Franzetti v. Franzetti

174 S.W.2d 65, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 28, 1943
DocketNo. 9369.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 65 (Franzetti v. Franzetti) 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
Franzetti v. Franzetti, 174 S.W.2d 65, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 542 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

In 1933, Gertrude Franzetti sued Guiditta Franzetti in trespass to try title to recover the property in controversy, a house and lot in Austin, Texas. Specifically, she asserted title under an alleged parol gift of the property to her by Angelo Franzetti, her father-in-law, and the deceased husband of Guiditta, which property was to be used, under the terms of the gift, as the home of Gertrude and her infant son, Willie Louis Franzetti, the grandson of the donor; the gift being alleged to have been made in 1930, at or about the time of the birth of the said Willie Louis Franzetti. 'On the trial, Gertrude and her mother, Dora Mussett, who lived with Gertrude on the property, testified that all of the improvements thereon were made in 1932, or subsequent to the death of the donor in 1931; and at the conclusion of the evidence the trial court instructed a verdict and rendered judgment for Guiditta, upon the ground that the improvements made after the death of the donor would not suffice to take the alleged parol gift of the real property out of the operation of the statute of frauds; which judgment this court affirmed on appeal. See Franzetti v. Franzetti, 124 S.W. 2d 195, writ refused, for a full statement of the nature of the suit and the facts thereof.

After the mandate reached the trial court from this court a writ of possession was issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff for execution; but before he could execute the writ Dora Mussett, the grandmother of Willie Louis Franzetti, filed this suit, as his next friend, against Guiditta Franzetti, alleging that said minor was not a party to the former suit of his mother, and that the parol gift to him was the result of the same words spoken by Angelo Franzetti at the same time he was alleged in the former suit to have given the same property to Gertrude. This is the suit here involved, and which resulted in the trial court in a special issue verdict and judgment in favor of Guiditta Franzetti.

On the trial of this case Gertrude Fran-zetti and appellant, Dora Mussett, testified that all of the improvements made on the property and relied upon to take the parol gift out of the statute of frauds, were made prior to the death of Angelo Fran-zetti, the donor. They admitted on cross-examination that each had testified on the trial of Gertrude’s case that the improvements relied upon were made after the death of the donor; that at the time each so testified she had been told by counsel in the case that the parol gift would not constitute a conveyance of the property unless the improvements were made prior to the death of the donor; that each discovered *67 “two or three days” after the judgment was rendered against Gertrude by the trial court, through one Stout, that same were made during the lifetime of Angelo Franzetti, the donor; but that the discovery of these facts was too late to be availed of in that case; and that each knew, under the former decisions of the trial court and of this court in Gertrude’s suit, that each of them had to change her testimony on the former trial and testify that the improvements had been made prior to the death of Angelo Fran-zetti, in order for Willie Louis Franzetti to recover in this suit.

After the foregoing testimony was in, ap-pellee, over the objection of appellant, introduced in evidence for the purpose of showing the motive of Gertrude and appellant in so changing their testimony given 'on the former trial, the pleadings, the instructed verdict, judgments, motions for a new trial and orders overruling them, and the portion of the judgment of this court holding that Gertrude failed to establish the parol gift of the property to her because her undisputed evidence showed that the improvements were made after the death of the donor.

By her first five points appellant complains of the introduction of the foregoing matters in evidence, contending that Willie Louis Franzetti was not a party to that suit and that the matters were not material to any issue in this suit, and were highly prejudicial. Neither contention is sustained.

The fact that Willie Louis Franzetti was not a party to the former suit of his mother for the same property resulting from or under the same parol gift is not material with respect to the admissibility of the records in question. He relied upon the testimony of his mother and grandmother in order to recover, which testimony each admitted was contrary to and directly opposite to the testimony given in Gertrude’s suit. They sought to explain this error by showing that they learned after the former trial, and from a man who died prior to the trial of this case, facts which caused them to know that their testimony given on the former trial was incorrect. This was a plausible explanation, which appellee was entitled to refute by facts tending to show other motives or reasons why they changed their testimony. The record and decisions in the former case, holding that Gertrude could not recover the property under their former testimony, were clearly admissible as matters showing the motive for changing their testimony and as affecting the credibility of these witnesses, all of which were matters for the jurors to pass upon in determining the issues submitted to them.

Appellant contends by Point Six that the court erred in admitting in evidence certain testimony of Lillian Caldwell, a witness for appellee. She testified as follows:

“I know Mrs. Gertrude Franzetti and her record. I have seen Gertrude Fran-zetti at Angelo’s home, not once but many times. My house is just across the street from Mrs. Franzetti’s house, that street would be 40 or SO feet wide. I have seen Gertrude at Angelo’s house, before he died and after. 'I could hear what was said as plain as I hear you. The first visit she ever made out there was on Sunday between 9:30 and 10:00. I was standing on my front porch watering the flowers and' I saw a car drive in the driveway. I didn’t pay any attention until I saw a man’s shirt and she kept throwing things out of the automobile ; the little boy was small and he was running and picking up things she threw out. Finally Louis showed up when he got on the runningboard of the car and he said, ‘No, no, don’t throw my things out.’ There was some man in the car with her, with this woman, Mrs. Gertrude Fran-zetti. Louis came from around by the big oak tree. She used cursewords on him, she has the worst tongue I ever heard in my life. Everyone could hear what she said. That was on Sunday morning. She (stayed) until Joe came from the store and old man Franzetti came. He asked her to get out of the yard, not to raise such excitement. He said, T never had anything like this happen before at my home.’ She cursed him and called him a damned nigger-lover, that woman. There was somebody with her, he got out of the car. Joe made them get out of the yard.

“Oh, Lord, I couldn’t begin to name the number of times I saw her around there after that time. I have known her to come at 8:00 o’clock and sit down on the back steps and cuss. She and Louis would fight awhile; if anybody came out she would cuss them. That was at 8:00 at night and she would stay until they got officers to put her out; they had to get officers.

“Those things occurred while Mr.. Fran-zetti was alive and they occurred frequently and I saw and heard them from my residence.”

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174 S.W.2d 65, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franzetti-v-franzetti-texapp-1943.