Hunter v. Hunter

187 S.W. 1049, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 838
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1916
DocketNo. 89.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 1049 (Hunter v. Hunter) 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
Hunter v. Hunter, 187 S.W. 1049, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 838 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

MIDDLEBROOK, J.

This is a suit filed in the district court of Tyler county, Tex., July 10, 1915, for divorce, on the ground of three years’ permanent abandonment. Defendant, D. L. Hunter, filed her answer and cross-action on July 29, 1915, denying plaintiff’s right to recover a • divorce of her, and in cross-petition pleaded for divorce in her own behalf, basing such plea upon the ground of cruel treatment. The trial of the case began on the 16th day of August, and was finally finished on the 21st day of August, the jury rendering verdict in favor of the defendant on her cross-action.

Upon filing of petition by the plaintiff, defendant sued out an injunction, asking that the plaintiff be restrained from interfering with her three children, two of whom were girls and one, a boy. The defendant alleged in her petition for injunction that after filing of suit by the plaintiff, but before citation was served on her, the plaintiff wrongfully took charge of John R. Hunter, the boy, who was only five years old, and that she feared he would remove him beyond her reach, and out of the state, into the state of Louisiana. The injunction was granted on this petition, and an order entered commanding the delivery of the boy, John R. Hunter, back to the mother, D. L. Hunter. Later this order was modified by the district judge, on petition of P. I. Hunter and upon a representation to the court by him that he would not take the child out of the state, and that he would have the child present at the trial of the ease. The case was tried before a jury and was submitted to the jury upon special issues, after a general instruction to the jury, as to grounds of divorce.

The five special issues submitted to the jury by the court, as presented by the record, are as follows:

(1) Is the plaintiff, under the facts and pleadings, entitled to a divorce?

(2) Is the defendant, Mrs. D. L. Hunter, under the facts and circumstances, entitled to a divorce?

(3) Is the plaintiff a fit and proper person to have the care and custody of the boy, John R. Hunter?

(4) Is Mrs. D, L. Hunter a fit and proper person to have the care’ and custody of the three children?

(5) Would the interests of the children be best subserved by placing their care and custody in the hands of Mrs. D. L. Hunter, or by placing the care and custody of the two girls in the hands of Mrs. D. L. Hunter, and the care and custody of the boy, John R. Hunter, in the hands of P. I. Hunter?

The jury answered the first question, “No.” It answered the second question, “Yes.” It answered the third question, “Yes.” The instruction given to the jury, as to their answer to the fifth question, was as follows:

“If you find the fact to be that the best interests of the three children will be best sub-served by placing their care and custody in the hands of Mrs. D. L. Hunter, then you will answer this question with the words: ‘Mrs. D. L. Hunter’; but if you find the fact to be that *1050 the best interests of the children -will be sub-served by placing the care and custody of the two girls in the hands of Mrs. D. L. Hunter, and the care and custody of the boy, John R. Hunter, in the hands of Mr. P. I. Hunter, then you will answer this question as follows: ‘Give the gii-ls to Mrs. D. U. Hunter, and give the boy to Mr. P. I. Hunter.’ ”

The jury answered that question: “Give the girls to Sirs. D. D. Hunter, and give the boy to Mr. P. I. Hunter.” Judgment was entered by the trial court, giving the custody of the two girls in the care of Mrs. D,. D. Hunter, and the custody of the hoy in the care of P. I. Hunter, and also a decree of divorcement, in the following language:

“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the bonds of matrimony heretofore existing between the plaintiff, P. I. Hunter, and D. L. Hunter be, and are hereby, in all things dissolved, and they are now divorced.”

P. I. Hunter, the plaintiff, in supplemental petition ashed for the care and custody of the boy, and represented in his petition, which was sworn to, that he was better able to care for, support, and educate the boy than was Mrs. D. Xj. Hunter and that he desired to give the boy a c-ollegiate education, as he had one of his sons by another marriage.

There is no statement of facts in the record in this case, hence the only thing before us for consideration is whether or not the record presents fundamental /error. The record, as presented, shows that the trial of this case was in progress during the notorious storm, which struck southeast and east Texas on or about the 16th of August. After the jury had deliberated upon a verdict for 18 hours, it returned into open court in body, and the foreman of the jury delivered to the trial judge the following written request:

“Judge A. E. Davis: We are hopelessly divided in this cause, and there are no hopes of reaching a verdict, and we would like to be excused. [Signed] D. G. Miller, Foreman.”

Upon receiving this message from the jury, the trial judge addressed the jury as follows: “Mr. Miller, did you write this note?” Mr. Miller answered, “Yes.” The trial court then asked the jurors if they had asked the foreman to write the note, to which they answered they had, and the trial judge then addressed the jury, substantially, as follows:

“Gentlemen, it has taken about three days to try this case, and at considerable cost, and I will just give you until midnight of next Saturday night to reach a verdict in this case.”

Pie retired the jury to their room, with this instruction, and in about six hours they again returned into open court, with the verdict heretofore set out.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is lengthy, but it complains of the action of the trial court in the remarks he made to the jury, when the jury came before him, after they had been deliberating about 18 hours, and announced that they were hopelessly divided and asked to be discharged. The assignment of error, the motion for new trial, and the bill of exceptions show that the case was on trial during the notorious August, 1915, storm, and the contention of the appellant in her motion for new trial and assignment of error, is that the trial court, in instructing the jury that he would keep them in consideration of the case until Saturday night August 28th, was a coercion by the court, upon the jury to extort a verdict from them, and that it did have the effect of extorting a verdict from them, and that such extortion is reflected in that part of the jury’s verdict, wherein they say that Mrs. D. L. Hunter is not a proper person to have the care and custody of the boy, and yet give her the care and custody of the two girls.

[1] We think, unquestionably, that the language of the trial court to the jury, in which he threatened to keep them together for eight more days, after they had deliberated upon a verdict for a part of two days, was very improper.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 1049, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-hunter-texapp-1916.