Gray v. Thomas

18 S.W. 721, 83 Tex. 246, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 726
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1892
DocketNo. 3335.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 18 S.W. 721 (Gray v. Thomas) 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
Gray v. Thomas, 18 S.W. 721, 83 Tex. 246, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 726 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.

The appellee brought this suit against appellant Gray to recover a sum of money due by a promissory note which was alleged to be lost, and to enforce a vendor’s lien upon a tract of land for the purchase money of which the note was given. The note was payable to George Thomas, formerly the husband of the plaintiff, but who was dead at the time the suit was brought. She alleged that the land for the purchase of which the note was given was the community of herself and her deceased husband, and that he died without issue, leaving her the sole heir of his share of the common estate.

The defendant pleaded a general- denial only. But appellant Clara Adams, joined by her husband, filed a petition in intervention, claiming to be entitled to the proceeds of the note, and praying judgment accordingly.

A demurrer to the petition in intervention was sustained, and intervenor having declined, to amend she was dismissed from the suit. Upon *249 the trial there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff as prayed for in her petition. The defendant and the intervenors have both appealed.

• During the progress of the trial the plaintiff, being upon the stand as a witness, was asked by her counsel the question, “Is the note sued upon lost?” and 1,hereupon the defendant objected to her answering the question, upon the ground that no affidavit of loss had been filed. •The court sustained the objection, but permitted such affidavit to be then filed and the question to be answered. There was no error in the court’s ruling prejudicial to the defendant. Before the passage of the statute which allows parties to testify, when it became necessary to prove a lost instrument by secondary evidence, the practice was to permit the party to file an affidavit of the loss addressed to the court, as a predicate to the introduction of evidence of its execution and contents. This was a privilege extended to a party who sought to establish a lost writing, and grew out of the necessity of the case. But since parties are now permitted to testify, we are at a loss to conceive of any reason why they should not be allowed to give testimony of the fact, instead of filing an ex parte affidavit. Such a practice gives the opposite party the opportunity of cross-examination, and he has no grounds of complaint. That the court should have permitted the plaintiff to testify in the first instance without filing the affidavit is not an open question in this court. Blanton v. Ray, 66 Texas, 61. But when the party elects to file an affidavit, we understand it to be a proper practice to permit it to be presented on the trial immediately before he offers his proof of the execution and contents of the instrument.

• But it is also complained that the testimony was not sufficient to show the loss of the note. The plaintiff, speaking of her husband, testified as follows: “He kept his papers over there in Orange County at our house in a trunk, and on Sunday morning after his death, in company with a large number of others, I went over to the house and found his papers scattered all around over the house. I got a man by the name of James Boland, who could read and write, to help me look for the note, but we could not find it. I can not read and write, but this man James Boland could do so. I have never been able to find the note, and have never seen it since the Thursday before George Thomas’ death. * * * I saw the note in George Thomas’ possession and among his papers just two days before he was killed. The last time I saw the note it was in his possession.”

We think this evidence sufficient to support the court’s ruling, and to admit secondary evidence of the contents of the note.

It is also insisted that the court erred in its charge to the jury with respect to the interest upon the note. It appeared that the note drew interest frorii August 22,1887, and that on June 16,1888, the defendant paid one Vestal the sum of $259.20 due upon a note executed by George *250 Thomas to him for the purchase money of the land. The plaintiff substantially admitted this credit. The defendant testified, that he had been ready to pay the note, but had not done so because of its loss. The court in effect instructed the jury to calculate the interest on the note from August 22,1887, to August 22,1888 (the day of its maturity), and to subtract from the sum the amount paid to Vestal, and to give judgment for the balance with interest thereon from the date of the service of citation to the day of the trial. The defendant pleaded no fact which entitled him to any deduction of interest between the time of the maturity of the note and the service of the citation, and the plaintiff under the pleading was entitled to more interest than she recovered. Hence the defendant can not complain of the result. We think, however, the court should have instructed the jury to add the interest on the note up to the date of the payment to Vestal, to subtract from the sum the amount of the payment, and to allow interest on the balance to the date of the'trial. It was admitted that defendant paid the note held by Vestal with the consent of plaintiff, and therefore the interest should have been calculated in the same manner as if the note was past due on the day of that payment.

The appellant Clara Adams, the intervenor in the court below, assigns as error the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to her petition in intervention. The allegations in the pleading in question are in substance as follows: That intervenor Clara Adams and George Thomas, the payee of the note in suit, were at one time husband and wife, and that during the existence of that relation they acquired as common property the land for the purchase money of which that note was given; that Thomas, her said husband, having become unfaithful to her and having treated her cruelly, she brought suit against him for divorce and for the division of their property; that while said suit was pending, in order to defraud her of her rights in their community property he professed repentance and proposed a reconciliation, which was accepted; that she thereupon dismissed her suit; that after the suit was dismissed he conveyed the land for which the note was given, as well as other lands belonging to the community estate, to a third party without consideration, with the understanding that they were to be re-conveyed to him after a divorce should be decreed between him and his wife, now the intervenor Clara; that immediately thereafter he renewed his unfaithful and cruel conduct, so that she again brought suit and procured a divorce dissolving the bonds of matrimony between them; and that subsequently thereto he married the plaintiff and procured the lands to be reconveyed to him. The intervenor also alleged, that the lands were their common property, and were conveyed by Thomas for the purpose of defrauding her of her rights therein, and that at the time she obtained the decree of divorce she was ignorant of *251 the fact that the lands had been conveyed away in trust, and did not make the discovery until a short time before this suit was brought.

From the brief of counsel, we infer that the demurrer to the petition in intervention was argued and decided in the court below upon the theory that it appeared from its allegations that the rights of George Thomas and of intervenor in their community property had been determined in the decree of divorce.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.W. 721, 83 Tex. 246, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-thomas-tex-1892.