Grant v. Grant

286 S.W. 647, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 723
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1926
DocketNo. 11679.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 647 (Grant v. Grant) 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
Grant v. Grant, 286 S.W. 647, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 723 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Ninety-Sixth district court, denying appellant’s application for the appointment of a receiver, the issuance of a temporary writ of injunction, and an accounting. So far as we deem it necessary to state, the case made by appellant’s application is one in which it appears that appellant, on the 25th day of August, 1925, procured a divorce from appellee, dissolving a common-law marriage alleged to have theretofore existed. The decree approved an agreement made between the parties, settling appellant’s alleged rights to community property. There was no appeal from this judgment, but some time later the present suit was instituted to set aside the decree, in so far as it fixed appellant’s right to any community property, on the ground that she had been induced to execute the agreement relating thereto by appellee’s false and fraudulent representations of the extent and value of the property, and she prayed for the appointment of a receiver, an accounting, and the issuance of a writ of injunction restraining appellee from making any disposition of the property. A full hearing was had, after which appellant’s application was denied, and this appeal prosecuted.

The ground upon which the court based the denial of appellant’s application is thus stated in the judgment, to wit:

“The court therefore concludes that the plaintiff, Mrs. Erma Grace Grant, is precluded, both in law and in equity, to further maintain this cause of action by virtue of the following provisions of said contract of agreement by plaintiff and defendant: ‘This agreement is made by each of said parties, upon their own responsibility, and upon, advice of their respective counsel, and not upon the representation made by the other1 — but would resolve the other facts in favor of plaintiff for the purpose of this hearing only.”

The only contention in behalf of appellant is to the effect that the quoted clause of the agreement does not sustain the judgment, the court having found all other facts in appellant’s favor. In support of the contention stated, counsel for appellant cites the very interesting case of Bridger v. Goldsmith, 143 N. Y. 424, 38 N. E. 458, by the Court of Appeals of New York, and decisions of several other states approving the New York decision. We do not want to be understood as disapproving the decision in the case of Bridger v. Goldsmith, when applied to a state of circumstances such as there shown; but every case must be determined upon its own peculiar facts, and we think that the case before us is distinguishable from the one from New York, so strongly relied upon.

We know of no reason why a clause of an agreement, such as is under consideration, should not be read and construed in the light of all attending circumstances. In the New York case the contract, which contained a clause similar to the one quoted from the court’s judgment herein, was one between two private persons, containing the terms of a purchase and sale of a certain business, fixtures, and other property. It appears without dispute that its execution had been induced by the fraudulent acts and representa *649 tions of the defendant, because of which the entire contract was set aside, the court ruling that the clause of the contract mentioned did not estop the plaintiff from showing the fraud. In the case before us there is no specific finding of fraud.' It is true the judgment recites that the court “would resolve the other facts in favor of the plaintiff for the purposes of this hearing only,” but this is very indefinite. We have no means of knowing what the court “would” have found, in the absence of the provision of the contract held by the court to be conclusive, nor can we know what weight was given by the court to the “other facts” referred to in construing and giving effect to the clause of the contract under consideration. The rules contemplate that a trial court’s conclusions or findings, when he makes them, shall show, not only the facts found, but also their legal effect, and it is certain in this case that there is no finding of the legal effect of the facts, so as to enable this court to determine whether the court’s conclusions are sustainable in law.

In this case the pleadings and evidence present a number of material questions, besides the legal effect of the clause quoted in the judgment as its basis. As illustrating this, the record discloses that appellant’s suit for divorce against appellee was instituted on the 15th day of July, 1925, in which she alleged the existence of a common-law marriage, and that during its continuance appel-lee had accumulated property of the value of .$50,000; the description of which, so far as she was able to give, being substantially the same as given in the present suit, except that in the present suit she alleged its value as $100,000. In the divorce suit, as in this, she prayed for an appointment of a receiver, an accounting, and for the issuance of a writ of injunction to prevent appellee’s improper disposal of the same. Appellee pleaded, among other things, that the property referred to in the plaintiff’s petition was not community property, but belonged to him alone.

A little later, pending, the suit, there was a written agreement entered into between the parties, in which there was no admission on defendant’s part of the existence of the common-law marriage, but in settlement of the plaintiff’s claim appellee agreed that she might have, under the terms of the agreement, some $5,000 in money. This agreement was executed on July 31, 1925, some 16 days after appellant had instituted her suit, and the trial upon her petition for divorce did not occur, or at least the final decree was not entered, until the 28th day of August, 1925, 2S days after the execution of the written agreement. No facts are relied upon, as we interpret the record, as showing that the agreement was fraudulently procured, except that it is alleged that appellee fraudulently represented the property to be his own, and not community property. There was no effort on appellant’s part, during the term of the court at which the decree of divorce was granted, to set the decree aside, and she accepted and received the amount specified in the agreement in settlement of their controversy over the property. In the present petition appellant alleges, in substance, that she did not ascertain the fraudulent representations. of appellee as to the character and extent of the property until after the decree of divorce, when appellee informed her to the effect that he had overreached her in this respect. Whereupon the present suit was later instituted.

It is strongly urged in behalf of appel-lee in the present suit that appellant had been appellee’s stenographer, was necessarily acquainted with his business, that she could not and was not in fact deceived, and in fact received no information relating to the matter not substantially known to her and asserted by appellee prior to the decree of divorce, and that hence her present claim must be denied because of a want of diligence on her part, and a want of a sufficient showing of reliance upon the asserted misrepresentations of appellee. There is no finding on the part of the trial court below upon these issues. We cannot say whether the trial court would or would not have found against appellant thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 647, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-grant-texapp-1926.