Mitchell v. Mitchell

15 S.W. 705, 80 Tex. 101, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 962
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1891
DocketNo. 3010.
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 15 S.W. 705 (Mitchell v. Mitchell) 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
Mitchell v. Mitchell, 15 S.W. 705, 80 Tex. 101, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 962 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

HENRY, Associate Justice.

Appellee Margaret J. Mitchell filed . suit in trespass to try title against William B. Mitchell,. Charles S. Mitchell, H. Z. Mitchell, Elizabeth A. Mitchell, Laura B. Mitchell, a minor, Mary 0. Burbank and her husband H. C. Burbank, Jennie C. Walton and her husband C. Walton, and William R. Johnson, temporary administrator of the estate of J. S. Mitchell, to recover certain real property in Galveston. Judgment was rendered for appellee.

*108 All of the defendants except Laura B. Mitchell appeared and answered by a general demurrer and plea of not guilty.. Subsequently the defendants Johnson and Elizabeth A. Mitchell filed amended pleadings as follows:

Defendant W. R. Johnson, temporary administrator of the estate of J. S. Mitchell, deceased, answered “not guilty,” and filed an exhibit of the funds by him received and disbursed for account of said estate.

Elizabeth A. Mitchell pleaded in abatement that before suit was brought appellee had conveyed one-fourth part of the premises sued for to Willie, Mott & Ballinger, and F. D. Minor, who owned and claimed such interest and should be parties defendant to the suit. And that these facts were unknown to Elizabeth A. Mitchell until after filing her •original answer in the suit, and that she pleaded the matter on first opportunity after learning it. She further pleaded that appellee derived title, if any she had, to the property sued for through her (appellee’s) deceased husband, James S. Mitchell, who acquired said property during his marriage with plaintiff. That James S. Mitchell by last will probated in a court of competent jurisdiction in Stearns County, Minnesota, provided that appellee should take the property involved in this suit upon condition that she should accept the same in lieu of all rights which by the laws of Minnesota she would have in the testator’s estate, real and personal, and if she should not within such time as might be fixed by the court (meaning a reasonable time) or by law relinquish all her rights under the statute and accept the provisions of the will in lieu thereof, such provision should be null and void and she should receive only such part of his estate as under the laws of descent and distribution she would be entitled to, and all property so intended to be devised to her by said provision, if the same were not so accepted by her and her other rights relinquished, were by the will devised to the defendant Elizabeth A. Mitchell. That though a reasonable time had elapsed since the probate of the will, appellee had failed to make the election imposed upon her by the will as a condition of her taking the property herein sued for, but had sought and was still seeking to avoid making such election and was contesting the probate of the will by proceedings in the Supreme Court of Minnesota, which would be finally heard in said court at its October session, 1889, when and where it was alleged said will would in all probability be finally adjudicated valid as against the contest of appellee. Said defendant charged that the purpose of this suit, pending the contest of said will, was to enable plaintiff by obtaining judgment in this suit to plead the same as res judicata, against this defendant, when under the provisions of said will she should make claim to said property as reverting to her through the rejection of the terms of the will by appellee, and so appellee would be enabled to reject the will and at the same time claim the property under judgment of this court, obtained before said will could be re *109 garded as finally established, all of which was contrary to equity and good conscience. She prayed that this suit be stayed until the contest of said will should be determined, or if the court should rule otherwise, then that it be on condition that the proceedings in this suit should be without prejudice to the rights of said defendant under said will whenever the contest should be determined, and that the proceedings in this suit should be so ordered and directed as to leave open the right of this defendant to claim under the will when finally established. She also pleaded “not guilty” and a general denial.

Appellee demurred and excepted to the special pleas of Elizabeth A. Mitchell, because the plea of non-joinder came too late after answer to the merits, and no sufficient reason was shown why it was not earlier filed; and further, because it was otherwise insufficient in law and because the plea for stay of proceedings could not affect the issues in this suit, and because the will had not been probated in this State, and she also traversed the facts alleged in said pleas and pleaded a release to her by Willie, Mott & Ballinger and.F. D. Minor of their interests in the property sued for. The court sustained appellee’s demurrers.

Laura B. Mitchell answered “not guilty” by guardian ad litem appointed by the court.

Upon the verdict of a jury judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for all of the land in controversy against all of the defendants.

Plaintiff’s contention was that the property in controversy was purchased during her marriage with J. S. Mitchell by the said J. S. Mitchell; that while the deeds for the property were made to her husband the purchase money belonged to her separate estate, and that the lands were purchased for her separately and never became the community property of herself and her husband.

The plaintiff before her marriage to J. S. Mitchell was a widow and had some separate property. She was merchandising, conducting.a retail produce business. The evidence indicates that before he married plaintiff J. S. Mitchell had very little if any capital. Subsequent to his marriage he conducted a retail produce mercantile business under the style of J. S. Mitchell & Co., in which plaintiff claimed that she owned the capital.

The court did not err in sustaining the plaintiff’s exceptions to the pleadings of the defendant Elizabeth S. Mitchell. If the plaintiff succeeds in establishing her title to the whole of the property in controversy as her separate property, her title can not be affected by any disposition made of it by her husband’s will. What effect her claiming the property in controversy and establishing her title to it may have upon her right to take property belonging to the estate of her husband and devised to her by his will is not an issue in this suit. If any of the property in controversy belongs to the estate of plaintiff’s deceased husband and shall not be recovered by her in this suit, the rights of *110 Ms other devisees, if they shall succeed in establishing his will against the opposition of the plaintiff, will not be prejudiced by the result of this suit. If it be "conceded that Willie, Mott & Ballinger and Minor own an undivided one-fourth interest in the property in controversy and are tenants in common with the plaintiff, that presents no reason why she may not prosecute this suit to a final judgment. It has been repeatedly held by this court that one tenant in common may maintain an action of trespass to try title against a trespasser without joining his .cotenants.

Appellants complain of the following proceedings in the District Court: “The court proceeded to impanel a jury to try the cause from the regular panel for the week during which the cause was called for trial.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W. 705, 80 Tex. 101, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-mitchell-tex-1891.