Hampton v. Hampton

29 S.W. 423, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 388
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1895
DocketNo. 552.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 423 (Hampton v. Hampton) 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
Hampton v. Hampton, 29 S.W. 423, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 388 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

— W. M. Hampton, Sr., was guardian of the estate of W. M. Hampton, Jr., and Jennette Hampton, minors, guardianship in the County Court of Guadalupe County. Through orders of that court a sale was made of inventoried property by the guardian to Mary L. Hampton, who was his wife, by deed dated June 9, 1881, the orders and deed reciting a consideration of $1000, which represented at that time the fair value of the property. W. M. Hampton and Mary L. Hampton sold it by warranty deed to E. Morris, one of the appellants, on July 21, 1881, who resold to Hoffman, the other, by warranty deed.

On July 28, 1891, the wards, Wade M. Hampton, Jr., then recently of age, and Jennette Hampton, then still a minor, suing by next friend, *500 instituted this proceeding in the County Court to have the sale declared void, the defendants being the guardian, his wife, and the appellants Morris and Hoffman, who were the interested parties under warranty deed from them. The appellants liad -actual notice when they bought, that the land had been conveyed by the guardian to his wife from the fact that the wife appeared as such by the same name as in the guardian’s deed, in the deed under which appellant’s claim, and besides they knew of the relationship by acquaintance with the family.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether or not any consideration passed from the wife to the husband, but we conclude from the evidence and circumstances that none was paid. The evidence that would go to show that the consideration called for in the deed was paid, does not show that the funds were the separate property of the wife, and there is no evidence that the plaintiffs received the benefit of any of the purchase money.

Conclusions of Law. — The petition alleged that the deed was by the guardian to his wife, and that appellants who purchased from and under them had knowledge of that fact when they bought. It was also alleged that no consideration had been received by the guardian. The allegation that no purchase money was paid negatively states that the minors received no benefit therefrom. There were general and special exceptions to the petition, and the propositions in respect to these ex- • ceptions assert that the statute (Revised Statutes, article 2582) prohibiting the guardian from purchasing the property of his ward “has no application to a purchase made by the guardian’s wife with her separate funds, and especially when she pays a full, fair, and adequate price therefor, and that the mere fact that the husband would be entitled to the rents as community property, or at the death of the wife to a life interest in such property, would not bring such purchase within the rule laid down in said article; and that the indirect purchase of a ward’s property by the guardian does not of itself render the purchase void, but it becomes voidable upon proper showing that the sale was made for an inadequate price.”

The inapplicability of these propositions to the petition appears from the fact that the latter contains an allegation that nothing was paid to the guardian for the property, and it states nothing that would imply that the land was paid for out of the separate funds of the wife. These are the only propositions that legitimately relate to the first assignment of error. We may, however, notice the second special exception of appellants as follows: “The petition shows from its allegations that this is a suit of trespass to try title, and not a suit to vacate an order or judgment of the Probate Court, and that these defendants were not parties to the order or judgment sought to be vacated, and are improperly joined in this suit, and they pray that they be dismissed.” It appears that this exception was abandoned.

*501 The second assignment relates to the striking out of that portion of appellant’s answer which undertook to plead that the minors had in fact no title to the property, for the reason, as alleged, that it was originally paid for with the separate funds of the wife and the title taken in the name of the minors, and that the proceedings in the County Court which led to the sale were taken merely for the purpose of placing the title in Mrs. Hampton, where it rightly belonged; and also to the striking out of other parts of the answer, to wit, the allegation that plaintiffs had full and adequate legal remedy against their guardian and his sureties, and the allegation that this suit was apparently against the guardian, but that the acts of plaintiffs and of the guardian were of such a suspicious nature as to constitute fraud on their part against the appellants, Morris and Hoffman.

The only proposition offered under this assignment is that appellants, having been made parties, should have been allowed to make any defense that would defeat the cause of action, and that if it were true that the property was in fact the property of the wife, and that the purpose of the order was to place the title where it belonged, they were entitled in the proceeding to show it.

The proceeding in the County Court to vacate the sale did not open the door for an inquiry there into the merits of the minor’s title. This is obvious from the want of jurisdiction of that court to adjudicate title to real property. The petition was based partly on the provisions of article 2582, alleging a sale of the wards’ property by the guardian to himself, and in addition thereto a cause for setting aside the sale was alleged to be fraud, involved in the fact that the consideration was not paid, and praying for an order declaring void the sale. The joinder of third parties claiming to hold title under the sale would not have the effect of enabling them to settle issues affecting their title not within the jurisdiction conferred on that tribunal.

It is not essential for us to say that appellants were necessary parties to the proceeding. They appeared and formally abandoned the position first taken by them that they were not proper parties. That they were proper parties, and entitled to be heard in a matter which concerned the validity or existence of a muniment in their title, we have no doubt. But the particular issue' of title mentioned in the proposition we are considering was not determinable in that tribunal.

The third assignment is, that the court erred in admitting the plaintiff Wade M. Hampton, Jr., to testify that the defendant Wade M. Hampton, Sr. (the guardian), had told him that in the sale of the land to Mary L. Hampton no money passed and no consideration was paid said guardian, for the reason “that.the guardian had reported under oath that he had received the purchase money, and he was not a competent person by whom to prove his own flagrant fraud.” We notice that the assignment does not go to the hearsay character of the evidence. We must therefore treat this declaration as if it had been testimony given by the guardian himself. The proposition is, that a *502 person can not testify to his own fraud, and if he himself can not so testify, it would be improper to permit some one else to testify as to what such person said. The guardian was in our opinion a competent witness to testify to the facts relating to the sale, although he might not have been permitted to impeach his own acts in a case of benefit to himself. 1 Greenl. on Ev., sec. 384.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 423, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hampton-v-hampton-texapp-1895.