Marino v. Lombardo

277 S.W.2d 749, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 1955
Docket4992
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 277 S.W.2d 749 (Marino v. Lombardo) 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
Marino v. Lombardo, 277 S.W.2d 749, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2574 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

*750 ANDERSON, Justice.

Upon original submission of this appeal, the judgment of the trial court was reversed and the cause was remanded for a new trial. Reconsideration of the record led to the conclusion that, as contended by appellee in her motion for rehearing, the legal theory on which the reversal was predicated should probably not have been given application on the assignments of error contained in the motions for new trial that were filed by the parties in the trial court. Appellant Rosalie Marino was then ordered to rebrief the case. She did this, and has now brought forward in acceptable form a point which was not passed upon in our original opinion because of procedural questions attending it. We have.therefore withdrawn our original opinion, and the following is substituted in lieu of it as the opinion of the court.

. The suit is in trespass to try. title to Lots 5 and 6 in Block 3 of the Flowers Addition to the city of Beaumont, It was originally instituted by Rosalie Marino against Carrie Lombardo and husband, Carmelo Lombardo, on February 28,. 1952. The plaintiff later, on October 15, 1952, filed her first amended original petition, in which Carrie Lombardo alone was named ■ as defendant. Carmelo Lombardo had died during the interim. Appellant Adam Gurski was brought into the suit by the defendant, Carrie Lombardo, by a so-called cross-action, the primary, if not the sole, purpose of which was to procure injunctive relief against certain alleged trespasses. The cross-petition' was filed on April 8, 1953, and both the plaintiff, Rosalie Marino, and the said Adam Gurski were named in it as cross'-defendátits. ' On April 8, 1953, a temporary restraining order was granted on the cross-petition. Whether or not a temporary injunction was subsequently granted is not reflected of record. On May 2, 1953, the defendant, Carrie Lombardo, filed her first amended original answer to plaintiff’s petition. Of the several defensive pleas interposed by her, we need note only her general denial and her plea of not guilty. By supplemental petition filed on May 8, 1953, the plaintiff entered a general denial and plea of not guilty to the defendant’s amended answer, and also pleaded that she " was an innocent purchaser for value, without notice of matters contained in said amended answer. Both Rosalie Marino and Adam Gurski interposed general denials and pleas of not guilty to the cross-petition of the defendant.

On a jury’s special-issue verdict, judgment was rendered whereby it was ordered, adjudged and decreed: “that Plaintiff, Rosalie Marino, do have and recover of and from the Defendant, Carrie Lombardo, the title to an undivided one-half (½) interest in and to Lot Number six (6) of Block Number three (3) of the Flowers Addition to the City of Beaumont, Jefferson County, Texas, according to the map or plat of said addition of record in the office of the county clerk of Jefferson County, Texas; but, that with regard to all of the other rights, title and interests sought by said Plaintiff, Rosalie Marino, against Defendant, Carrie Lombardo, in this suit, Plaintiff shall take nothing”; and, “that Cross-Defendant, Adam Gurski, be, and he is .hereby, restrained and enjoined permanently from removing or damaging any of the improvements, houses, dwelling places, sheds, clothes lines, or clothes poles situated in, over or upon said property, and further from molesting or harassing Defendant and Cross-Plaintiff, Carrie Lombardo, or interfering in .any manner with her right of possession of said property or premises.” From this judgment, both the plaintiff, Rosalie 'Marino, and the cross-defendant, Adam Gurski, have appealed.

The plaintiff, Rosalie Marino, relies on what she insists is the superior record title under a common source, she and the defendant, Carrie Lombardo, having agreed upon Carmelo Lombardo, Carrie’s deceased husband, as the common source of the respective titles and rights asserted by them. Cross-defendant Gurski holds and relies on the title of the plaintiff, having acquired it during pendency of the suit, and in addition contends that a verdict should have been instructed and judgment should have been rendered in his favor because, as he maintains, the cross-action of the defendant, Carrie Lombardo, is in form of trespass to *751 try title, and said defendant failed to prove either title or right of possession in herself. He points out, in this connection, that,he has at no time sought affirmative relief, but is a party to the suit only as a defendant in cross-action, and that he answered the cross-petition by plea of not guilty. He did not expressly enter into any agreements as to a common source of title.

The defendant, Carrie Lombardo, appears to rely primarily on her claim of homestead rights in the property in controversy. While no mention is made of it in her brief, we assume she also asserts whatever inherative rights her husband’s death cast upon her. She also maintains that one of the deeds appearing in the plaintiff’s chain of title is void, this being a deed from Camelo Lombardo to Roy C. Lombardo, dated May 20, 1946. This contention is based upon the theory that, at the time the deed was made, the premises sought to be conveyed by it constituted a part of the homestead of the defendant and her husband, and the defendant neither signed nor acknowledged the deed.

The only special issues submitted to the jury pertained to defendant’s claim of homestead rights. The jury found that on May 20, 1946, (the date of the deed which is claimed to be void) the land in controversy was a part of the homestead of Carmelo Lombardo and the defendant; and failed to find from a preponderance of the evidence either that Carmelo Lombardo abandoned the lots in controversy “for the purposes of a home” before May 20, 1946, or that before signing the deed dated May 20, 1946, he represented to Roy Lombardo (the grantee) that he never intended to use said lots as a home.

For the purpose of showing title in herself under the common source, the plaintiff, without objection having been made to their introduction, introduced in evidence three deeds. The first of these was a deed from Carmelo Lombardo to his son, Roy C. Lom-bardo, dated February 3, 1943. By it, for a recited consideration of $200 in cash— which, according to the evidence, was actually paid — the grantor conveyed to the grantee and undivided one-half interest in Lots 6 and 7 in Block 3 of the Flowers Addition. This deed contained, among others, the following provision: “I, the said Carmelo Lombardo, do hereby reserve unto myself my homestead rights in and to said property so long as I shall live and use same or any part thereof as my homestead. It is expressly understood and agreed that the improvements consisting of a one-story house in which I live is located on Lot 5 of Block 3 of said Flower's Addition to the City of Beaumont, and if for any reason we should be mistaken concerning the location of said home and said house should actually be located on either Lot No. 6, Lot No. 7, or both, in Block No. 3 of the Flowers Addition * * * then I hereby except and reserve unto myself said house and the same shall be considered as personal property and subject to removal by me, and I shall have the right to maintain and keep said house on the land it is now located during my lifetime.” The deed also contained a general warranty of title.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W.2d 749, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marino-v-lombardo-texapp-1955.