Lesage v. Gateley

287 S.W.2d 193, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2020
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 1956
Docket3319
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 287 S.W.2d 193 (Lesage v. Gateley) 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
Lesage v. Gateley, 287 S.W.2d 193, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2020 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

HALE, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree which provided for a division of the estate of the parties to a divorce suit. The paramount question presented for decision is whether interest accrued and paid during marriage on an unsecured demand note owned by the wife before marriage is community property.

Appellee and appellant were married on June 11, 1951 and lived together as husband and wife until July 26, 1954. Thereafter, appellant instituted suit against appellee for divorce. Appellee answered with a general denial and a cross action against appellant for divorce, for partition and division of their community property and for an accounting of all monies and properties belonging to their community'estate. On motion of appellant, and in pursuance of Rule 174(b) T.R.C.P., the court ordered a separate trial of the divorce action from the claim of appellee for an equitable partition of the community property alleged to belong to the parties. In a trial before the court without a jury, judgment was rendered granting appellant a divorce. A subsequent trial was had before a jury'relating to the property matters. Based upon the verdict of the jury and upon extensive facts established by undisputed evidence and by stipulation of the parties, judgment was rendered awarding to appellee as his part of the estate of the parties a- Cadillac automobile valued at $2,000, the interest appellee had purchased in an aeroplane, and the sum of $30,000. All other property involved in the suit was awarded to appellant as her separate property or as her equitable interest in the community estate. Appellant duly perfected her appeal from the judgment disposing of-the property rights of the parties, but no appeal was perfected from the judgment rendered in the divorce action.

.The record before us discloses that at the time of her marriage appellant owned certain real estate situated in Dallas and in San Antonio, and an unsecured promissory note or notes of the Lone Star Company in the principal sum of $1,787,339.29. These notes bore interest at the rate of 5% per annum payable monthly, with the entire principal payable on demand. Between June 11, 1951 and September 1, 1954, the total sum of $449,751 was paid to appellant on the principal of said notes and during the .same interval of time interest on said notes accrued and was paid to her in the total sum of $194,736.41. The trial court concluded as a matter of law that the interest which accrued and was paid during marriage on the Lone Star Company notes was community income. Not only did the court instruct the jury in effect that such interest was community income, but in arriving at what he deemed to be a just and equitable division of the property involved in the suit the court treated such interest as community property.

Appellant timely objected to the action of the court in instructing the jury that the interest accrued and paid during marriage was community, property and in her motion for new trial she also complained of the action of the court in overruling her objections and in treating such interest as community income for the purpose of effecting an equitable partition of the estate of the parties. In summarizing her contentions in the court below and here she says in her brief: “(1) The interest on appellant’s Lone Star Company notes owned prior to marriage, of which' approximately $200,000 was collected during the period of marriage, was separate income and never became community property; (2) the treat *195 ment- of the interest on appellant’s separate property notes as community income caused the trial court to make an inequitable partition of the property involved in the suit; and (3) the trial court, in treating the foregoing interest as community income, committed errors in submitting the case to the jury with respect to the use and disposition thereof.”

After due consideration of the foregoing contentions of appellant we have concluded that they are not well founded and should be overruled. We shall discuss briefly some of the reasons upon which our conclusion is based.

Art. XVI, § IS of Vernon’s Annotated Constitution of Texas provides in part as follows: “All property, both real and personal, of the wife, owned or claimed by her before marriage, and that acquired afterward by gift, devise or descent, shall be the separate property of the wife; and laws shall be passed more clearly defining the rights of the wife, in relation as well to her separate property as that held in common with her husband; * * This provision has been contained in each Constitution of Texas since 1845. It is a part of the community system of property rights of husband and wife which we derived from the civil law of Spain. Under the Constitution and laws of this State the separate property of the husband or wife is that owned or claimed by such spouse before the marriage and that acquired afterward by gift, devise or descent.. All other property of the marital estáte, regardless of how it may be acquired, is community property. Art. 4619 Vernon’s Tex.Civ.Stats. This community estate, it has been said, is, therefore, “a variable one; it begins at the marriage with nothing and ends at the dissolution of marriage with everything, presumptively, of which the parties are possessed. The character of the estate is determined by operation of law according to the time and circumstances of acquisition.”

Appellant does not contend that the interest which accrued during her marriage on the notes she owned before marriage was acquired by gift, devise or descent, but she says such interest was owned by her before marriage because it was a part of the debt owed to her as evidenced by the notes of the Lone Star Company. In support of her contention she cites, among other early decisions, the case of Carlisle v. Sommer, 61 Tex. 124, which she asserts is “directly in point with the case at bar.” We do not think any of the cases cited by appellant are directly in point on the controlling question before us. None of them involves interest accruing after marriage on an unsecured demand note owned by the wife before marriage. But, be that as it may, we agree with the comment contained in the Third Edition of Speer on Marital Rights, page 499, Sec. 368, referring to the cases of Carlisle v. Sommer, 61 Tex. 124, and Scott v. Sloan, 3 Tex.Civ.App. 302, 23 S.W. 42, as follows: “In at least two cases, an individual view has been expressed that interest due on vendor’s lien notes given for the wife’s separate real estate would belong separately to her, upon the reasoning that such interest became a part of the purchase money. But this has never commended itself to the courts, and is not sound.” See also 23 Tex.Jur., p. 126, Sec. 103.

In her brief, appellant says: “It is believed the decisions which hold that interest is community income were written because the authors were considering- interest as damages rather than interest payable under a contract.” However, it appears to us that the legal distinctions between “conventional interest,”- “legal interest” or “interest by way of damages,” are wholly immaterial to a correct determination of the question here under consideration. Art. 5069 of Vernon’s Tex.Civ.Stats. defines interest as being “the compensation allowed by law or fixed'by the parties to-a contract for the use or forbearance or detention of money.” Consequently, interest which ■ accrued after marriage ’ on the unsecured demand notes owned by appellant before marriage was the compensation fixed by the parties to the note for the irse of appellant’s money as evidenced by.

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W.2d 193, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lesage-v-gateley-texapp-1956.