Freeman v. Pierce

250 S.W. 778
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1922
DocketNo. 8923.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 778 (Freeman v. Pierce) 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
Freeman v. Pierce, 250 S.W. 778 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

On February 4, 1882, Gus Pierce and Mary Carey were married in Limestone county, Tex. A few months later a separation took place which became permanent, the parties never seeing or speaking to each other thereafter. On November 7, 1882, their child, Ernest Pierce, was born. On June 11, 1883, J. M. Berry deeded to Gus Pierce the 93 3/4 acres of land in controversy herein, the deed being filed and recorded April 14, 1886. The consideration for the transfer was $350 cash, being money earned by Gus Pierce while working at the carpenter's trade during the existence of the marriage relation but subsequent to the separation. In 1887 Mary Carey Pierce obtained a divorce from Gus Pierce, but there were no property rights set up or in any way involved in the divorce proceeding. Thereafter, in 1889, Mary Carey Pierce died intestate, leaving Ernest Pierce as her sole heir and who became of age on November 7, 1903. From time to time Gus Pierce had borrowed money, giving deeds of trust on the land as security, and on one occasion leased it and apportioned the money received therefrom among his children by other wives, allotting to Ernest Pierce his proportionate part also. On November 22, 1920, Gus Pierce sold the land to W. D. Freeman, H. W. Freeman, and H. C. Freeman, appellants herein, and kept the entire purchase price therefor after paying off the debts against the property. On January 16, 1922, the Freemans leased 30 acres of this land to the Kirby Petroleum Company, also appellants, conveying to them seven-sixteenths of the oil and gas therein. The latter had drilled several large producing oil wells thereon, and is now engaged in drilling a great many more. Shortly there after Ernest Pierce and his half brother and sister brought suit against appellants and others in the district court of Limestone county, Tex., at Groesbeck, in trespass to try title to the land, claiming an undivided one-half interest therein as the heir at law of his mother, Mary Carey Pierce. He also prayed for the appointment of a receiver to take active charge and control of the property involved during the pendency of the suit. Ben F. Cone and A. B. Rennolds intervened, each claiming an interest by purchase from Ernest Pierce. The case has not been tried on its merits, but on hearing of the application for a receiver the court was of the opinion that only Ernest Pierce and the two interveners had probable grounds for recovery, and that the property was in danger of being lost, removed, and materially injured and, accordingly, granted the application and appointed T. Y. Pickett receiver on May 23, 1922.

On May 15, 1922, while the application was being heard and appellees' attorney was actually engaged in presenting the case, one of the Freemans and his attorney, B. J. Stubbs, went to the sanitarium at Carlsbad, Tex., where Ernest Pierce was fatally ill with consumption, and procured from him a deed to the Freemans covering his interest in the property, paying a $10,000 *Page 780 consideration therefor. He appeared in court on a stretcher shortly thereafter and testified that the deed had been given under representations that his lawyer had sold him out, that his brothers and sister had compromised the case for $10 each, and unless he took what was offered him for the land, which they testified was full value therefor, he would get nothing. He tendered the money back and asked for cancellation of the deed. A few days later, and prior to May 27, 1922, he died, and his heirs became parties in his stead. From the order of the court appointing the receiver, appellants appeal to this court.

Under Revised Statutes, art. 2128:

"Receivers may be appointed by any judge of a court of competent jurisdiction in this state, in the following cases [among others]: In any action * * * between partners or others jointly owning or interested in any property or fund, on application of the plaintiff or any party whose right to or interest in the property or fund or the proceeds thereof is probable, and where it is shown that the property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed or materially injured."

If the heirs and assigns of appellee Ernest Pierce have a probable interest in the subject-matter of this suit, and if such property is in danger of being lost, removed, or materially injured, their right to a receiver for its preservation pendente lite is unquestioned. But, if these two conditions do not exist, the receivership should be vacated.

To reach a proper conclusion, it will be necessary to consider the legal effect of the status of the parties involved at the various stages in the history of the case just outlined. The property was originally purchased by Gus Pierce from J. M. Berry, after the former's marriage to Mary Carey, after the birth of Ernest Pierce, and prior to the granting of the divorce. Under Revised Statutes, art. 4622:

"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. * * *"

As the funds which purchased the land were earned during such coverture by the husband working at his carpenter's trade, the real estate in which they were invested became community. That this is the correct status of the property is also declared by Judge Ocie Speer in section 514 of his "Law of Marital Relations," which reads:

"The community estate is a statutory estate, dependent wholly upon the existence of the marriage of which it is an incident. It is peculiarly a child of the marital union. It begins at the altar and ends at the grave, unless sooner terminated by judicial decree. It continues during the marriage, regardless of the living apart of the spouses, and regardless of the proportionate contributions of the respective partners. All the earnings or acquisitions of either, not separate under the statute, become a part of the community fund. Like the status of the parties, the community estate as such is terminated only upon dissolution of the marriage by death or divorce." Goode v. Jasper, 71 Tex. 48, 9 S.W. 132.

When the marriage relation was dissolved by the divorce of Mary Carey Pierce from Gus Pierce, the property was not disposed of or even involved. Therefore, under the law, it passed from the status of community property into a joint estate of Gus Pierce and Mary Carey Pierce as tenants thereof in common. The wife's equitable title to a one-half interest was not affected by the husband placing the legal title to the entire interest in his own name. The same section of Speer's "Law of Marital Relations" defines the status of the property on such date in the following language:

"After dissolution of the marriage there can be no further community between the parties. If the parties are divorced they become tenants in common in the former community, in the absence of a judicial partition, and are clothed with absolute control and disposition of their separate property. The wife thereafter deals with such property as one of the owners, not as agent or representative of the community or of the husband."

To the same effect are the holdings in Williamson et ux. v. Gore et al. (Tex. Civ. App.) 73 S.W. 563; Goode v. Jasper, supra; Wingo v. Rudder,103 Tex. 150, 124 S.W. 899.

The one-half interest of Mary Carey Pierce in this property, originally community, afterwards separate in cotenancy, passed by inheritance on her death intestate to her son and only heir, Ernest Pierce. Revised Statutes, art. 2461.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-pierce-texapp-1922.