Nichols v. Stewart

15 Tex. 226
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 Tex. 226 (Nichols v. Stewart) 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
Nichols v. Stewart, 15 Tex. 226 (Tex. 1855).

Opinion

Lipscomb, J.

This suit was brought by the plaintiff, Rachael Nichols, to recover her share of one league of land granted by the Mexican Government to her deceased husband, John Sow-ell. She alleges that the several persons, named and prayed to be made defendants, have taken possession of portions of the said land under some pretended claim of title.

The defendants answered, setting up title derived from administrator’s sale of the estate of John Sowell, or by title derived from the plaintiff herself. ' Arthur Swift intervened; claimed to be the owner by purchase from Rachael Turner, claiming to be the grand-daughter of John Sowell, and daughter of William A. Sowell, a son of the said John Sowell, and prayed to have the share, so purchased by him of Rachael Turner, set apart to him. All the defendants prayed judgment, quieting them in their respective titles.

There was a verdict of the jury, finding various special facts ; on which there was a judgment against the plaintiff. There was a judgment in favor of Swift, for one share of the balance of the lands of John Sowell, after deducting therefrom the lands sold by the administrator. There Was a judgment in favor of those who claimed by purchase from the other heirs [231]*231of John Sowell, subject, however, to the claim of Swift for the share of Rachael Turner, the grand-daughter of John Sowell, she having been adjudged to be one of the heirs of John Sowell. And there was a judgment in favor of those who claimed title derived by purchase from the said plaintiff, Rachael Nichols. Those defendants who were affected by the decree in favor of Arthur Swift, appealed from the judgment and decree, in that only. And the plaintiff brought writ of error, to reverse the judgment and decree in favor of Charles A. Stewart.

The question, presented by the appellants, is as to the heir-ship of Rachael Turner to John Sowell, as the child of William A. Sowell. The appellants contend that she is not the legitimate heir of William A. Sowell, not having been born in legal wedlock between the said William and her mother. The proof shows that on the 1st day of June, 1834, William A. Sowell and Sarah Grogan entered into what is commonly known as a marriage bond. It was in proof that they lived together some time before the date of this bond, as man and wife; that they were recognized as such by the family of John Sowell, the father ; that Rachael was recognized by the family as the child of William A. Sowell, and was named after the mother of the said William. It was in proof that Rachael, at the time of the execution of the marriage bond, above mentioned, was a small child, just beginning to walk. The evidence was not very precise as to her age. They lived in the family of John Sowell. It was in proof that there had been a marriage bond between Sarah Grogan, the mother of Radial, and one Frederick Roe, entered into November, 1332, and was filed with the Alcalde of Gonzales, which bond was cancelled by mutual consent a short time before the date of the marriage bond between Sarah Grogan and William A. Sowell. It was further in proof, that Roe and Sarah Grogan lived together a short time as man and wife, the time not exactly proven, ranging from three months to eight; and it was proved that William Sowell paid Roe for a release of his claim upon Sarah Grogan, as his wife. It was in proof that William A. Sowell died a short time after [232]*232the execution of the marriage bond between himself and Sarah Grogan, and before the death of his father John Sowell.

We are relieved from discussing the question, as to what would have been the effect of such agreements to live in a matrimonial relation, on the status of the children of parties so living as man and wife, acknowledging and claiming those children as the offspring of the parties, had there been no legislation on the subject. Had -there been none, it would not have followed as a necessary consequence, that the children of such parents should be bastardized (in after time, when civil society become better organized) and held to be incapable of holding as heirs to their parents. At the time that these bonds were entered into; there was no means of solemnizing matrimony, in any form recognized by the law of the land, there being no Eclesiastics to whom resort could be had, who alone, it seems, could solemnize, with the sanctions of the Church, matrimony; and parties were driven back to the primative elements, constituting the married state : and this, no doubt, was the mutual consent of the parties. We, however, have legislation on the subject. But a recurrence to the circumstances in which the parties were placed, at the time these engagements were entered into, may not be unprofitable, in applying the subsequent legislation, to such cases.

Art. 2439, Hart. Dig., being the 2nd Section of the Act of 5th June, 1837, is as follows, i. e.: “ That in cases where per- “ sons have intermarried, as aforesaid, agreeably to the cus- “ toms of the country, and either husband or wife had died “ previous to the passage of this law, then and in that case, all such marriages are declared of legal and binding effect, “ and the issue of the same are hereby legitimatized provided “ that such parties lived together as man and wife at the said death of either party.”

A strict, literal construction of the Act of the Congress, above cited, would, perhaps, limit the legitimatizing of the children, to such as were born after the execution of the mar[233]*233riage bond; but that would not seem to be within the spirit and object of the law. It was designed to legalize marriages or associations of that kind, and to put it upon the same footing as if married with the legal sanction of the Church. The consequences of a legal marriage at that time, would have been to make children, the issue (acknowledged by the father) of the parties born before wedlock, legal heirs. This was the Spanish Law and Mexican Law, at the time the marriage bond was executed. The fact that the parties were living together as man and wife, at the death of either of them, seems to have been regarded by the Legislature as most important. The proof is abundant, without any contradiction, that William A. Sowell and Sarah Grogan were living together as man and wife, and that they both always claimed the child Rachael as their common offspring.

Some embarrassment has been thrown upon the question of the paternity of Rachael, from the proof that there had been a marriage bond between her mother and Frederick Roe, and that the bond between them was not cancelled, until a few days before the date of the marriage bond between Sarah Grogan and William A. Sowell; and that Rachael was at that time about six months old. The conclusion, attempted to be raised from these facts, is, that Rachael must, from her age, have been born during the time her mother was living with Frederick Roe, as man and wife. The evidence, however, will not support this conclusion. It proves that a marriage bond had been entered into between Roe and Sarah, in November, 1832 ; that they lived together a very short time ; several of the witnesses said from three to six months. Take the longest date, and the child could not have been born, nor even begotten during that time. The evidence shows that Sarah Grogan and William A. Sowell were living together at the time of Rachael’s birth, as man and wife. The bond between Roe and Sarah Grogan had no validity, and as there was no law to sanction such contract, there was none to enforce it, and it could be vio [234]

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tex. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-stewart-tex-1855.