Moore v. Moore

192 S.W.2d 929, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 679
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1946
DocketNo. 14744.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 929 (Moore v. Moore) 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
Moore v. Moore, 192 S.W.2d 929, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 679 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Appellant, Elizabeth H. Moore as plaintiff below, instituted this suit against ap-pellee, Lonnie B. Moore, as defendant, seeking a divorce and a division of property; she claimed that certain funds were her separate property and that all the remainder was community. She prayed for attorney’s fees as against her husband.

Appellee answered by general denial and a special plea of cross action for divorce, and asserted that specified funds were his separate property, that all other funds were community and sought a division of the community property.

Trial was to the court without a jury; judgment for divorce upon the petition of appellant was entered. Appellant was denied recovery of certain funds claimed as separate and appellee recovered some of the funds he claimed as separate property. The court found that $400 was a reasonable attorney fee and gave her judgment against the husband for one-half of that amount. The wife being dissatisfied with the judgment has appealed.

No dispute arises here as to the sufficiency of the pleadings, and wa find no fault with them.

Appellant relies upon five points of error which may be classified and consolidated into three. They are in substance: (1) Error of the court in finding that the $1,550, originally the separate property of appellee, had not been intermingled and commingled with community 'funds so as to lose its identity as separate funds. (2) Error of the court in holding that $1,500, originally the separate property of appellant, had been so intermingled and commingled with community funds as to lose its identity as her separate property. And, (3) error in entering judgment for appellant for only $200 or one-half of the attorney’s fee against appellee.

It is apparent from the judgment as a whole, that the court undertook to award to each of the parties such of the funds and jewelry on hand as appeared to be their separate property and to divide the community property equally according to the long-standing principles announced in the early case of Fitts v. Fitts, 14 Tex. 443, and the many cases following it on down to and including McGarraugh v. McGarraugh, Tex.Civ.App., 177 S.W.2d 296.

Points of error one and two challenge the findings of the court in determining what was and what was not the separate property of the respective parties.

We deem it appropriate to make some observations, just here, of some of the cardinal principles of law applicable to the respective claims of property here involved.

All property owned by either spouse prior to marriage remains separate property after marriage. All property acquired by either during coverture, by gift, devise or descent is separate property as distinguished from community. Moneys received by an ex-soldier after marriage for services rendered to the government prior to marriage become his separate property; 23 Tex.Jur., 140, § 111, citing Johnson v. Johnson, Tex.Civ.App., 23 S.W. 1022. If the “bonus money” received by *931 appellee in this case were additional compensation to that formerly paid by the government to him for services rendered, the services were performed before marriage, and his rights thereto existed at the time of marriage, and if the “bonus” were a gift by the government it fell within the rule of gifts during coverture. We are not attempting to adjudicate any other form of compensation to soldiers; they are not before us.

It is the generally recognized rule in this state that if a bank checking account contains both separate and community funds, all commingled in such a way that neither can be distinguished from the other, the whole must be considered community property. Smith v. Buss, 135 Tex. 566, 144 S.W.2d 529, 532.

Appellee testified substantially that since his marriage to appellant in 1920, he received from the U. S. Government $1,789 as a “bonus” for services rendered by him as a soldier in World War I. That he deposited that money in The First National Bank of Fort Worth in a savings account. (Subsequent testimony reveals that he deposited only $1,550 of that money in the savings account.) He said that the bonus money was all that he put in that account; that he had a checking account in another bank; that he purchased a $2,100 note for $2,000 and put his bonus money from the savings account into that purchase. “I took from the bank and gave a check for the balance to make $2,000.00.” (This made the total purchase price of the note.) “I put my bonus in on that note.” He said the $2,000 note so purchased bore six or seven per cent interest and was repaid in monthly installments over a period of about eight jrears, and all installments went back into, the savings account in The First National Bank of Fort Worth; that at the time of trial the note had been fully paid, the last installment having been paid about two months before the trial. In response to a question asked he said he never had commingled his bonus money with community funds. “That is the only money, bonus money, in The First National Bank, and it is a savings account.” At another part of his testimony he said there was, at the date of trial, $2,458.69 in the savings account in The First National Bank. That the excess in the bank, over the amount of his bonus money invested in the note, was the $100 discount which he got when he purchased the note, and the accumulated interest on the note while it was being paid.

The banker in charge of the savings account said the first deposit was $1,550 made on June 25, 1936, and that on July 3, 1936, he deposited $35; on July 11, same year, $50; and on October 5th, same year, $863; and on June 1’5, 1937, $19.85. That in January, 1937, there was $2,500 in the account. The witness said that the account dropped down to $10 in May, 1937.

Appellee was recalled and admitted that he must have been mistaken about having placed the whole of his bonus money check in the savings account when he opened it, but reaffirmed that all money in that bank over and above the amount he did open the account with ($1,550) was community funds. He said he and his wife had a checking account in the Fort Worth National Bank upon which they drew at all times to pay their household expenses.

There are many discrepancies between the testimony of appellee as to how the funds were handled and the testimony of appellant and the banker, but it remains that there is no dispute of the fact the bonus fund was originally appellee’s separate property and that $1,550 of the amount was deposited in the savings account and was used, -along with community funds, to make up the difference between the bonus fund and $2,000 to purchase the note. The precise source from which the community funds came is not disclosed. The trial court held that the $1,550 of bonus money had not become so commingled with community funds as to lose its identity, and awarded to appellee, as his separate property $1,550, holding that the remainder of the account was community. Apparently the trial court, as trier of the facts as well as of the law, discarded such of the testimony that conflicted with that of appellee and gave credence to his testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 929, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-moore-texapp-1946.