DuPerier v. DuPerier

59 Tex. Civ. App. 224
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Tex. Civ. App. 224 (DuPerier v. DuPerier) 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
DuPerier v. DuPerier, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 224 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by appellant against her husband, Douglas DuPerier, to recover the title and possession of lot No. 10, in block No. 73 of Van Wormer’s addition to the city of Beaumont. After the usual allegations in a suit of trespass to try title, the petition further alleges:

“Plaintiff further represents to the court that the property in controversy in this suit was conveyed to the defendant by Alfred DuPerier on the 12th day of July, 1902, by general warranty deed, for the consideration of $2400 cash; that after the defendant had acquired title to the property he desired to convey the same to his wife, the plaintiff herein, to be owned and held by her as her own separate estate; and the defendant sought the advice of a lawyer as to the manner in which title to the property could be passed from him to his wife, the plaintiff herein, so that she could own and hold same in her own right as her own separate estate; and the defendant was advised by an attorney that the only .valid way to effect a transfer of title to said property from, the defendant to his [227]*227wife, the plaintiff herein, so that the same could bo conveyed to and owned by her as her own separate estate, was to make, execute and deliver a deed conveying the property to some third party who should act as the trustee to hold said property, and after said deed had been executed and delivered to the said third party as trustee and the title had fully passed out of the defendant, that the said trustee could legally convey the property to the defendant’s wife, the plaintiff herein; and, acting upon said advice and believing the same to he the correct and only valid way in which the title to said property could be passed from said defendant and vested in his wife, • the plaintiff herein, so that the same could be owned and held by helas her own separate estate, the defendant and this plaintiff executed and delivered a general warranty deed conveying this property to one H. P. Barry, on the 23d day of September, 1903, which said deed is recorded on page 588 of volume 73 of the deed rec.ords of Jefferson County, Texas; that no consideration of any kind or character was paid by the said H. P. Barry for said conveyance of said property, and no consideration of any kind or character was received by plaintiff or defendant from H. P. Barry for said property, and the recitals of the payment of consideration in said deed are not true; and on the other hand, it was expressly agreed and understood by and between all the parties to said transaction, that the said H. P. Barry should hold the title to said property as a trustee, and that he should thereafter make, execute and deliver to the plaintiff herein a good and valid deed of conveyance that would convey to this plaintiff the title to said property to be owned and held by helas her own separate estate; and that in pursuance of said agreement and understanding, the said H. P. Bariy and his wife Katherine M. Barry, on or about the 1st day of October, 1903, made, executed and delivered to this plaintiff a general warranty deed of conveyance to this plaintiff the property now involved in this suit, which said deed is recorded on page 328 of volume 75 of the deed records of Jefferson County, Texas. And the said H. P. Barry and his wife, Katherine Barry, received no consideration of any kind or character for said conveyance of said property, and the said deed was made in pursuance of the general agreement or understanding made and entered into by the plaintiff and defendant herein and the said H. P. Barry at the time plaintiff and defendant conveyed the said property to the said H. P. Barry by the said deed of September 23, 1903, to the effect that it was the purpose of said conveyánce and the intention of all the parties to said deed that the property should be conveyed to and held by this plaintiff as her own separate estate, and the property was conveyed and title to the said property was vested in the said plaintiff herein as her separate estate, but the deed does not show upon its of ace, by reason of a mistake of the draughtsman who draughted said instrument, that the property is conveyed to and to be held by the plaintiff as her own separate estate, but in truth and in fact it was the understanding of all the parties to the conveyance that such should be the effect of the said conveyance, and the property was conveyed by plaintiff and defendant to said H. P. Barry for the sole purpose of having it conveyed to the plaintiff [228]*228herein as her separate estate; and the said II. P. Barry, acting as said trustee, was instructed and directed by the defendant herein to convey the property to this plaintiff to be owned and held by her as her separate estate, and in truth and in fact the property was so conveyed and is now owned by and held by her as her separate property.”

Then follow allegations sufficient under the rule announced in Dority v. Dority, 96 Texas, 215, to entitle plaintiff to maintain this suit against her husband. The prayer of the petition is that plaintiff have judgment for the title and possession of the property, and that defendant be restrained from collecting rents therefor and from interfering with its management and control by the plaintiff.

Defendant answered by general denial and plea of not guilty.

The trial in the court below without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of defendant, "that plaintiff take nothing by her suit.”

The evidence shows that plaintiff and defendant were married on January 12, 1901, and that the property in question was conveyed to defendant by his father, Alfred DuPerier, on January 12, 1902, by a deed which recites a cash consideration of $2400 paid by defendant. The undisputed evidence further shows that no consideration was in fact paid by the defendant for the property and it was in fact a gift from his father.

We adopt the following conclusions of fact filed by the trial judge:

"Shortly after said property was given to defendant, he and the plaintiff, who was then his wife, moved on to said premises and occupied the same and claimed the same as their homestead, and the same was in fact their homestead and remained their homestead up to the separation of plaintiff and defendant, as hereinafter mentioned.

“A little while prior to the execution of the deed by defendant and wife to H. P. Barry, hereinafter mentioned, the defendant and plaintiff had gone to the town of Erath, in the State of Louisiana, and they were temporarily residing at said place at the time of the execution of said deed to said Barry, but were then claiming the property in controversy as their homestead, and in fact intended at that time to return to said property and occupy the same as their homestead.

“At said time the defendant was indebted to divers persons, the exact amount of which indebtedness I do not know, but the same was somewhere between five hundred and a thousand dollars.

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Related

Swearingen v. Reed
21 S.W. 383 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1893)
Rivera v. White, Guardian
63 S.W. 125 (Texas Supreme Court, 1901)
Dority v. Dority
60 L.R.A. 941 (Texas Supreme Court, 1903)
Smith Brothers v. Wallis, Landes Co.
45 S.W. 820 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1898)
Kahn v. Kahn
58 S.W. 825 (Texas Supreme Court, 1900)
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86 S.W. 635 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1905)
Lewis v. Simon
10 S.W. 554 (Texas Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
59 Tex. Civ. App. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duperier-v-duperier-texapp-1910.