King v. Matney

259 S.W.2d 606, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1953
Docket6312
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 606 (King v. Matney) 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
King v. Matney, 259 S.W.2d 606, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1865 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment holding a partnership contract executed by a married woman to be valid, although her disabilities of coverture had not been removed as provided for by law. This suit was originally filed by appellant, Garland H. Morris, joined by her husband E. L. Morris, against appellee, V. Lee Matney. Mrs. Morris was on October 30, 1950, divorced from E. L. Morris and later married A. P. King, who, by order of the court, was then added as a party plaintiff as the husband of appellant after dropping the name of E. L. Morris, her former husband, as- a party plaintiff, thus changing the name of the original plaintiff from Garland H. Morris to Garland H. King, who will be hereafter referred to as appellant.

The suit arose as a result of a written contract dated and executed on June 10, 1948, wherein appellant, joined by E. L. Morris, who was then her husband, entered into the contract with appellee, V. Lee Matney, to form a trading partnership for the purpose of buying, selling and raising cattle under the name of “Tule Cattle Company”. The contract stipulated that appellant and appellee would each on the date of the contract pay into the company the sum of $25,000 as a capital fund and that appellant would advance an additional sum of $50,000 as a loan to be used as an operating fund. It was further therein stipulated that the $50,000 advancement made as a loan to the company by appellant would “be repaid at the termination of the operating agreement, but without interest”, and that additional operating funds may be later borrowed by the company. Later in 1948 appellee transferred from another account the sum of $27,896.88 of appellant’s separate funds into the operating funds of the company as a loan to the partnership. All of the funds advanced by appellant as loans to the company and used by the partnership was appellant’s individual money and separate estate. The terms of the contract likewise made appellee treasurer of the company and gave him authority to manage the company operations.

The case went to trial before the court without a jury upon two separate counts of appellant’s amended petition, alleging first that she was a married woman when she entered into the partnership contract of date June 10, 1948, and by reason of her cover-ture, she lacked authority and power to become a party in the trading partnership and that by reason of the investments of the sums of $75,000 and $27,896.88 of her separate money and estate in the Tule Cattle Company she became a creditor of the company to the extent of her total investments, for which amount she sought judgment.

In her second count pleaded alternatively her investments previously herein stated were again pleaded and she sought an accounting and a dissolution of the partnership, pleading among other allegations, in effect, that appellee had opened an account at the bank and set up the company books in the name of “V. Lee Matney Special” contrary to the terms of the contract which required such to be done in the name of “Tule Cattle Company”, and that later on December 31, 1948, a change was made by appellee transferring the account to Tule Cattle Company but such was done by ap-pellee partly in bad faith when he then wrongfully charged individual losses sustained by himself to the partnership. Ap-pellee joined issues with appellant on both counts. As a result of the trial appellant was denied any relief on either count. Judgment was rendered awarding an equal division between appellant and appellee, the sum of $5,757.90 representing the remaining proceeds of Tule Cattle Company, from which judgment an appeal was perfected.

At the request of appellant, the trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law and thereafter further findings and conclusions were likewise filed at the request of appellant, all of which are consistent with the judgment rendered. In effect, the trial court found in part that the contract was-voidable at the election of appellant and that she, between the time of her divorce from Morris and her marriage to King and while she was a single woman, elected *608 to affirm and ratify the original contract by originally then filing this suit, alleging a partnership and seeking an accounting, pleading then in substance as she pleaded here in her second count of her amended pleading previously herein mentioned. For these reasons the trial court concluded that appellant was bound by the terms of the original contract and that she was not entitled to recover under the pleadings and facts presented.

Appellant attacks the judgment and some of the findings of the trial court with seven assignments or points of error presented. She charges that the trial court erred in its failure and refusal to sustain her claims made in her first count pleaded concerning her marital status at the time of the execution of the contract.

The record reveals that appellant was married to Morris from June 10, 1944, to October 30, 1950, from which latter date she was a single woman until she married King on August 14, 1951; that the written partnership contract was entered into on June 10, 1948, without having her disabilities of coverture removed and that all of the funds invested as a result of the contract in the Tule Cattle Company were appellant’s separate property. The record further reveals that appellee was a man of experience and had business ability. He had for a long time been employed by appellant’s maternal grandfather, J. A. Whit-tenburg, during his lifetime as an accountant and bookkeeper. After the death of appellant’s maternal grandfather in 1936, appellee was employed by appellant’s mother, Mrs. Hedgecoke, as a bookkeeper and accountant until her death in 1941, after which he was a cotrustee of the estate of Mrs. Hedgecoke, kept the books and managed her estate consisting of real property, oil interests, a wholesale business, drug store and the operation of a ranch until the fall of 1948. He had been closely associated with appellant’s family and was managing the estate of her deceased mother at the time the partnership contract was executed. He had therefore occupied a position of trust with the family of appellant for many years and the relationship of trust still existed with appellant at the time she signed the partnership contract. But on April 13, 1949, appellant, joined by her then husband E. L. Morris, entered into another written agreement with appellee to liquidate the Tule Cattle Company assets and dissolve the partnership. The agreement provided that no more cattle would be purchased and no more obligations incurred, except to preserve and protect the estate; that the assets should be sold by appellee on or before June 30, 1949, and an accounting of the same rendered to appellant by appellee. Further investigation into the matters of appellant’s interest resulted in the filing of this law suit.

We are not here concerned with the signing or execution of an ordinary contract by a married woman. We are here concerned with the legal authority of a married woman to execute a partnership contract for “mercantile or trading purposes” without first having her disabilities of coverture removed as provided for in Article 4626, Vernon’s Civil Statutes, and the result of such action. This matter, being governed by statute, has been separately treated by our courts and it must not be confused with the rules governing the result when a married woman signs or executes an ordinary sales or lease contract or a note.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Williams v. Williams
319 S.W.2d 777 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1958)
Paul C. Teas, Jr. v. Mildred Kimball
257 F.2d 817 (Fifth Circuit, 1958)
Shannon v. Commissioner
29 T.C. No. 80 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 606, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-matney-texapp-1953.