First Nat. Bank of Plainview v. McWhorter

179 S.W. 1147, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1024
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1915
DocketNo. 839.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 1147 (First Nat. Bank of Plainview v. McWhorter) 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
First Nat. Bank of Plainview v. McWhorter, 179 S.W. 1147, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1024 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

In 1913, B. O. McWhor-ter, the husband of Kate H. McWhorter, was indebted to the appellant the First National Bank of Plainview, as surety upon two promissory notes, in an amount between $9,-000 and $10,000. In September, 1914, the bank sued B. O. McWhorter upon the notes and caused the levy of a writ of attachment upon certain Sudan grass seed. This litigation is an independent suit of the husband, with the wife, Kate H. McWhorter, in trover and conversion for the value of the seed, alleging that it was the separate property of Mrs. McWhorter, and that the same was not liable for the debts of B. O. Mc-Whorter. The court peremptorily instructed the jury that the seed constituted the separate property of the wife, leaving the question of value only for the consideration of the jury, which they assessed at $9,380.25, afterwards reduced by remittitur in the sum of $1,810.

Both parties treat the real estate upon which the Sudan seed was raised as the separate property of the wife; and the understanding between the husband and wife, by virtue of which the latter claims she acquired the Sudan seed as her separate property, is testified to as follows, the substance of which we reproduce:

Mr. McWhorter had a little farm up there. I also had one. He said to me one day, “Mattie, I think I shall rent the farm this year.” I said, “No, that I did not want mine rented, that I might farm my own,” and that I wanted to plant it in Sudan seed. He agreed to finance it for me, and I told Mm that P would have the boys (meaning their children) properly, work *1148 the ground as much as possible, “and agreed to put it in cultivation for my own benefit.” He purchased the seed for planting and I had an agreement that later, when the seed were sold, “I would keep a memorandum of what he was out on the seed and the entire crop and when I sold it I would repay him.” I had a man to plow the land and get it in shape to plant, and my two sons cultivated it. I agreed to pay the older boy $20 per month and the smaller boy $10, to be paid to them when the seed Was sold. Mr. McWhorter showed the boys how to manage the crop, and a few times went to the field for that purpose, but never worked the same. When the seed was thrashed, I had it brought to the house, placed in a small garage upon the place; and, when the crop was growing, I had it looked after with a view of having it entered in the Sudan Seed Association, and also had the same inspected by the inspectors at the Experimental Earm, and instructed my son to join the association so that the seed could be sold by it; and after the seed was thrashed, and before I had put it into the association, it was levied upon before the association building was ready for the reception of the seed.

The husband did not testify in the case.

The appellant bank assigns that the court erred in peremptorily instructing the jury to find that the seed was the separate property of the wife, and under the assignments the following propositions are presented:

“The credibility of the witness is a question for the jury, and it was error for the court to assume the truthfulness of plaintiff Kate H. McWhorter’s unsupported testimony. * * *
“The undisputed evidence shows that the said seed were produced by the labors of the husband and wife, and their minor children, and the mere agreement between the husband and wife, before the seed was planted, could not have the effect of changing the law of marital property rights. * * * ”

[1] At the threshold of the case appellee presents an exposition of the amended acts of 1913 to article 4621, with reference to the rights of married women, insisting that on account of the change of the law there is a change of the title of this character of property. Under this act, as formerly, all property, real and personal, of either spouse, acquired before marriage, and afterwards, by gift, devise, or descent, “as also the increase of all lands thus acquired,” shall be the separate property of the spouses. This amendment does say:

“During marriage * * * the wife shall have the sole management, control and disposition of her separate property, both real and personal,” provided the husband joins in the manner prescribed by law for the conveyance or incumbrance of her separate real estate; “and the joint signature of the husband and wife shall be necessary to a transfer of stocks and bonds belonging to her or of which she may be given control by this act.”

It further says:

“Neither the separate property of the wife, nor the rents from the wife’s separate real estate, nor the interest on bonds and notes belonging to her, nor dividends on stocks owned by her, nor her personal earnings, shall be subject to the payment of debts contracted by the husband.”

Article 4622, following 4621, just quoted from, provides, as before, that:

“All property acquired by either the husband or wife during marriage, except that which is the separate property of either one or the other, shall be deemed the common property of the husband and wife, and during coverture may be disposed of by the husband only,” with the addition, “provided, however, the personal earnings of the wife, and rents from the wife’s real estate, the interest on bonds and notes belonging to her and dividends on stocks owned by her shall be under the control, management and disposition of the wife alone, subject to the provisions of article 4621, as hereinabove written.”

Of course, if you start with the assumption that this statute makes the products raised upon the wife’s real estate the separate property of the wife, instead of community property, this case is ended in favor of the wife; but we are unable to give the statute the interpetation suggested. If it were not for the settled channels of the law, dug deep by successive interpretations heretofore made, the question might at least become debatable. The statute does give the wife the management, control, and disposition of her real property, provided that the husband, when it comes to the disposition, joins in the conveyance; and, if he should refuse to join under article 4621, the district court, upon satisfactory proof that the conveyance would be advantageous to her interest, may grant her the permission to convey. To give the wife the management and control of the real estate, and not give her the real incidents and fruits of that control, might, in an ethical sense, appear contradictory; and though it has appeared to a great many in this state that the construction that, although the thing itself may be separate property, but that which grows out of it and is produced upon it and which makes property really beneficial is community, is an incongruous interpretation; but the Supreme Court of this state has placed the same upon what it has conceived a broader ground, as to the meaning of the old statute and the result of the community partnership, and the presumed labors of each between husband and wife. In the early case of De Blane v. Lynch, 23 Tex. 29, where it was held that crops grown upon the separate property of the wife, and by the labor of her slaves, were community property, the Supreme Court said:

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 1147, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-plainview-v-mcwhorter-texapp-1915.