Kempner v. Comer, Fairris & Dial

11 S.W. 194, 73 Tex. 196, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1167
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
DocketNo. 2394
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 11 S.W. 194 (Kempner v. Comer, Fairris & Dial) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kempner v. Comer, Fairris & Dial, 11 S.W. 194, 73 Tex. 196, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1167 (Tex. 1889).

Opinion

Collard, Judge.—

T. L. Fairris, one of the firm of Comer, Fairris & Dial, before maturity, signed his wife’s (C. A. Fairris’) name on the back of her three promissory notes payable to her order and delivered, them so endorsed to his firm to be by them hypothecated for credit,. [199]*199Mrs. Fairris knowing nothing oí the transaction or the intended use of her notes. The firm deposited the notes with appellants as collateral, who advanced money and gave credit to Comer, Fairris & Dial in the belief that the notes were regularly endorsed by the payee, though they did not know the payee or that she was even a woman until after the credit and advances had been made. Mrs. Fairris did not know of the pledge until after Comer, Fairris & Dial had obtained the credit and had been closed out by attachments of appellants.

It is insisted by appellants that the notes, though payable to C. A. Fairris and though her separate property, were apparently community of herself and husband, and that his endorsement and act of delivering them before maturity to his firm, who pledged them to appellants for a valuable consideration, passed the title to appellants and made them a valid security in their hands, they having no notice of her rights.

Humerous authorities in this State have decided that property acquired in the name .of the wife during coverture is presumptively community unless there be something in the deed to show that it is the wife’s separate estate, and that it is subject to sale and disposition by the husband to persons paying a valuable consideration therefor without notice of the wife’s individual rights. A mortgage of the wife’s separate estate under such circumstances would be as valid as a sale. Kirk v. navigation Co., 49 Texas, 215. It is also the law in this State that a purchaser under execution against the husband under similar circumstances would be protected, and this as well where there is a resulting trust in favor of the wife as where the creditor would be protected by force of registration laws. It is, however, only after sale that the protection will be given in case of execution against the husband where registration laws do not apply. Parker v. Coop, 60 Id., 114. In the case cited Justice Stayton gives the reason of the law as follows: These cases all proceed upon

the theory that the purchaser in good faith may rely upon the real title being where by deed it appears to be, and that he or she who willfully or negligently permits the title to stand in the name of another person, at least as apparent owner, can not be heard to say that such is not true to the prejudice of a person who relying upon the apparent ownership has bought and paid a valuable consideration for the land.” Registration laws being out of the way, which-give to certain lien creditors rights they would not otherwise have, no reason can be assigned why a creditor should take the wife’s separate property by dealings with the husband where it is shown that it was not done upon the faith of its being community property.

Where the facts giving rise to the principle of protection do not exist the principle can not be invoked. It is conclusively shown that appellants did not act upon any presumption that the notes were community of Mrs. Fairris and her husband; they acted upon an entirely different [200]*200presumption, or rather assumption; they took the notes as collateral, supposing they were correctly endorsed by the payee, without any information that the payee was the wife of T. L. Fairris or that he had endorsed them with her name. They knew nothing of any facts which would authorize a presumption of community and were not deceived in relation to such facts. They should not be credited with knowdng such facts by a mere fiction when the proof is positive that they had no such knowledge. The law will not force them into the attitude of innocent and bona fide holders of the notes against the proof; it will not and ought not to thrust a benefit of a presumption upon them -when it is affirmatively shown that the presumption had nothing to do with the transaction. A married woman’s rights ought not to be construed away by any such inequitable process of reasoning. Mrs. Fairris was not in fault in the transaction, and no fact existed which would charge her with negligence or wrong, and we can not see that appellants have any equities on account of reliance upon a presumption of community.

Then the question arises, did appellants obtain the legal title to the notes by the husband’s endorsement in the absence of his wife’s knowledge or consent? At common law the husband’s endorsement would be sufficient upon the ground that all the wife’s personal property vests in the husband. Daniel on Neg. Inst., p. 505. But this is not the law of this State. With us all the wife’s personal as well as real property vests and remains vested in her. The only power given by the statute to the husband over it is its management. Const, of Texas, art. 16, sec. 15; Rev. Stats., art. 2857. She can not convey her personal property or endorse her note without her husband’s consent. Hemmingway v. Matthews, 10 Texas, 207. Of course if the wife’s note be presumptively community the husband can convey it to persons relying upon the presumption, provided it be done before maturity (Wells v. Coclcrum, 13 Texas, 127; Bank v. Turnley, 61 Texas, 369), but not to persons with notice of her rights. Rose v. Houston, 11 Texas, 325.

Where the husband pledged the wife’s note without her consent and without endorsement, and after the husband’s death his debt to the pledgee with the note credited on it was allowed by her as administratrix, it was held that she was not bound and that her allowance of the debt with the note so credited was not a ratification. Hamilton v. Brooks, 51 Texas, 145. It has been held that if the husband pledged the wife’s coupon bond (a negotiable instrument payable to hearer) before maturity, and no advances be made on it until after maturity, her rights are not affected. Bank v. Turnley, 61 Texas, 369.

Her rights were protected upon the very same principle that a stranger’s would have been in a similar case. Had the coupon bond, payable to bearer as it was, not fallen due until credit had been extended upon it, the owner though a stranger would not have been entitled to protection. [201]*201We know of no case under our law which by virtue of the husband’s authority to manage the wife’s separate estate warrants him in selling her personal property. The contrary has been held. McKay v. Treadwell, 8 Texas, 176. We can not see xv'hy her notes should be an exception to the rule. It has been held, as we have seen, that when he alienates her note without her consent for value to persons with notice of her rights, they take no title. From this it is not to be inferred that if they have no notice they would have the title. On the contrary, it upholds the principle that he has no legal right to convey her notes. If her note be payable to bearer or to her order and is endorsed by her, and in such condition he transfer it to an innocent holder before maturity, the title it maybe would pass, because the possession of such paper is prima facie evidence of ownership, and he could pass the title of a stranger’s note in the same way. We could give no satisfactory reason for holding that the husband has authority as such to convey by endorsement or otherwise the wife’s promissory note without her consent, while the principle that intervenes to prevent his doing so is manifest. He can not legally transfer what is not his, and the law limits his power over his wife’s property to management.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W. 194, 73 Tex. 196, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kempner-v-comer-fairris-dial-tex-1889.