Janelli v. Janelli

216 S.W.2d 587, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 931
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1948
DocketNo. 14017.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 S.W.2d 587 (Janelli v. Janelli) 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
Janelli v. Janelli, 216 S.W.2d 587, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 931 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

BOND, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order of a District Court of Dallas County, in limine, temporarily restraining the defendant “from selling or disposing of or encumbering any of his real or personal property wherever located” pending a suit brought by plaintiff against the defendant; and, incidentally,- for the defendant to file inventory of his property on or before the date mentioned in the order. The injunc-tive writ was directed to be issued upon plaintiff’s executing a temporary injunction bond in the sum of $1,000 in terms of *589 law, payable to the defendant. The defendant excepted to the judgment and gave notice of appeal; whereupon the trial court fixed amount of supersedeas bond at $5,000 which was duly posted, thus perfecting the appeal to this Court.

The defendant predicates his appeal upon two points of error germane to appropriate assignments of error: (1) Where plaintiff can show no marriage to defendant, she does not, in suing him for a divorce, have the right to require him to file an inventory of his property; and (2) the burden of proof is upon the party seeking a temporary injunction, and where the plaintiff is unable to show a marriage existing between herself and the defendant, she is not entitled to an order enjoining defendant from his free use, management and disposition of his property. It will be seen that the controlling issue presented in both points of error is that there was no marriage existing between the plaintiff and defendant; hence on that controlling feature; hinges a determination of plaintiff’s right to the interlocutory orders presented in this appeal. Manifestly, if there was no marriage, there can be no divorce; hence suit is a nullity.

The validity or existence of the marriage relation is obviously the substructure upon which a divorce action depends. It is jurisdictional. In divorce suits, as well as all interlocutory orders made in relation thereto, where the existence of marriage is the basis of the action, plaintiff must prove as well as plead the existence of such marriage. And in the absence of such pleadings or proof the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain the suit; nor the trial court make orders incident thereto. “A marriage is a mutual agreement of a man and woman to live together in the relation and Under the duties of husband and wife, * * Lewis v. Ames, 44 Tex. 319, per Roberts, C. J. The relation growing out of putative marriage is not that of husband and wife; there must have been an actual contracting or agreement for the marriage and a consummation of the marriage by statutory formalities, or by common-law union. Marriage differs from concubinage in that the intent in the former is to agree to assume the relation of husband and wife, whereas the intent in the latter is to assume no su'ch relationship. Marriages, as well as divorces, being of vital public interest, the law fixes and regulates marital relation on public consideration, justifying proof of such relation to be clear, unambiguous and satisfactory, before a judicial tribunal shall decree such relationship and deprive one of his personal property rights.

Plaintiff’s suit is merely in form of divorce, alleging that “she and the defendant were lawfully married to each other on the 6th day of November, 1939, in Dallas County, Texas.” The defendant in reply alleges that “Ella Pennington, who in this suit styles herself Ella Janelli, was never married to him and that no marriage relation exists or has ever existed between them.” Thus the issu'e joined; and, the burden being on the plaintiff to prove the marriage, before any order may be made in reference thereto, we conclude that the plaintiff has wholly failed to meet the burden; that the evidence here presented conclusively shows that the parties were never married or held themselves out as husband and wife.

It is not clear from plaintiff’s pleadings whether she relies upon ceremonial marriage or a common-law marriage; but in either event the evidence of such is wholly lacking for the court to proceed upon a valid marriage existence to create rights and liabilities in reference thereto. The only testimony in support of plaintiff’s allegation is that of plaintiff herself, who testified that she and defendant were married on Sunday morning, November 6, 1939, at Eleven o’clock, in the defendant’s room at his home, by a Reverend Smith whom she did not know, or had ever seen; she did not know the preacher’s initials, his religious sect or the church of which he was pastor. She stated that on that occasion, the defendant had already secured a marriage license, Unbeknown to her; she didn’t know when or where it was issued nor whether the preacher returned it to any county clerk’s office for recordation; she had never made • inquiry at the county clerk’s office of Dallas County, in which county both she and defendant had lived the greater portion of *590 their lives, to ascertain whether or not such marriage license had been issued or recorded. . S'he further testified that no one witnessed the marriage ceremony other than herself, the defendant and the preacher; she did not tell her family she was going to marry; she did not know it herself until they got near the defendant’s home on the occasion mentioned; that they stayed a little while at the house after the ceremony and then went out driving; that she and defendant never lived together, — she lived at 3409 Osbum Street and the defendant lived at 1413 Pennsylvania Street in the City of Dallas; that after his mother died (1943) he moved into another house he owned and lived with a widow and two children at another location on Peabody Street; that during all this time she was living with “a bunch” of her nieces and nephews and her own children by her first marriage (to a Mr. Pennington) ; that defendant never stayed at her home and she never stayed at his home, except one time when the widow at his home went ou't to West Texas. She further testified that during all this time the defendant had been going and keeping company with other women. She further testified that in July 1947 she purchased a lot and built a house on it in name of Ella Pennington;' executed deferred payment notes as Ella Pennington; paid it out in installments, and in June 1948 secured a $3,000 mortgage loan, executing a note as Ella Pennington to Metropolitan Loan Company; that she had been working for Lorch Manufacturing Company in Dallas for about fifteen years in name of Ella Pennington, a single woman; that she carried the name “Pennington” in all her dealings, executed withholding Federal tax reports in that name and reported to her employer daily slips of her work as a single woman; that she never signed a joint income tax report with the defendant; that she owned two houses in Dallas, insured in her name, as Ella Pennington, and had a fire loss on one of the houses and collected for the damage in name of Pennington.

The only testimony offered by plaintiff corroborative of her own testimony, was that of her daughter-in-law Bessie Irene Pennington, and her daughter Gladys Pennington.

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Related

Dixon v. Dixon
348 S.W.2d 210 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)
Janelli v. Janelli
220 S.W.2d 255 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W.2d 587, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janelli-v-janelli-texapp-1948.