Lee v. Lee

247 S.W. 828, 112 Tex. 392, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 107
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1923
DocketNo. 3589.
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 828 (Lee v. Lee) 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
Lee v. Lee, 247 S.W. 828, 112 Tex. 392, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 107 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Judge GERMAN

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This case comes from the Court of Civil Appeals for the First District upon the following certificate:

*396 “To the Honorable Supreme Court:

This suit was brought by appellee Anna Lee against The Texas Company and appellant Mary Lee to recover the sum of $1260.00, alleged to be due plaintiff by The Texas Company under a contract made by it with her deceased husband, Joseph H. Lee. Appellant Mary Lee was made a party defendant upon allegations that she was asserting a claim to the money for which plaintiff sued. No issue appears to have been made by The Texas Company as to its liability upon the contract with Joseph H. Lee declared upon in plaintiff’s petition, nor as to the amount due by it under said contract. The only issue presented by the pleadings is whether the appellant Mary Lee is entitled to recover all or any portion of the amount due under said contract.

The cause was tried in the court below upon the following agreed statement of facts:

‘I.

Joseph H. Lee, late an employee of The Texas Company, defendant herein, died on or about March 27, 1919.

II.

At the date of the said Joseph H. Lee’s death, he was an employee of the Refining Department of defendant, The Texas Company.

III.

There was in force, at the date of the death of the said Joseph H. Lee, a plan for employes covering, among other things, death and disability benefits promulgated by the said defendant, The Texas Company, for the benefit of its employees, a printed copy of such plan being attached hereto, marked Exhibit ‘A’ and made a part hereof.

IY.

That under and by virtue of the said plan for employes, there accrued as a death benefit in favor of beneficiaries to be ascertained, from The Texas Company, the sum of $1260.00; which said sum The Texas Company admits it is liable for, and which sum is properly payable to whomsoever the Court may adjudge is entitled thereto under the evidence to be adduced in this case in connection with said plan for employes and the other admitted facts in this case.

V.

The said Joseph H. Lee and plaintiff herein, Anna Lee, were married in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, on March 7th, 1906, which said marriage has not been legally dissolved by any judgment of any court.

*397 VI.

That sometime during the year 1913, plaintiff, Anna Lee, who was then living at Port Arthur with her husband, Joseph II. Lee, went to New Orleans, Louisiana, and remained there until July 1919, when she returned to Port Arthur, Texas. During all of these years Joseph H. Lee’s legal residence and place of work was Port Arthur, Texas.

VII.

Defendant herein, Mary Lee, believing that Joseph H. Lee and Ann Lee had been divorced, on or about September 15, 1916, was married to defendant, Joseph H. Lee, at Port Arthur, Texas, and thereafter under the belief that she was the lawful wife of tne said Joseph H. Lee, lived with him as such wife and continued to believe she was the wife of the said Joseph H. Lee, and lived with him as such up until the date of his death, during which time she cared for him in his illness and otherwise conducted herself toward him as his wife; and that the said Joseph H. Lee died at her house, and was waited on by her in his last illness, and buried by her at his death.

VIII.

Joseph H. Lee had no children.’

The plans promulgated by The Texas Company providing a death and disability benefit, and which when acted upon became a contract wth its employee, Joseph H. Lee, under which the death benefit of $1260.00 in controversy in this suit accrued, contain the following provisions:

‘Death and Disability Benefits.

1. Death. Benefits will be paid, as hereinafter stated, upon the death of employes who-at the date of death or the beginning of their last illness shall have been one year or longer in the active, continuous and exclusive service of this Company or its subsidiaries.

2. Total and Permanent Disability. Benefits will be paid also, as hereinafter stated, upon the total and permanent disability of employes who at the date of such disability shall have been one year or longer in this service, actively, continuously and exclusively.

3. Payments. The amounts payable will be the same whether the employee dies or becomes totally and permanently disabled. In either event- the company will pay, in monthly installments corresponding to the salary or wages received by the employee at the date of death or such disability, four months full pay in cases where the term of service is one year, and one month’s full pay for each complete six months of additional service; but in no ease shall the amount exceed twelve months full pay or exceed a total of $5,000.00.

*398 4. Beneficiaries. Employes should immediately file with the company written designations of the beneficiary or beneficiaries to Avhom death benefits are to be paid. The employes will have the privilege of revoking such designation or changing it at discretion by filing a written revocation or new designation, if an employee files no such designation, death benefits will be payable according to the laws of Texas then in force applicable to the estates of deceased persons: Provided, however, that in the absence of designation by the employee, and if there shall survive no wife, husband, child, father, nor mother, the death benefit shall lapse.

Disability benefits will be paid directly to the employee.’

Joseph, Anna, and Mary Lee are all negroes. There was no designation by Joseph Lee of a beneficiary of the death benefit which accrued to him under the provisions of his contract with The Texas Company, and it is not shown that either .of his Avives had any knowledge of the existence of his death benefit until after his death.

Upon these facts the trial court held that all of the $1260.00 belonged to Anna Lee, the lawful wife, and rendered judgment accordingly.

Upon consideration of the questions raised by this appeal the majority of the Court reached the conclusion that the appellant, Mary Lee, the putative wife, was entitled to ofie-half of the sum in controversy. Justice Lane dissents from this view and is of opinion that the legal wife was entitled to all of the fund. Copies of the majority and dissenting opinions are sent up with this certificate and made a part thereof.

The case is now pending before us on motion for rehearing. Because of the importance of the question involved, we deem it advisable to certify for your determination the following question: Upon the facts stated, is the appellant Mary Lee entitled to the money due the deceased, Joseph H. Lee, under his contract with The Texas Company, or any part thereof-?”

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 828, 112 Tex. 392, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-lee-tex-1923.