Jones v. El Paso Bitulithic Co.

246 S.W. 749
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 1922
DocketNo. 1388.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 749 (Jones v. El Paso Bitulithic Co.) 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
Jones v. El Paso Bitulithic Co., 246 S.W. 749 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Statement of Case.

HIGGINS, J.

The El Paso Bitulithic Company filed this suit on December 8, 1920, against O. T. Kinne and O. P. Jones and wife to recover the sum of $235.35, • due upon a paving assessment certificate and for foreclosure of lien securing the same on lots 1 and 2 and the west 10 feet of lot 3 in block 3 of the East El Paso addition to the city of El Paso.

Briefly stated, the allegations of the petition, material to a consideration of the questions presented, are that on January 22, 1920, the El Paso city council, by formal vote determined to pave the street upon which said premises abutted; that the council by resolution declared such paving necessary for the public interest, and caused an estimate of the probable cost to be made by the city engineer, who thereafter reported the estimate to the city council, with a list and description of the premises abutting on the proposed pavement and the names of the owners thereof, so far as known; that the premises above described are now owned by the defendants, and abutting upon said street, and after tbe receipt of the engineer’s report the city council gave notice by publication to all persons interested, and in pursuance of tbe notice the city council met to hear objections urged against the assessment, and defendant Kinne, then owner of said lots, failed to appear or urge any objection, and on April' 29, 1920, the city council levied an assessment of $235.35 against said lots and the owner thereof, according to the front-foot rule or plan, and thereafter the council awarded to the plaintiff the contract for such pavement, and the same was paved by plaintiff and accepted by the city and'a lien .fixed against the lots to secure the payment of said assessment, title to which lots at the time the assessment and lien was placed against it was in Kinne, but since such time Mr. and Mrs. Jones are making some claim to the property, the nature of which was unknown; that the claim of the city of El Paso for the cost of the pavement and lien securing the same and the paving certificate have been transferred to the plaintiff.

*750 Kinne was not served with process, and as to him the suit was dismissed. Jones and wife set up a homestead right in the premises for more than 10 years prior to the paving, and that they had notified plaintiff that they did not want the paving in front of their property and would not pay for same, and also filed a general denial.

The case was tried before the court, and judgment rendered- against Mr. and Mrs. Jones for the sum of $144.15, with foreclosure of the lien asserted by the plaintiff as it existed on April 29, 1920,, against an undivided one-half interest in the above-described lots, and ordered the same sold as under execution. From which judgment J'ones and wife prosecute this writ of error.

Findings' of fact and conclusions of law were not filed by the trial court, but the material facts are undisputed,' and show that o,n August 6,'1902, John Sneed, for a consideration of $200, conveyed the lots to J. M. Kinne, the former husband of Mrs. Jones. J. M. Kinne died intestate, leaving a surviving wife and three children. In the early part of 1909, and subsequent to the death of her husband, Mrs. Kinne erected a house upon the lots. On May 29, 1909, she married Jones. From that date up to the present time Mr. and Mrs. Jones have resided in the house as their homestead. The evidence, however, discloses that for two or three years prior to 1913 or 1914 Jones remained away from the home and from his wife. His absence was due to the presence there of an objectionable son-in-law, a man who had married the daughter of his wife. Neither of the parties, however, during this period applied for divorce, and it is shown that all during the absence Jones and his wife frequently saw and visited each other at least once a week, and that during all of this time he paid her expenses and contributed to her ' support. It is plainly apparent that the separation Was in no wise permanent and was due solely to the presence of the objectionable son-in-law, and that upon his death, and long prior to 1920, Jones returned and has since lived with his wife upon the property. During his absence from the home, and on October 18, 1911, Mrs. Jones and others conveyed the lots to Clarence T. Kinne for a recited consideration of $1 and other valuable considerations. The deed was duly recorded in El Paso county. The deed contains the following'recital:

“Know all men by these presents: That we, Mrs. C. F. Jones, formerly Mrs. J. M. Kinne, the said Mrs. C. F. Jones living separate and apart from her husband, Mr. O. F. Jones, they having separated on June thirtieth (30th) A. I). 1911. * * * ”

The deed is not copied in the statement of facts, and the foregoing shows all that is to be gathered therefrom concerning such deed.

It is impossible to determine who the other grantors in this deed were. On June 10, 1920, Clarence T. Kinne reconveyed the property to Mrs. C. F. Jones, reciting a consideration of $10 and other valuable considerations, which deed was duly recorded. Jones testified that he protested aganst the execution of the deed by his wife to C. T. Kinne, and that no money whatever was paid for the reconveyance by C. T. Kinne to his wife.

Opinion.

It was agreed that the assessment was duly and legally made in the manner and upon the dates set out in the petition, and the claim transferred by the city to the plaintiff. Under the decision in Higgins v. Bordages, 88 Tex. 458, 31 S. W. 52, 803, 53 Am. St. Rep. 770, it is well settled thht upon the facts here presented the defendant in error had no lien upon the property if it was the homestead of Jones and wife. The defendant in error does not question that view of the law, but asserts that it was an issue of fact whether the property was homestead in character, and that this had been x’esolved against the Joneses by the court below. We are not advised of the theory upon which the trial court acted, but in our opinion the property was unquestionably impressed with the homestead character, and no lien attached.

There is some confusion in the record title arising out of the execution of the deed by Mrs. Jones and others to C. T. Kinne of date October 18, 1911, but that it was occupied and used by Jones and wife as homestead for a number of years prior to 1920 is not an issuable fact. All of the evidence shows conclusively that it was.

Nor does the deed mentioned affect the question. At the time of Mrs. Kinne’s marriage to Jones she owned a onedialf interest in the property as her separate estate; the other interest being owned by the children of herself and her deceased husband. The deed which she executed to C. T. Kinne was made while she was married to Jones and he did not join in the conveyance, but protested against it. It therefore passed no title to CT. Kinne. It is true Jones and wife were living separate and apart at the date of the deed, but he did not completely abandon his wife, and the separation was not of that permanent character which must exist in order to empower the wife to convey without the joinder of her husband. We, therefore, conclude that Mrs. Jones’ title was not divested by the deed to C. T. Kinne, and since it was occupied as a home, no lien ever attached to the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-el-paso-bitulithic-co-texapp-1922.