Cubley v. Barbee

73 S.W.2d 72, 123 Tex. 411
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 1934
DocketNo. 5777.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 72 (Cubley v. Barbee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cubley v. Barbee, 73 S.W.2d 72, 123 Tex. 411 (Tex. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice CURETON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Jessie Cubley, joined proforma by her husband, brought this suit against Mrs. J. H. Barbee, W. M. Spillars, and others for the establishment of claimed rights in the estate of Mrs. M. L. Leonard. Mrs. Leonard (formerly Mrs. B. F. Thyng) died intestate in the City of Dallas (in 1927), leaving an estate consisting of real estate, cash, and other personal property, valued at approximately $195,000.00

Mrs. Cubley’s claim is predicated upon an adoption or attempted adoption, while the defendants in error claim to be heirs of a deceased son of Mrs. Leonard.

■Mrs. Jessie Cubley was born Jessie Partridge on July 4, 1882, in Bay City, Michigan. Her father died in 1884. After his death, in the fall of 1884 or early in 1885, Mrs. Partridge (Jessie’s mother), with Jessie, then less than three years of *414 age, came to Longview, Texas, where Mrs. Partridge’s father, a railroad man, and his wife, the step-mother of Mrs. Partridge, then lived, and stayed about three months. She sought and obtained employment through an employment agency with a Mrs. Brown, who ran a boarding house in Fort Worth, Texas. Her step-mother not being able to or declining to care for the three year old child, Jessie, Mrs. Partridge took the child to Fort Worth and kept her at the boarding house where employed. She worked at Fort Worth four months, became ill and returned to her father’s and step-mother’s home at Long-view; and being ill and unable to care for Jessie, left her with Mrs. Brown, who said she would care for her and was “coming North in the course of a few months and she would bring the child.” From Longview, where she remained three weeks, Mrs. Partridge went to East Saginaw, Michigan, and from there to Flynt in the same state. Before leaving Longview, however, she received a letter from Mrs. Brown asking her to send a power of attorney relative to the custody of Jessie, as parties wanted to take the child but would not do so without some authority. She aft'erwards learned that by virtue of the power of attorney Mrs. Brown had turned the child over to Mrs. B. F. Thyng, generally known in this record as Mrs. Leonard. While working at Flynt, Michigan, in January, 1888, Mrs. Partridge received a letter from Mrs. Thyng at Chicago, forwarded through her father at Longview, Texas, stating that the child Jessie was very sick and not expected to live. She left Flynt that night for Chicago, and found the child, who was better, at a hotel with Mr. and Mrs. Thyng. She remained at the hotel with Mr. and Mrs. Thyng about a week. During this time they told Mrs. Partridge how much they thought of Jessie, —that they thought as much of her as if she were their own child, and that they would like to “keep her as their own.” They stated they were able to and would educate, clothe, and care for her. In fact, they were then giving her music lessons, and had her teacher present, while Mrs. Partridge (at the time of this trial she was Mrs. Fuller) was in Chicago.. Mrs. Partridge at first declined to sign and acknowledge the relinquishment of the child, but finally, on the day before she left the city, did do so; and Mr. and Mrs. Thyng signed and acknowledged an “adoption paper.” As to the circumstances preceding the signing of this paper, Mrs. Partridge in part said:

“I think the second day was the first time Mr. Thyng said anything about adopting the child. He said he didn’t have any children of his own, and thought as much of Jessie as if - she was his o%on child. They said they would like to adopt her. ■ I *415 don’t know if I can remember all they said about adopting her. He said they wanted to adopt her and I told him I wouldn’t sign any papers of adoption; then every day after that they talked about it until at last I decided I toould let them adopt her.” (Italics ours.)

The contents of this “adoption paper” and the “relinquishment” of Jessie are not before the Court, except by the testimony of Mrs. Partridge and repeated statements of Mrs. Thyng made to other persons. Both instruments were taken by Mr. and Mrs. Thyng at the time, and have never been found. As to their contents, Mrs. Partridge in part testified.

"As to whether any instrument was drawn to adopt my daughter by those people, Thyng and wife, they had papers with them that they had brought from Texas.

“I say a paper was presented to me about adoption. It toas not signed. After it was presented to me, it was signed by Mr. and Mrs. Thyng. I signed a paper; I signed a paper of relinquishment; relinquishment of my child to them; I signed a relinquishment paper and they signed an adoption paper. Mr. and' Mrs. Thyng took both papers; they kept the papers; they kept both of the papers, the paper that they signed and the paper I signed.

“Mr. Thyng came in one night after supper and brought in a notary and the papers were signed before him; they were acknowledged before the notary public. i-C tfc JjC Jji ^

“I did not see that paper until the day I signed it. Mr. Thyng took it out of his pocket ivhen I first saw it. That was the last day I was there. I didn’t leave until the next morning; I didn’t leave that night; I left Chicago in the morning.

“He took the paper out of his pocket and had the notary with him at the time. I had told him I would sign the relinquishment. I told them I wanted them to bring Jessie up right; educate her and take care of her. I did not tell them what kind of a paper I wanted them to sign; I didn’t know anything about it. They said they would sign the adoption papers.

“They took the paper out and read it over and the notary wrote on that; it seems that the paper they had brought didn’t have just what they wanted to do for the child, and the latter part, of what I gave testimony was in that paper, was written on there; the notary wrote it on there. I think the rest of it was typewritten. I don’t recollect what was in the typewritten part only in regard to taking Jessie as their heir; that was in the typewritten part. This part I have testified about was in the handwriting of the notary. After he wrote it, they signed *416 it; Mrs. Thyng signed it first and Mr. Thyng signed it, and the notary asked them if they were signing it of their own free will and they said they were, and he wrote that in it. I read the paper before I signed it. I read it before the notary put this in, that I have testified about, and read it afterwards. ******

“That night after signing the papers, I made a request to them: I said, ‘Mrs. Thyng, do you think this paper will be all right?’ I said, ‘You said you brought this paper from Dallas.’ I said, ‘It has been signed here in Chicago and I am from Michigan,’ and she said that she, when she came back, she would have it examined and see if it was all right, and she would write me, but she didn’t write me; it went along a number of months and I wrote her in Dallas.

“She told me she brought the paper with her from Dallas.

“I signed the relinquishment papers at the same time, and acknowledged them before the same notary, while we were all there together in the room. *******

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 72, 123 Tex. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cubley-v-barbee-tex-1934.