Jordan v. Johnson

155 S.W. 1194, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 940
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 1194 (Jordan v. Johnson) 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
Jordan v. Johnson, 155 S.W. 1194, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 940 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

This suit was in trespass to try title to recover 160 acres of land in Parker county.

Plaintiffs and defendants all claim title as heirs of Henry Owens, deceased, who owned the land at the date of his death. Mary Jordan, one of the plaintiffs, was a sister of Henry Owens, and the other plaintiffs are descendants of Aaron Walker, deceased, who was a brother of Henry Owens, and the remaining plaintiffs are descendants of Lizzie Fullirlove, deceased, who was a sister to Henry Owens. Henry Owens was formerly a slave; his master living in Louisiana, where plaintiffs all reside at the present time. After emancipation he took the name of Ful-lirlove for a while, that being the name of his former master, but later adopted the name of Henry Owens, while his brother seems to have adopted the surname of Walker, and his sister the name of Fullirlove. Shortly after the close of the Civil War Henry Owens moved to Texas, and settled near the town of Acton, in Hood county, where he resided for some three or four years, and then moved to Parker county, where he resided until his death. Jane Riley, now Jane Britt, formerly a slave and owned by J. Riley, also resided near the town of Acton, in Hood county, and while Henry Owens resided in that vicinity she gave birth to two daughters, Ola and Lizzie, whose father was Henry Owens. Ola, one of these daughters, married Ed Johnson, and this suit was instituted by plaintiffs against her and her husband as defendants. The other daughter, Lizzie now deceased, married-Humphries. Her children joined- by her mother, Jane Britt, formerly Jane Riley, intervened in the suit, claiming that Jane Britt was the common-law wife of Henry Owens at the date of his death, and that the property in controversy was the community property of Henry Owens and his wife, Jane Britt, intervener, and that interveners together with defendant Ola Johnson, daughter of intervener, Jane Britt, are the sole heirs of Henry Owens, and entitled to undivided interests therein as follows: Jane Britt, one-half; the children of Lizzie Humphries, one-fourth ; and Ola Johnson, one-fourth. Inter-veners prayed for judgment for the interests *1195 so claimed by tbem, and intervener, Jane Britt, claimed a homestead interest in the land as the surviving wife of Henry Owens. Defendant Ola Johnson, who was older than her sister Lizzie Humphries, alleged that she, Ola Johnson, was born during the common-law marriage relationship 'of Hienry Owens and Jane Riley; that that marriage was dissolved; that she was the only child born of that marriage; that Lizzie Hum-phries was born after that marriage was dissolved, and after Henry Owens was lawfully married to Kate Riley, sister of Jane Riley. By their verdict the jury found that there was a common-law marriage between Henry Owens and Jane Riley, and that Ola Johnson and Lizzie Humphries were both children of that marriage and heirs at law of Henry Owens; that the heirs of Lizzie Humphries were entitled to one-half the land in controversy and Ola Johnson entitled to the remaining one-half. Upon their verdict a judgment was rendered vesting in interveners, who were descendants of Lizzie Humphries, a one-half interest in the land and in defendant Ola Johnson the remaining one-half interest, and that intervener Jane Britt and plaintiffs take nothing. From that judgment plaintiffs alone have appealed.

The statement of facts appearing in the record is confined to testimony upon the issues of the alleged heirship of the various parties to Henry Owens, including the chiefly contested issue of the alleged common-law marriage between Henry Owens and Jane Riley. In addition to the facts stated above, the following facts were also established by uncontroverted proof: About the year 1871 Henry Owens married Kate Riley, sister of Jane Riley, under the sanction of a marriage license duly issued. One child who died in infancy was the only fruit of that marriage, and Kate, the wife, afterwards died. It does not appear that Henry Owens again married after the death of Kate. After Henry Owens married Kate, her sister Jane Riley married Ike Chisholm, from whom she separated after a short time, and later married Herbert Britt, who joined with her pro forma as an intervener in this suit. The proof further shows that no divorce was ever granted dissolving the alleged common-law marriage between Henry Owen's and Jane Riley; that Jane Riley together with her mother, Grace Riley, and other members of her family, were present at the time of the marriage of Henry Owens to Kate Riley, which occurred in the home of Grace Riley; and that neither Jane nor her mother nor any one else questioned the lawful right of Henry Owens to marry Kate, in the absence of an annulment of the alleged common-law marriage of himself and Jane Riley through divorce proceedings in court.

[1] By their first and second assignments errors are assigned to the exclusion of certain answers of certain witnesses given in their depositions. These assignments are overruled because the testimony thus excluded was substantially embraced in answers by the respective witnesses to other interrogatories and introduced in evidence.

[2] Likewise the error, if any, in admitting the answers of several witnesses to certain interrogatories, the admission of which is complained of in the third, fourth, and fifth assignments of error, are overruled in view of the fact that the answers of the respective witnesses are substantially to the same effect as others admitted in evidence without objection.

[3, 4] The affidavit of Jane Britt, the admission of which is assigned as error in the sixth specification of error, contains statements which were in conflict with the material facts testified to by her on the witness stand, and was properly admitted because it was competent for the purpose of impeachment; and in the absence of an instruction limiting the affidavit to that purpose appellants cannot complain that the same might have been considered by the jury for another purpose.

By the seventh assignment of error appellants insist that the court erred in admitting the testimony'of several witnesses, some of whom testified that Henry Owens recognized Ola Johnson as his child, and claimed that he and Jane Riley were husband and wife, and that Henry Owens and Jane Riley claimed each other as husband and wife, and others testified that Jane Riley stated that she and Henry Owens were living together as husband and wife, all of which statements were alleged to have been made before Henry Owens married Kate Riley. One of the grounds of objection was that it did not appear that such recognition and claim of the marriage relations were open and, public. We think the testimony tends to show the contrary of this contention. S. T. Edwards, one of the witnésses, testified: “It was my understanding that she and Henry Owens claimed to be husband and wife.” An additional ground of objection to that statement was that it was hearsay and inadmissible. In the light of other testimony of last-named witness, we think the statement quoted amounts to no more than a statement of the general reputation of the marriage relation between Henry Owens and Jane Riley. The further grounds of objection, that Jane Riley was present in court and testified as a witness, and that her alleged former declarations were therefore not admissible, we think untenable.

[5]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 1194, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-johnson-texapp-1913.