Griffin v. McKinney

62 S.W. 78, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 78 (Griffin v. McKinney) 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
Griffin v. McKinney, 62 S.W. 78, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 462 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

This was an action for the partition of land alleged to belong to the community estate of F. M. Griffin and his deceased wife, S. J. Griffin, brought by a married daughter, Jessie McKinney, joined by her husband. The other children were made parties defendant, as follows: Katie Barnes, a feme sole, and Johnnie, Kora, Janie, Jim, Ed and Maggie Griffin, who were minors and for whom F. E. Wilcox was appointed guardian ad litem by the court. The petition described six tracts of land which were alleged to belong to the community estate of the appellant, F. M. Griffin, and his deceased wife, S. J. Griffin, and to be subject to partition. It was alleged that the homestead was not included in the tracts described, and that it consisted of another and different tract situated in the town of McKinney upon which the appellant then resided. Certain personal property was described in the petition, but as there is no controversy about it, no further notice will be taken thereof. The defendants, Katie Barnes and the minor children by their special guardian, adopted the pleadings of the plaintiff, and joined in her prayer for a partition of the property. After demurring to the pleadings, the appellant denied generally all the allegations in the petition and in the answers of Katie Barnes and the minor children, and especially answered setting up the right to have a homestead of 200 acres set apart to him, consisting of the tract of 160 acres and 40 acres of the adjoining land; and that the east half of lot 234, block 67, in the town of McKinney was his separate property. Trial was had before the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment in favor of the heirs of S.'J. Griffin, decreeing a partition of all the land described in the petition, except the homestead in the town of McKinney.

As shown by a bill of exception reserved to the action of the court *434 during the trial, on Monday, April 9, 1900, and while the appellant was being examined as a witness by counsel for the plaintiff, he said that he owned the fifth and sixth tracts of land described in the petition before he came to Texas, and while he lived in the State of Georgia, and afterwards, on examination in his own behalf, he further said that he bought said land while he resided in Fulton County, Georgia, and that all the money used in paying for' it he had brought with him when he moved to Texas, and that such money was earned by him while he resided in Georgia and during his marriage with his deceased wife. That the second tract was bought in exchange for another tract for which he paid also with money acquired in Georgia during the marriage and brought with him to Texas. The plaintiff objected to the evidence because the defendant had not pleaded that the land was his separate property, and the objection was overruled, and after hearing other evidence in the cause the court postponed further hearing until Saturday, April 14th, to enable the defendant to produce evidence of the law of the State of Georgia to show whether or not the money brought from Georgia and invested in the land was the separate property of the said F. M. Griffin. When the case was again called on Saturday, April 14th, one of the counsel for the defendant stated to the court that he had visited the city of Dallas, but had been unable to procure an authenticated copy of the laws of Georgia, but after diligent search.had been able to find only one copy of the laws of said State, and that was an unofficial ■copy; that counsel had telephoned to the city of Sherman and caused diligent search to be made there, but no copy could be found in that city. Whereupon counsel asked for further time, but the plaintiff objected and argued to the court that the defendant should not be permitted to give said laws in evidence for the reason that he had not pleaded the same in his answer. The court thereupon announced that he had changed his opinion as to the admissibility of the laws, and held that, the same would not be admitted because they had not been pleaded. Thereupon defendant’s counsel stated to the court that the defendant, F. M- Griffin, had told them that said land was community property, and for that reason they had not pleaded specially that it was his separate property; and further, that the reason why the defendant stated to them that said land was the community property of himself and his deceased wife was that he supposed and believed that all property acquired during their marriage was community property, without regard to the funds paid for the same. Counsel further stated that the first time they had any knowledge, intimation, or belief that said land was the- separate property of the said F. M. Griffin was during his examination upon the trial by plaintiff’s counsel. As soon as the court announced his ruling that the defendant would not be permitted to offer in evidence the laws of the State of Georgia, counsel asked permission of the court to withdraw their announcement of ready for trial and postpone the cause, in order that they might amend their pleadings and procure an authenticated copy of said laws, stating to the court the dili *435 gence they had used to procure the same as above set out; and' that •from the unofficial copy which they had seen it was their opinion that the money invested in said land was the separate property of the said F. M. Griffin. Thereupon the court stated that the trial had progressed too far for a postponement of the same, and overruled the motion and proceeded to render final judgment as above stated.

Appellant filed a motion for new trial, and on April 26, 1900, an amended motion for a new trial. The grounds for a new trial set up iñ the motion were (1) that the court had erred in decreeing the partition of the 160-acre tract, because it was the homestead of the defendant; and (2) that the court erred in not permitting the defendant to withdraw his announcement of ready for trial in order that he might amend his pleadings and procure an authenticated copy of the laws of Georgia, as would more fully appear from the bill of exceptions taken to-the ruling of the court and to exhibits attached to the motion. The , exhibits attached were the affidavits of the following parties: “A”. T. F. Mangum, one of defendant’s counsel, showing his diligence to procure a copy of the laws, etc., and that he did not know and had no knowledge that any of the land mentioned was the separate property of F. M. Griffin until it was developed on the trial of the case. "B”. M. G. Abernathy, a member of the firm of Abernathy & Mangum, counsel for appellant, that he had no such knowledge until developed as above stated. "C”. F. M. Griffin, that while he stated to his counsel that the land was community property, he did so because it was his opinion of the law that being bought during the marriage made it such; and that if he had known that it was his separate property, he would have claimed it. “D”. Certificate of the clerk of the county court showing that on the margin of the deed records there appeared as to the tract of 45.66 acres receipt of payment of all purchase money by "note or otherwise, on this 7th day of1 April, 1883and as to the 85.54-acre tract receipt of payment of notes mentioned in the deed and release of interest in land, dated October 17, 1882. "F” and "G”. Letters of attorneys in Georgia with reference to the procuring and forwarding of a "Code for Georgia of 1882.” The motion for a new trial stated that said code had been received, and was then "offered in evidence, showing that the money which the said F. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 78, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 432, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-mckinney-texapp-1901.