Grigsby v. Reib

139 S.W. 1027, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 1027 (Grigsby v. Reib) 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
Grigsby v. Reib, 139 S.W. 1027, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1245 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This suit was instituted by the plaintiff in error, Jessie Stallcup Grigs-by, who will hereafter be called “plaintiff,” against Eliza J. Reib, defendant in error, who will hereafter be referred to as “defendant,” and her late husband, J. H. Reib, to recover a very large amount of real and personal property which is described in plaintiff’s petition. After the institution of the suit, the defendant, Eliza J. Reib, was divorced from her husband, J. H. Reib, and he having no interest in the property, and claiming none, the case was dismissed as to him. The petition alleges, in substance, that the plaintiff is the surviving wife of G. M. D. Grigsby, deceased; that the said Grigsby died in July, 1906; that the property sued for and described in plaintiff’s petition was the common property of the said G. M. D. Grigsby and plaintiff; that the defendant, without right and contrary to law, had taken possession of said property, which consisted principally of money, bank stock, and lands of probable value of $500,000, and had converted and was converting the same to her own use and benefit; that the defendant, although often requested, had failed and refused to deliver any part or portion of said property to the plaintiff, to her damage $500,000. The petition further alleged that the defendant had in her possession all the paper evidences of title to’ said property and had in her possession, in addition to the property specifically described in the petition, $100,000 in money owned by the said G. M. D. Grigsby, which she, the defendant, was concealing from the plaintiff. The prayer of the petition is that plaintiff recover of and from the defendant the title and possession of all of said property; that for such of said property as may have been converted by defendant and placed beyond the reach of the plaintiff plaintiff have Judgment for the value thereof. The defendant answered by general and special demurrers, a general denial, and special pleas, which need not be stated, as a knowledge of them is not necessary to an understanding of the opinion. The controlling issue in the case was whether the plaintiff and the said Grigsby became husband and wifé in April, 1905, by mutual agreement. The case was tried before a jury and resulted in the following verdict being returned: “We, the jury, find that plaintiff was not the common-law wife of G. M. D. Grigsby, deceased, and we find for the defendant, Eliza J. Reib. [Signed] R. G. Gaines, Foreman.”

[1] The first assignment of error is, in substance, that the verdict of the jury is ■without any evidence to support it, for that it was shown by the undisputed evidence that the plaintiff on or about the 10th day of April, 1905, made and entered into a valid contract of marriage with the deceased, G.’ M. D. Grigsby, and that they were thenceforth man and wife until the date of the death of the said Grigsby. In this view of the evidence we do not concur. On the contrary, we think the evidence amply sufficient to authorize and sustain the verdict of the jury. The plaintiff testified that she was first married to one Joseph Graham; that after his death she married W. K. Stallcup, lived with him about one year; that she did not know what became of him; that she was divorced from him in 1900 in East St. Louis; that she came to Dallas in 1901, as a commercial traveler selling Madam Stanley’s face goods; that she met G. M. D. Grigsby at the Oriental Hotel; that she had never known Grigsby before meeting him at the Oriental Hotel; that Grigsby represented himself to be a single man; that they had a mutual agreement *1029 that they were husband and wife, and went into the rooming house business; that she afterwards discovered that Grigsby was a married man at that time and ceased her relations with him until after the death of his wife; that on or about the 10th day of April, 1905, she and the deceased, Grigs-by, “were married by mutual agreement and lived together as husband and wife after that until his death.” But from other testimony adduced the jury was clearly warranted in concluding that no such marriage, or contract of marriage, was entered into. The preponderance and weight of the testimony establishes that plaintiff, at and after the date of the marriage, asserted and claimed by her, was a prostitute and the keeper of a notorious assignation house; that in connection with and at her assignation house, which she says was the home of herself and Grigsby, she sold, under a federal license alone, beer and wine; that, during the time she claims to have been the lawful wife of G. M. D. Grigsby under the marriage agreement testified to by her, she retained the name of a former husband, Stallcup; that she habitually had promiscuous sexual intercourse with other men; that she did not know the full name of the said Grigsby; that she transacted business, borrowed money, made sales and conveyances of property in the name of Mrs. Jessie Stallcup, stating at the time that she had been divorced from her husband and had not married again; that she made bank deposits, contracts with the telephone company, and, in fact, transacted all of her business under the name of Jessie Stallcup. It further appears that the said Grigsby, for some time prior to the date of the marriage contract asserted by plaintiff, and practically up to the time of his death, was in very ill health, much of the time under the care of physicians and in sanitariums or traveling in search of health; that very shortly after entering into the contract of marriage claimed by plaintiff G. M. 1>. Grigsby took a trip to Europe in search of health; that, notwithstanding he was gone several months, no letters passed between him. and plaintiff ; that, as a result of disease with which he was then suffering, Grigsby died at the house of his mother-in-law at Jefferson, Tex., in June, 1906; that plaintiff did not attend his funeral or communicate with any member of his family with reference to his death; that she did not disclose her claim of marriage to Grigsby until more than a year after his death, the probate of his will, and the granting of administration upon his estate.

On the issue of plaintiff’s alleged marriage to Grigsby, and as tending to show her true character, we quote from her own testimony as follows: “I had been married twice before. I knew there was usually a little ceremony that was performed when people became man and wife, but I never had been successful that way, and we were satisfied and agreed to become husband and wife. I wanted to try it a new way. I was not acquainted with the Texas rules. We moved there (408 Wood street) to commence relations same as that of man and wife. * * * I sold liquor there under a license, kept few cold bottles in my ice box. When I moved to Wood street to open up there, I took out liquor license from the federal authorities. 'I never did take out a state and county license. I didn’t know but that one license was required. I had no regular price for my liquors. When I found out that Mr. Grigs-by was a married man, I ceased having relations with him. After that I was trying to make a. living for myself off of my house the best way I could. I was a Christian woman. I sold beer and I made some on it. * * * I don’t know who I sold beer to. I don’t know who was in my house. Some were there that I never saw. In the last year or two a great many would just go there with the girls or to see the girls in the girls’ rooms and I would not see them. * * * Those girls, Bosa and Lynnie, the Greek girl I mentioned, would receive company in their own room. Sometimes they would get beer.

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 1027, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grigsby-v-reib-texapp-1911.