Defferari v. Terry

99 S.W.2d 290
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1936
DocketNo. 1642-6714
StatusPublished

This text of 99 S.W.2d 290 (Defferari v. Terry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Defferari v. Terry, 99 S.W.2d 290 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

TAYLOR, Commissioner.

This is a suit by Gussie Terry to recover from the four children of Frank Defferari, plaintiffs in error, a one-fifth interest in lands held by them under the will of their grandmother, Louisa Defferari. The grandmother as testatrix bequeathed the lands in question to her grandchildren. Mrs. Terry claims to come within the terms of the will as a legitimate child of Gus Defferari, a brother of Frank. Her suit, in which she is joined pro forma by her husband, is for a one-fifth interest in the lands that passed under Louisa’s will; it being conceded that the four children of Frank, who were made defendants, are the only other grandchildren of the testatrix.

Plaintiffs in error' will be referred to herein as the Defferaris, and defendant in error Mrs. Terry will be referred to by name.

The trial court denied the motion of the Defferaris for an instructed verdict, and rendered judgment in favor of Mrs. Terry and her husband. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment. 68 S.W.(2d) 253.

The jury by its verdict found: (1) That Mrs. Terry’s parents prior to her birth agreed to become husband and wife; (2) that pursuant to the agreement they lived together as such; and (3) that during such time they held each other out to the public as husband and wife.

It was upon the foregoing findings that the trial court rendered judgment, overruling the Defferaris’ .motion for an instructed verdict. The motion should have been granted if the evidence was legally insufficient to establish Mrs. Terry’s claim of legitimacy. Doubt that the evidence was legally sufficient to show the child was legitimate was expressed by the court in granting the writ.

Mrs. Terry’s claim that she was the legitimate child of Gus Defferari, and hence the legitimate grandchild of the testatrix and competent to take under her will as such, is predicated upon the second provision of article 2581, R.C.S.

The article referred to is brief, having just two provisions. Only the second is invoked. Since it is necessary in construing the second that it be considered in connection with the first, both for convenience will be set out in full.

The first reads: “Where a man, having by a woman a child or children, shall afterward intermarry with such woman, such child or children, if recognized by him, shall thereby be legitimated and made capable of inheriting his estate.”

The second reads: “The issue also of marriages deemed null in law shall nevertheless be legitimate.”

The first provision of the article above quoted is not relied upon to support Mrs. Terry’s claim of legitimacy. Under its terms legitimation is brought about by the parties themselves by means of a valid marriage, and it is admitted that 'the parents, Eula Beck and Gus Defferari, were [291]*291not competent to enter into a valid marriage on account of an impediment which existed on his part. Stated concretely, Mrs. Terry contends that under the findings of the jury it is established that prior to her birth a relationship constituting within the purview of the second provision of the statute a marriage deemed null in law was entered into by her parents, and that by operation of law her status as a child of such relationship is the same as to legitimacy as if her parents had been lawfully married.

In order to make clear the precise question presented for decision, it is necessary to state generally but briefly some of the facts upon which Mrs. Terry relies as bringing the relationship of her parents within the purview of the statute, together with the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals with respect thereto.

It is undisputed that at the inception of the relationship assumed by the parents and throughout its continuance an impediment existed to the consummation of a valid marriage between them. Two Or three years before Gus met Eula, he married Bella Brown from whom he did not procure a divorce until after he and Eula ceased living together. No claim is made by Mrs. Terry that prior to her birth Gus and Eula entered into a valid marriage either ceremonially or at common law. Her contention is that although the attempted marriage was not valid in law, it was such as would have constituted a common-law marriage had it not been for the impediment thereto on her father’s part of which her mother was ignorant, and that she as the “issue” of such marriage “is nevertheless legitimate.” Stated more concretely, Mrs. Terry’s claim of legitimacy is predicated upon the theory that her father and mother entered into a real marriage, so intended at least by her mother, lacking in validity only because of the legal impediment on the part of her father. She claims that the marriage intended by her parents was a real marriage at common law, and that they fully complied with its requisites as to form.

The Court of Civil Appeals, in accepting this theory and in construing the findings of the jury to mean there was such compliance on the part of the parents, states that Mrs. Terry “was not born clear out of wedlock,” but under the affirmative findings of the jury, was born “to a union that had all the form and requisites of a marriage at common law”; that there was such good-faith intention on Eula’s part in making what the jury found to be a mutual agreement between her and Gus to become husband and wife and in thereafter living and cohabiting together as such, as to constitute a “marriage” within the statute.

The Court of Civil Appeals states in this connection that the precise interpretation of this provision of the statute “does not seem to have heretofore been announced by a Texas appellate court”; and in indicating its sweeping effect refers to the early case of Hartwell v. Jackson, 7 Tex. 576, 580, in which the court is quoted as saying that its language legitimates the issue of “marriages deemed null in law, without regard to the grounds of nullity.”

The two provisions of the article above quoted are supplemental. It is clear from the language of the first that regardless of what the relationship of the parents had been prior to the birth of the child, they, if capable of thereafter entering into a valid marriage, could render it legitimate by so doing.

It is equally clear from the language of the second that the nature of the relationship of the parents, of which the child is declared the legitimate issue, is vital. Legitimation under the terms of this provision results from legislative declaration, and not from the subsequent acts of the parents after the child is born. The nature of the- relationship from which legitimacy is declared is indicated by its use of the restrictive term “marriage”; and while the relationship is unlawful, it is nevertheless worthy to be designated by the Legislature as “marriage” notwithstanding it is “deemed null in law.”

It is manifest that the Legislature by the language of the first provision makes available to the parents the means of legitimating a meretricious relationship, and by the language of the second declares legitimate the issue of a relationship designated as a “marriage deemed null in law.”

The case turns upon whether the relationship between Gus Defferari and Eula Beck is comprehended within the foregoing statutory designation. If not, her suit must fail.

A brief history of article 2581, and other legislative enactments relating to legitimacy and marriage in connection with the conditions leading to their enactment, will aid in determining in general the legislative in[292]

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Related

Stripe Ex Rel. Shannon v. Meffert
229 S.W. 762 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1921)
Defferari v. Terry
68 S.W.2d 253 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1933)
Grigsby v. Reib
153 S.W. 1124 (Texas Supreme Court, 1913)
Smith v. Smith
1 Tex. 621 (Texas Supreme Court, 1846)
Hartwell v. Jackson
7 Tex. 576 (Texas Supreme Court, 1852)
Carroll v. Carroll
20 Tex. 731 (Texas Supreme Court, 1858)
Sapp v. Newsom
27 Tex. 537 (Texas Supreme Court, 1864)
Lewis v. Ames
44 Tex. 319 (Texas Supreme Court, 1875)
Evatt v. Miller
169 S.W. 817 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/defferari-v-terry-texcommnapp-1936.