Dominy v. Dominy

305 S.W.2d 389, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2035
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 1957
Docket13124
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 305 S.W.2d 389 (Dominy v. Dominy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dominy v. Dominy, 305 S.W.2d 389, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2035 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

GANNON, Chief Justice.

The appellant, Lennie Belle Dominy, the surviving widow and sole heir-at-law of S. C. Dominy, also known as Carroll Dom-iny, brought this suit on November 9, 1956, against her brother-in-law, B. L. .Dominy, as defendant, to try the title to Lots 13, 14 and 15, in Block 44 of Rice Military Addition to the City of Houston, Harris County. The subject property is improved with a dwelling house and with an additional structure which has been used from time to time as a broom factory. Plaintiff Len-nie Belle Dominy relies solely upon the 10 year statute of limitation. The record indicates at one point a claim of a lost deed from B. L. Dominy- and wife to Carroll Dominy, but at the trial Mrs. Dominy expressly abandoned claim of title under the deed.

It is undisputed that defendant B. L. Dominy is the record owner, he having purchased the property on March 20, 1922, from A. W. Wells and wife, Carrie Wells, for the sum of $1,000, of which $400 was paid in cash, with a deferred balance of $600. The deed from Wells and wife to B. L. Dominy, as well as the release of the vendor’s lien, is in evidence and undisputed. It is recited in the deed that at the time Dominy received his conveyance the property was improved with a dwelling house.

Trial was to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment in favor of the record owner, defendant B. L. Dominy, from which Lennie Belle Dominy appeals on three points of error. By two of these she complains of the want of any evidence to support the judgment in favor of defendant, and asserts that “all the evidence of probative force showed that appellant had perfected a legal title to the property under the ten year statute of limitation”; that is to say, that the evidence below was such as to compel a judgment in her favor. By another point Mrs. Dom-iny complains of the admission in evidence over her objection of certain testimony of defendant which she claims related to a transaction with her deceased husband, defendant not having been called by Mrs. Dominy “thereto”. The basis of the complaint is that the court’s action in admitting the testimony was violative of Article 3716, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.St., familiarly known as the Dead Man’s Statute.

A careful and painstaking study of the record and the pertinent decisions has convinced us that but for the admission of the testimony complained of the evidence presents only a fact and not a law issue bn limitation. However, we are persuaded that the evidence complained of was erroneously admitted and that on the record before us its admission was reversible error.

*392 As briefly stated as may be for an adequate understanding of our views, the material record shows the following:

It is undisputed that after B. L. Dom-iny’s purchase of the property he and his brother, Carroll, lived on it together with their mother and father up until 1924 when the defendant B. L. Dominy married. After his marriage in 1924 B. L. Dominy moved from the property and made his home elsewhere. However, the mother and father and Carroll continued to occupy the premises up until the year 1927, when the senior Dominy died. Carroll and the mother Mrs. Betty Dominy, continued in possession after the senior Dominy's death. Carroll Dominy married in December of 1927 and his wife, the plaintiff Lennie Belle Dominy, then moved onto the property with Carroll and his mother. She and her husband and the senior Mrs. Dominy continued to occupy the property as a home until 1943. From the date of Lennie’s marriage she and her husband, Carroll, engaged in the manufacture of brooms on the premises, but in 1934 Carroll and Lennie discontinued this enterprise. In 1934 Carroll Dominy rented the “broom factory” located on the back of the premises to Emil 'Nentwig. Rents on the broom factory were collected by Carroll Dominy from Emil Nentwig up until 1943. At that time Carroll and Lennie Dominy purchased a home in Houston Heights, to which they removed, taking Carroll’s mother with them. Simultaneously they rented the entire premises to Nentwig, who continued to pay rent to Carroll Dominy until 1946 when Nentwig moved off, leaving his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Mabry, on the place. All arrangements for Mr. Nent-wig’s tenancy were made by Carroll Dom-iny and all rents were collected and received by him. Asked specifically if during his occupancy Mr. Carroll Dominy claimed to be the owner of the property, Nentwig testified in substance that the matter of ownership never came up and that the matter was therefore never mentioned. Mr. Nentwig testified that during his occupancy “substantial repairs were made by Carroll Dominy”. When Mr. Nentwig moved away Mr. and Mrs. Mabry continued occupying the premises, renting directly from Carroll Dominy and paying the rents to him. After about six months Mrs. Betty Dominy, the mother, desired to move back to the subject property and Carroll Dominy made arrangements with Mabry for her to occupy one of the back rooms and for her use of the kitchen, Mabry to continue to occupy the rest of the premises at a reduced rental. Mrs. Betty Dominy then moved in and continued in conjunction with others to live in the house on the property until about a year before her death which occurred in 19SS. The Mabrys moved out in 1947.

Plaintiff’s witness, R. C. Poston, testified that he lived next door or on adjacent property, at 217 South Knox Street, from 1923 to 1935, during which time he was well acquainted with the plaintiff, Lennie Belle Dominy, and her deceased husband, Carroll Dominy. This witness testified that during this period Carroll Dominy and his wife were living on the subject property and that on “several occasions” they claimed to own it.

Mr. Cleveland Dominy, a cousin of Carroll and of defendant B. L. Dominy, testified that in May of 1947 he moved onto the property, renting it from Carroll Dominy at $5 a week; that he occupied the property until July of 1948; that Carroll Dominy died in November of 1947; that after Carroll Dominy’s death, he paid his rent to the mother, Mrs. Betty Dominy; that this was because Carroll Dominy’s surviving widow, the plaintiff, instructed him to do so; that through the “course of time [he] knew him on various occasions” Carroll Dominy claimed to him, Cleveland Dominy, to own the property. This witness explained that Carroll Dominy rented him the property at a very low rate in consideration of Mrs. Betty Dominy being permitted joint occupancy, kitchen facilities, and on account of Cleveland *393 Dominy and wife being there to look after her.

Mrs. Lennie Bell Dominy testified to facts to show herself the sole heir-at-law of her deceased husband, Carroll Dominy; that during her marriage all rents on the subject premises were collected by and paid to her husband, Carroll Dominy, during his lifetime, that is, up until November, 1947. She corroborated Cleveland Dominy’s testimony that following her husband’s death she instructed Cleveland Dominy to pay the rents to Mrs. Betty Dominy, explaining that she felt the old lady needed these to supplement her pension. Additionally, the witness testified she arranged with Betty Dominy as her tenant for her, Betty Dominy to occupy the place and have any rent on it she might be able to collect as long as she lived. Mrs.

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305 S.W.2d 389, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dominy-v-dominy-texapp-1957.