McIlveen v. McIlveen

332 S.W.2d 113, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1984
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1960
Docket13483
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 332 S.W.2d 113 (McIlveen v. McIlveen) 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
McIlveen v. McIlveen, 332 S.W.2d 113, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1984 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

WERLEIN, Justice.

The only issue in this case, other than a jurisdictional question hereinafter mentioned, is whether appellant, Guadalupe Postell Mcllveen, was the common law wife of the deceased, Alfred Mcllveen, at the time of his death on February 10, 1956. Since this is an appeal from an instructed verdict against appellant and in favor of *115 appellees, who are the surviving brothers and sisters of the deceased, including David W. Mcllveen, administrator of his estate, we are called upon to determine whether there is any evidence in the record which required submission of the case to the jury. In doing so, we must view the evidence in the most favorable light to appellant. Conflicts in the testimony must be disregarded and every intendment reasonably deducible from the evidence must be indulged in favor of the losing party. This Court will assume that the facts shown by appellant’s evidence are true facts. 4 Tex.Jur.2d, pp. 320-1, Appeal and Error, § 802, and authorities cited. In view of the instructed verdict, our statement of the evidence will comprehend only that which is favorable to appellant.

In order to establish a common law marriage it is necessary to show not only cohabitation of the parties as man and wife and their holding each other out to the public as such, but also that such conduct has been pursuant to an agreement to presently become man and wife. Shelton v. Belknap, 155 Tex. 37, 282 S.W.2d 682. The agreement necessary to the validity of a common law marriage may be an express agreement or implied. Consolidated Underwriters v. Kelly, Tex.Com.App., 15 S.W.2d 229.

Appellant testified that the deceased, Mc-llveen, first asked her to be his wife in January of 1955, and at such time he told her he was divorced and gave her a set of rings. The January agreement to become man and wife was entered into on January 25, 1955, the day following appellant’s divorce from Frank Postell. In April, 1955, appellant for the first time learned that the deceased had not obtained his divorce until March, 1955. She testified that she was greatly upset and felt awful bad because he had lied to her, and she gave the rings back to Mcllveen, and moved out sometime between April and July, 1955. On July 29, 1955, she entered into a ceremonial marriage with a man by the name of Garza, and went with him to the State of Michigan. There she found out that he had a wife. Garza testified by deposition that he was married at the time of his marriage with appellant and also at the time she left him in September, 1955 and returned to Houston.

During the time she was in Michigan she corresponded with Mcllveen and had a telephone conversation with him in which she agreed that she would come back and be his wife, and later be married “by the Catholic Church.” She returned to Houston on September 20 or 23 with Frankie, a nine year old son by a former marriage. Mcllveen met her at the railroad station in Houston and put the rings on her finger. She testified: “Fie said ‘you are back again, you are my wife, going to be my wife and going to be happy, you and Frankie and I’ and hugged me and kissed me.” She also testified, when asked what happened when she met him:

“A. Yes maam, that’s the first thing he did, put them back and hugged me and kissed me and hugged the boy and he said I have a home — David, that’s his brother, and I been fixing home and we went home.
“Q. Did he tell you he was fixing a home for you? A. Yes sir, he said David and I fixing the home for you and Frankie.
“Q. Where was this home? A. 10521 Munn, where I live now.
“Q. Did you go directly from there when Mr. Mcllveen met you at the train? A. Yes sir.”

She further testified that the marriage “Flappened when we made agreement over the phone before I left Michigan and then when I got here.” Her testimony was that she lived continuously with Mcllveen until he died.

It is undisputed that appellant, after her return from Michigan, went with Mcllveen to the home on Munn Street which he had repaired and there lived with him following the alleged agreement in September.

*116 Appellant testified substantially as follows: The deceased after the September agreement introduced her as his wife at Lack’s where they bought a bicycle for Frankie on credit. She was allowed to make purchases on that account. Appellant knew all of Mcllveen’s brothers and sisters and some of them visited in her home, and she and her husband visited some of them. They were friendly with her until after Mcllveen’s death. Mcllveen introduced her to all the neighbors as his wife, and some of the neighbors visited in her home. She and Mcllveen received from neighbors in December, 1955 two Christmas cards addressed to them as Mr. and Mrs. Mcllveen. She further testified that since September of 1955 she always went under the name of Lupe Postell Mc-llveen. She did not change her social security number, and there is evidence that she continued to use the name "Postell” after her alleged marriage in September. This evidence, however, goes merely to her credibility, and does not constitute an admission that she did not hold herself out as the wife of the deceased. She further testified in substance: The doctors at the hospital knew she was Mcllveen’s wife and taking care of him. She and Mcllveen visited her parents and she told them they were married. All the neighbors called her Mrs. Mcllveen. The nurses and other employees at the Northshore Hospital, where she worked, knew her as Mrs. Mc-llveen and knew her husband. She had accounts at Lack’s, Sears on Main Street, and at Grant’s in the name of Mcllveen. The reason she didn’t sign her name “Mc-llveen” at Deaton Hospital, where she had worked, was that her social security was never changed. When asked who told her that she could make a claim as a common law wife, she testified that Alfred (Mc-llveen) told her that.

The holding out of appellant and Mc-llveen as husband and wife was corroborated by a number of witnesses. Mrs. Morales testified that she stayed in their home several days and visited them in October and November of 1955 and in January of 1956., She heard Mcllveen introduce appellant as his wife to several different people, and testified that they acted as other married couples do. Ida Barrow, a neighbor, testified that Mcllveen introduced appellant as his wife in a store, where the witness first met him, and that when she visited at the hospital she asked for Mrs. Mcllveen and that she got “Lupe”, the appellant. Marie Flores testified that Mc-llveen referred to Lupe as his wife, and that she referred to him as her husband, and that they seemed to be awfully fond of each other, and that she sent them a Christmas card addressed to Mr. & Mrs. Mc-llveen, and that she and her husband visited Mr. and Mrs. Mcllveen in their home, and that the neighbors referred to them as Mr. and Mrs. Mcllveen. Everlee Beasley testified that she had worked with appellant at Deaton Hospital, and knew her husband, Alfred Mcllveen, having met him when he brought some lunch to the hospital. Appellant introduced him to her as her husband. Estelle Kennedy testified that she had heard Mcllveen refer to appellant as his wife. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
332 S.W.2d 113, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 1984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcilveen-v-mcilveen-texapp-1960.