Hale v. Realty Acceptance Corp.

122 S.W.2d 334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
DocketNo. 4969.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 334 (Hale v. Realty Acceptance Corp.) 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
Hale v. Realty Acceptance Corp., 122 S.W.2d 334 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This is a suit upon a promissory note in the sum of $280.80, executed by plaintiff in error, Myrtle J. Hale, who is the wife of plaintiff in error, D. J. Hale, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage lien upon a water softening equipment, purchased by her from Brown Brothers, Ltd., a domestic corporation. Plaintiff in error, D. J. Hale, did not sign either the note or chattel mortgage. The note was payable in monthly installments of $7,80 each, the first installment falling due September 20, 1936. They were dated August 3, 1936, and assigned to defendant in error, Realty Acceptance Corporation, by the payee on August 21, 1936, which was prior to the maturity of any of the monthly installments.

The record shows that Myrtle J. Hale was operating a beauty parlor in the town of Weslaco and the water softening equipment was installed in her place of business. Contemporaneously with the order for the equipment, plaintiff in error, Mrs. Fíale, signed and delivered to the agent of Brown Brothers, Ltd., a credit statement in which it was stated that the amount of credit required by her was $262.50. In response to a question included in the statement concerning her social status, the word “widow” was inserted and the statement recited: “I authorize you, or - any financial institution to which you may desire to offer our note - for sale, to obtain such information as you (they)' may require concerning the above statement and agree that it shall remain your (their) property, whether or not my (our) note is finally accepted by you.” When the note and mortgage were assigned and delivered to defendant in error by Brown Brothers, Ltd., they also delivered to it the credit statement above mentioned.

The case was submitted to the court without' the' intervention of a jury and judgment was rendered against Mrs. Hale for the total sum of $361.41, which included the principal and interest due on the note, plus attorneys.’ fees, and the chattel mortgage lien was foreclosed. No personal judgment was rendered against the husband.

In defense of the suit against her, Mrs. Hale pleaded her coverture and consequent incapacity to execute as a binding contract the note and chattel mortgage sued upon.

In reply to the plea of coverture, defendant in error pleaded the terms of the credit statement hereinbefore mentioned, setting up estoppel by reason of the execution of the credit statement by Mrs. Hale; that it was an innocent 'purchaser of the note and mortgage, having purchased the same in due course without notice of any infirmities and' paid a valuable consideration -therefor.

The trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law which are not challenged by plaintiffs in error and the record discloses no request for additional findings. The court found that Mrs. Hale executed the credit statement and delivered .the same to the agent of Brown Brothers, Ltd. for the purpose of procuring credit on the property involved in controversy and that, at the time the credit statement was executed, all of the matters contained therein had been inserted in it, among which was the statement that Mrs. Hale was a widow. He further found that Mrs. Hale • executed the note and mortgage in suit; that the note, chattel mortgage and credit 'statement were presented to defendant in error by Brown Brothers, Ltd.; that defendant in error, in reliance upon the credit statement, purchased the note and mortgage without any knowledge to the contrary, and paid a valuable consideration therefor. He found that the representations as contained in' the- credit- statement were relied upon by defendant in error in purchasing the note and chattel mortgage and that it would not have purchased • the same but *336 for such representations. The court further found that the water softening equipment would not operate as represented by Brown Brothers, Ltd. and its agent, whereupon Mrs. Hale refused to make further payment on the note and tendered the equipment back to Brown Brothers, Ltd.; that at the time of the institution of this suit, the equipment was of no value to Mrs. Hale, but did have a market value not exceeding $250. He, further found that at the time she executed the note and mortgage,,Mrs. Hale was a married woman, the wife of plaintiff in error, D. J. Hale.

Based upon the foregoing findings of fact, the court concluded as a matter of law that plaintiff in error, Myrtle J. Hale, was estopped to deny the fact that she was a widow when the credit statement, note and mortgage were executed, and that she could not, therefore, avoid personal liability on the note.

The case is presented in this court upon three propositions of law which, in various ways, present the contention that Mrs. Hale, under the circumstances of the case, and being, as a matter of fact, under the disabilities of coverture, was not, under the law, estopped to plead coverture.

The record shows that E. R. Bradfield was the agent of Brown Brothers, Ltd., and his negotiations with Mrs. Hale for the sale to her of the water softening equipment extended over a period of some two weeks or more, during which time he became acquainted with her social status and learned she was a married woman. It. is further shown that, when the statement was prepared, Bradfield was in Mrs. Hale’s place of business and that she was busily engaged with a customer. Notwithstanding she was so engaged, Bradfield propounded a number of questions to her and wrote her answers upon the statement. Mrs., Hale testified positively that she was not asked by Bradfield if she were a married woman and that she did not authorize him to insert the answer to the question concerning her social status to the effect that she was a widow. She said she signed the statement at his request, without reading it, and did not know it contained a representation that she was' not a married woman.

At common law, a married woman’s contract was void. She was not subject to the rules governing estoppel, in ordinary cases.but, as..stated.by Judge,Speer, .ijn his valuable treatise on the Law of Marital Rights in Texas, 3rd Ed., par. 271: “A recognition of her separate identity as an individual capable of contracting, suing and being sued, has necessitated a further recognition of her power to bind herself by her acts and conduct in numerous instances.”

It is held by our courts that persons dealing with married women in ordinary circumstances and with negotiable paper executed by them, must take notice of the coverture and the existence or want of existence of circumstances and facts that would authorize them to execute contracts or bind themselves by written instruments. Johnson et al. v. Scott, Tex.Civ.App., 208 S.W. 671.

In view of the rule thus announced, it follows that even a bona fide purchaser of her negotiable note is in no better position than the payee. Haas et al. v. American Nat. Bank, 42 Tex.Civ.App. 167, 94 S.W. 439.

As a consequence of this trend of construction adopted by our courts, it follows that' the only defense to a plea of coverture is an allegation of capacity of a married woman to bind herself by the instrument involved,' or estoppel. We 'are thus brought to the controlling question in the instant case.

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122 S.W.2d 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-realty-acceptance-corp-texapp-1938.