Gibbs v. Mayes

2 Posey 215, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 264
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Posey 215 (Gibbs v. Mayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. Mayes, 2 Posey 215, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 264 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

The first objection urged by appellants in their brief is that the general demurrer should have been sustained as against Mrs. Manning’s claim of homestead, and the reasons assigned are: 1. It was too vague. 2. It does not aver what sale was made without her consent and against her will, nor by or to whom the homestead was sold, nor whether it was a homestead in the city or the country. 3. Whether she claimed land or money. 4. It does not identify the land in any way. 5. That while alleging that the deed includes the homestead, and that it was sold without her consent and against her will, she does not aver that she did not sign the deed or that she did not acknowledge it.

A statement of what Mrs. Manning did allege will show that these objections are untenable. -

1. She, with her co-plaintiffs, avers the conveyance to Gibbs, in July, 1863, by Eeuben Manning, of about one thousand six hundred and ninety-three acres of land in one body, and the land is fully described in the deed and the boundaries of it set out by defendants.

2. She alleges “that the homestead of -herself and the said Eeuben Manning, Sr., was and is included in the said deed of conveyance from said Manning to said Gibbs, it being part of the land described in said deed, and that said homestead was sold without her consent and against her will,” and she prays that her homstead right in and to the said premises may be restored and set apart to her, and for other relief, etc.. We think this a sufficient statement of her claim, and we confess we do not perceive how, -without incommendable prolixity, it could be made more ample. That it was necessary for her to allege more specifically what sale was made, or that she did not sign the deed, or that the land was not a town lot, or money, we do not think can be seriously urged.

There can be no more specific description of the home[217]*217stead, when it is situated upon a larger tract of land than two hundred acres, than that embraced in the term homestead, unless indeed it has been actually laid off and surveyed. The law defines what it is. It is the residence of a family, and includes the house which shelters them, and in the country embraces, if the head of the family has it, two hundred acres of land, and no more.

The case of Anderson v. McKay is cited as an instance of defective allegation in showing “ how and when the property was destined for a homestead.” In that case there had been no actual residence upon the land, and it has, manifestly, no application to the present case.

The second objection is that the special demurrer should have been sustained. It went to the misjoinder of parties and actions or multifarious character of suit. The suit, when brought, was to set aside a conveyance made by Keuben Manning to Jasper Gibbs of land and other property on the alleged ground of fraud, undue influence, old age and imposition.

Manifestly his widow and heirs were necessary parties to that suit. But the appellant’s counsel insist that, a whether their objection would have been good as the pleadings stood previous to sustaining his special demurrer, and striking out the prayer for a rescission of the contract, it was certainly good after that ruling was made.” This is as much as to say that while the pleadings might not, as they first stood, have been obnoxious to the objection of multifariousness, yet they were clearly so when the greater part of the charges and allegations and causes of action stated in them were stricken out.

The result of the ruling of the court upon the demurrers was that the case then stood for trial as one of the Manning’s heirs against Gibbs and Halliday for the recovery of the community interest of Manning’s first wife in the property conveyed by Manning to Gibbs, and of Mrs. Elizabeth Manning for the recovery and setting apart to her of the homestead in the land in controversy. That she had a right [218]*218in some form to assert her claim in this suit will not be denied. Therfe is no exception to the misjoinder of parties plaintiff. If it should be the consequence of the appellant’s demurrer that she was no longer a proper party plaintiff, yet surely she would have the right to intervene in the suit for the assertion of her homestead rights, and we can see no necessity, and less propriety, in dismissing her at one door when she has an unquestionable right to demand admittance at another. In Clegg v. Varnell, Chief Justice Hemphill says that “ there is not an inflexible rule as to what constitutes multifariousness. Each case must be governed by its own circumstances, and whether multifarious or not must be left to the sound discretion of the court.” In this case the result shows that no injury has resulted to the appellant from the action of the court upon his exceptions, and he has, therefore, no just cause of complaint.

The third objection of appellant is that the verdict is not warranted by the pleadings. What we have said upon appellant’s exceptions to the allegations of- Mrs. Manning is applicable to this objection. Her allegations were, we think, sufficiently specific; and if they were not, if is one.of the properties of the verdict that “ it cures all defects, imperfections or omissions in the petition or statement of the cause of action, -whether of substance or of form, if the issues joined be such as require proof of the facts imperfectly stated or omitted, though it will not cure or aid a statement of a defective cause of action.” Dewitt v. Miller, 9 Tex., 246; 1 Chit. Plead., 712, 722 ; 22 Tex., 409; 2 Tex., 209.

If there were not in her petition a sufficient description of the homestead place she claimed, it is not an objection to the verdict that it supplies the omission. We concur in the statement of appellant’s counsel, “ a plaintiff can get all he claims in his pleadings, and he can get no more.” He can get what he claims, and nothing else. Here she claims a homestead out of some of the lands in controversy, and all that the jury could respond was, “We give you a home[219]*219stead out of the lands.” And this we think is precisely what the jury have done, and no more. The verdict awards her the Heuben Manning homestead, which the law says is the place of his domicile, and contains two hundred acres of land; and, for further identification, the jury says that Jasper Gibbs now resides on it. This verdict is not only correct, but the only verdict which the jury could render, if satisfied that Mrs. Manning and her deceased husband had a homestead upon the place to which she was now entitled.

It is almost a contradiction in terms to say that the jury could have given her two hundred acres of land anywhere — they could only award her the homestead.

The remaining objections to be considered go to the charges of the court. The charges given and refused, in the absence of a statement of facts or bill of exceptions, are not ordinarily the subject of revision upon appeal, as said by Judge Bell in Bast v. Alford, 22 Tex., 399. The charge of the court appears to be correct, and if it did not so appear, it is the well-established rule of this court that the charge of the judge below will not be revised unless there be a statement of facts in the record; except in the case where the pleadings contain matter which shows that the charge is necessarily erroneous.

And in McMullen v. Kelso, 4 Tex., 237, Hemphill, C. J., says: “ There being no facts sent up wfith the record, it will be unnecessary to examine further the above instruction or the one which was asked and refused.

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257 S.W. 228 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Posey 215, 1880 Tex. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-mayes-texcommnapp-1880.