Faglie v. Williams

569 S.W.2d 557, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3461
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 1978
Docket12690
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 569 S.W.2d 557 (Faglie v. Williams) 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
Faglie v. Williams, 569 S.W.2d 557, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3461 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

In its initial stage this lawsuit, brought in August of 1976 by Audrey Williams Faglie, now appellant, against a daughter and three sons, was a suit in trespass to try title to approximately four acres of land, now in the northwest part of the City of Austin. As amended from time to time, the suit at time of trial in May of 1977 involved two tracts of land, the second consisting of about seven acres, and suit encompassed several defendants, in addition to the four children of appellant.

The case was tried before the court without aid of a jury, and in June of 1977 the trial court entered judgment that Audrey Williams Faglie take nothing by her suit. We will affirm the judgment of the trial court.

As originally instituted, the suit in trespass to try title set up a claim of one-half interest in the four-acre tract, under a number of legal theories, by virtue of a relationship spanning three decades with Mike Williams, who died in 1956. Plaintiff alleged, and at trial it was shown, that the daughter and three sons of appellant sold the four acres to a limited partnership, engaged in land development, in 1975 for $156,300, retaining a vendor’s lien, secured by deed of trust.

By amendments subsequent to the initial filing, plaintiff below alternatively sought recovery of the value of improvements placed by her on the property. Plaintiff also sued for a share in the proceeds of sale by the children of an adjoining tract of seven acres, sold by them in 1967 for $12,- *560 000. Defendants ultimately made parties included the four children by Mike Williams, the limited partnership, and others acting as trustees or in other capacity.

The record is voluminous, consisting of 665 pages in the statement of facts and 583 pages in the transcript. Numerous witnesses testified, in person and by deposition, and extensive documentary, photographic, and other graphic and instrumental evidence was introduced at trial. The controlling issues in this case grew from, or are interwoven in some fashion with, the relationship between Audrey Williams Faglie and Mike Williams, the natural parents of the four defendants so far designated as the daughter and three sons of the couple.

The record reveals a succession of marriages, divorces, and deeds, but the legal status of the relationship between Audrey Williams Faglie and Mike Williams in the years from their marriage in 1930 to Williams’ death in 1956 is labyrinthine and in most aspects eludes classification. Harsh circumstances, arriving in this country with the stock market crash of 1929 and extending through the 1930’s, purportedly made expedient from the outset this starkly strange and unconventional union. As the testimony at trial unfolded, this union came more and more to find description in the words of W. Somerset Maugham, an articulate witness of life who observed, “It is not difficult to be unconventional in the eyes of the world when your unconventionality is but the convention of your set.” (The Moon and Sixpence, ch. 14).

Appellant and Mike Williams were ceremonially married in March of 1930 before a justice of the peace in Austin, when appellant was 15 years old and Williams was 34. The couple started married life in San Saba County, where they worked at cutting cedar posts before returning to Travis County in 1931, when they moved onto the seven-acre tract, one of the two parcels in controversy in this lawsuit. A son, Charles Williams, one of the defendants below, was born to the couple in 1937, and a daughter, Betty Williams (Cloud), also a party defendant, was born in 1938.

In December of 1942 appellant brought suit against Williams and obtained a divorce in Williamson Gounty under a judgment validity of which she seeks in this action to challenge. In her petition for divorce appellant alleged that she and Williams had no community property, and the trial court in the judgment entered in March of 1943 found “that the material allegations in the plaintiff’s petition are true.” In the action now on appeal appellant alleged and proved at trial that waiver of issuance and service of citation in the divorce action was signed by Mike Williams on December 19,1942, two days prior to the filing of the petition on December 21.

About two and one-half months after her divorce from Williams, appellant on May 28, 1943, married Howard Nalley, who was a friend of both Williams and appellant. At the trial of the present action appellant testified that Mike Williams originated the idea of a divorce from him and appellant’s marriage to Nalley, who was in the military service at that time, and that Williams persuaded Nalley to enter into the marriage with appellant for economic reasons.

Appellant explained at trial that Williams believed himself dying of tuberculosis and pressured appellant to get the divorce and marry Nalley because Williams could not provide enough to feed his family. Appellant pointed out that the children were sick, and she and the children could be cared for from Nalley’s military allotment. Appellant insisted, in effect, that the marriage to Nalley was purely an economic expediency, and that she did not consummate the marriage with Nalley, but on the contrary never left Williams’ bed and remained his wife until 1951 when they separated.

Appellant’s testimony as to the Williams’ illness, inability to provide for the family, and illness of the children was corroborated by Dollie Faglie, appellant’s sister-in-law during the time appellant, subsequent to 1951, was living with Robert Faglie and had taken his name. Other witnesses contradicted the testimony of both appellant and Dollie Faglie and claimed that Mike Williams had never been sick.

*561 Howard Nalley testified in direct rebuttal of some of the essential matters to which appellant testified. Nalley denied that Williams had any influence on Nalley in bring- • ing about the marriage after appellant divorced Williams. In fact Nalley testified he and appellant were intimate in 1942, the year before the divorce and subsequent marriage to Nalley, and stated that he married appellant because at the time he was in love with her. In July of 1942, Nalley testified, he and Williams had a fist fight in a grocery store parking lot in Austin when, confronted by Williams, Nalley admitted to Williams that he loved Audrey, then Williams’ wife. Nalley stated that he was on military duty in Tennessee in 1943 and when unable to obtain a furlough to meet appellant in Livingston, Texas, where her sister lived, he went absent without leave for eight days in order to meet and marry appellant in Livingston. Nalley denied that the marriage was never consummated, and named occasions when he and appellant had relations as “man and wife.”

Appellant and Nalley married in May of 1943, and the following September 18 appellant filed suit for divorce. In her petition appellant alleged that at the time of her marriage to Nalley she was an unmarried woman and that their marriage was lawful. She also alleged that two days before filing suit, on September 16, Nalley had beaten her while in Texas on furlough and while in a drunken condition. Waiver of issuance and service of citation in this action was dated September 18, the day suit was filed, and, bore Nalley’s signature.

Nalley’s testimony again conflicts with that of appellant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

in the Interest of J.G.H. a Child
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2014
Narvaez v. Maldonado
127 S.W.3d 313 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
Netecke v. STATE, THROUGH DOTD
715 So. 2d 449 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1998)
Dalworth Trucking Co. v. Bulen
924 S.W.2d 728 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1996)
People v. Badgett
895 P.2d 877 (California Supreme Court, 1995)
Richardson v. State
744 S.W.2d 65 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1987)
Bybee v. Bybee
644 S.W.2d 218 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1982)
Jacobs v. Cude
641 S.W.2d 258 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1982)
Brown v. McLennan County Children's Protective Services
627 S.W.2d 390 (Texas Supreme Court, 1982)
Walker v. Walker
619 S.W.2d 196 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1981)
Tidwell v. Tidwell
604 S.W.2d 540 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1980)
Day v. Day
603 S.W.2d 213 (Texas Supreme Court, 1980)
Hardin v. Hardin
597 S.W.2d 347 (Texas Supreme Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.2d 557, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faglie-v-williams-texapp-1978.