Fitts v. Fitts

14 Tex. 443
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 14 Tex. 443 (Fitts v. Fitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitts v. Fitts, 14 Tex. 443 (Tex. 1855).

Opinion

Hemphill, Ch. J.

This was a suit, by the wife, Nancy Fitts, for divorce, on the ground of cruelty. There having been no appeal by the defendant, from the judgment for divorce, the decree will not in this particular be reversed ; the errors, if any, being such as are not apparent on the record. But, the plaintiff insisting that she has been aggrieved by the disposition that has been made of the property, we will examine her grounds of complaint.

[446]*446She alleged in her petition, that she was entitled to two tracts of land, certain negroes named, some cattle, and a yoke of oxen, which, by deed of gift from her husband, had been conveyed to her subsequent to their marriage, and a copy of the deed was filed as an exhibit. This was drawn very unskillfully. It states the consideration to be the natural love and affection which the husband bore to his beloved wife, and children already begotton by his wife, and to be begotten by them ; and the further consideration of one dollar; and it gives the property to his wife and her lawful heirs by him, and after her death the property to go to the lawful heirs, &c.

By various amendments, it was averred that the defendant, previous to their intermarriage, had, by deed, conveyed these slaves to John Moore' the father of the wife, for her use and benefit; and that of the heirs of her body begotton by this marriage ; that the said deed was, after its execution and delivery, deposited in the office of the County Clerk, to be recorded ; and that the defendant, after the marriage, unlawfully and fraudulently, without consent of the plaintiff, or of John Moore, the trustee, took the said deed of trust from the said office, and destroyed or suppressed the same; that the defendant is dissolute and dissipated, incapable of managing or taking care of property, and the plaintiff feared that if he should obtain control of said slaves, they would be disposed of and their proceeds squandered, so as to be lost to plaintiff and her children; that he has already sold, and squandered the proceeds of the sale of five of the slaves, which had been included in the marriage settlement. She prayed for the appointment of a trustee, to carry out the trust of said deed, and for such relief as the nature of her case might require.

The jury found that there was a deed of trust, given by defendant to John Moore, for the benefit of plaintiff and her children, before the intermarriage of plaintiff and defendant ; and they found the negroes, claimed in the petition, subject to said deed of trust; and they also found that a conveyance was [447]*447afterwards made by defendant to plaintiff, which included the slaves, oxen, cattle and two tracts of land, and that these originally belonged to the defendant. They also found that the deed of trust was attested by two witnesses, but was not acknowledged before a Notary Public, but was filed in the County Clerk’s Office and taken out by defendant.

The Court, after reciting the substance of the trust deed,, and setting forth fully the deed made after the marriage, appointed Samuel P. Darwell trustee in place of the deceased John Moore, investing him with the powers pertaining to the said Moore, and that the title to the said slaves be not divested, but that the net proceeds of their use be decreed as follows, viz: one-fifth to the husband during his natural life, one-fifth to the plaintiff during the life of the defendant, and three-fifths to their children ; and it was further decreed, that the-said Samuel P. Darwell be appointed special agent or receiver,, distinct from his office as trustee; that as such he give bond to the parties in double the value of the slaves ; and after stating the conditions of said bond, the mode of execution and approval, «fee., it is further decreed, that the said receiver take charge of the property, and manage it for the best interest of the parties concerned ; that on the death of Oliver Pitts, the defendant, the office of receiver shall cease, and the property revert to and be controlled by the trust deed ; that such receiver be under the supervision of the Court, and orders may, from time to time, be made, to carry into effect the objects of' the decree ; and that the receiver so arrange the affairs of said trust, as to pay the portion due the husband at the beginning of each year, and that the same be raised of a portion of said slaves, or otherwise, as may be most expedient.

No provision was made in relation to the two tracts of land nor was it declared to whom they belonged, or in whom they should vest.

There were various errors assigned by the plaintiff, but the objections to the decree, as urged in argument, are principally, 1st. To the appointment of a receiver, and subjecting the sepa[448]*448rate property of the wife to the support of the husband, whose misconduct was the cause of the divorce. 2nd. That the lands were not decreed to be the property of the plaintiff, free from any charge or incumbrance.

In relation to the first, no objection has been urged, that the trust deed was not valid in law, the,same not having been executed or acknowledged before a Notary Public. It was considered, perhaps, that though this may have been an objection, originally, to the deed, yet that it was either not fatal, or that if so, its effect was obviated by the subsequent acts of the defendant, in attempting its suppression, and by the execution of the deed of the like purport, and with similar trusts, posterior 'to the marriage. The trust deed, then, having binding force, there can be no objection to the substitution of a trustee, for Moore, who had departed this life; but why he should have been also denominated or appointed as a receiver, is not so obvious. But if he be not required to discharge any duties, or be not invested with any powers, which might not have been imposed or conferred upon him in his capacity as trustee, there is no sufficient reason why the appointment should be revoked, especially when, as a condition precedent to the assumption of the office, he is required to give bond with sufficient sureties, and is also strictly and constantly under the supervision and control of the Court. Whether he be called receiver or trustee, is not very material.

The main point for consideration is, whether the Court had ■competent authority to dispose of the property, as provided for in the decree, and place it under the active and immediate control of the trustee, subjecting a portion of its proceeds to the support of the husband. There is no copy of the trust deed in the record, and there was none, it is presumed, before the Court below. Its exact provisions are not known, and its trusts are not described with much accuracy or precision. "Whether the conveyance was for the use of the wife, during "her natural life, and for the children of the marriage after her death, or for their use jointly, does not distinctly appear ; and [449]*449the Court might therefore use some discretion in declaring or establishing its trusts, so as, however, not to defeat the main object, which was a provision for the wife and their children.

If the deed were to be regarded as a provision for the wife and children, jointly, then there would be more reason why the property should be under the immediate control of the trustee, especially as a second marriage may be contracted by the wife. There is no statement of facts, and wc are not apprised of the grounds upon which the Court acted in making up the decree.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Tex. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitts-v-fitts-tex-1855.