O'Brien v. Woeltz

58 S.W. 943, 94 Tex. 148, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 225
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1900
DocketNo. 945.
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 58 S.W. 943 (O'Brien v. Woeltz) 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
O'Brien v. Woeltz, 58 S.W. 943, 94 Tex. 148, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 225 (Tex. 1900).

Opinions

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Ida Woeltz sued her husband, August Woeltz, for a divorce and for a partition of the community property, making John O’Brien a defendant, alleging that he had a mortgage upon the greater part of the property, and that the mortgage was executed when the property hereafter mentioned was a part of the homestead of Woeltz and his wife. Mrs. Woeltz prayed that the mortgage be canceled and that the property constituting the homestead, as well as other property, be partitioned between herself and her husband. There were a number of lots involved in the suit, but the controversy is narrowed down to the south half of lot 14 in block 30, and lot number 2 in block 4, in the city of San Antonio. We shall therefore only state the facts which are necessary to determine the rights of the parties as to these lots.

In 1893, August Woeltz, with his wife and children, resided upon the north half of lot No. 14 in block 30, and carried on a saloon and grocery business in a house on lot No. 2 in block 4. He owned both pieces of property at the time. The residence of the family was upon the north half of lot No. 14. Through the middle of that lot there was a fence built about six feet high, and on the south side of the fence a stable or stalls for horses was constructed, making the fence a part of it. The horses used in the business of Woeltz and for his family were fed and kept in this stable and the lot-was used for the horses when they were turned loose, and sometimes persons who came to trade with Woeltz in his grocery and saloon business camped in the inclosure. On August 16, 1893, August Woeltz and his wife, Ida Woeltz, to secure the payment of a $6000 note to John O’Brien, executed a deed of trust upon the south half of lot 14 and upon lot 2 in block 4, as well as upon other property. Woeltz borrowed $6000 from O’Brien and expended the money in building a two-story brick house upon the south half of lot 14. As soon as the house was completed, Woeltz moved his business out of the house on lot 2 in block 4 into the new storehouse and has continued there since, renting out the house in which he formerly carried on business. Prior to the time that Woeltz negotiated with O’Brien for the money, he and his wife determined to build a *152 house upon the south part of lot 14 and had a cellar for the foundation of the house dug out at that place. Mrs. Woeltz testified as follows: “When we borrowed this money from Mr. O’Brien, I was satisfied that this property should be taken off from the homestead and mortgaged; Mr. Woeltz did this with my consent; and the north half of the lot with the house on it was reserved as our homestead. I did not want the homestead mortgaged. It has sufficient room for our family; has six rooms and there is ground enough, but there is not much back yard; not very much, but enough for comfortable use, and I was satisfied to have the homestead contracted that way. It left us a residence with sufficient ground around it; at least yard enough to get along with.” Also as follows: “I understand the mortgage. I understood when we were mortgaging the property that we were reserving only the house we were living in.” Woeltz testified: “I gave Mr. O’Brien a deed of trust for all of my property except the north half of lot 14, block 30. That was left-out as our homestead. It was our family residence. This half of the lot was fenced off when the money was taken because he said it had to be fenced up. * * * At the time I borrowed the money, I had nothing where the store now is. A cellar was dug before I borrowed the money.”

The plaintiff in error claimed that at the time the deed of trust was executed the south half of lot 14 was not a part of the residence homestead, and that subsequently to the execution of the deed the business homestead upon lot No. 2 in block 4 had been abandoned, making both pieces of property liable to the deed of trust. The case was submitted to the judge without a jury and he gave judgment canceling the deed of trust as to lot No. 2 in block 4, and foreclosing it upon so much of the south half of lot 14 as is covered by the building. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment and rendered judgment canceling the deed of trust as to lot No. 2 in block 4, and also as to the south half of lot No. 14.

The case is presented to this court upon an assignment that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in canceling the deed of trust upon the south half of lot No. 14 in block 30.

It is not claimed that the husband attempted in any way to defraud the wife of her homestead right or that the deed of trust was made with a view of incumbering the homestead while it existed as such. Neither is it claimed that the homestead of the family was unduly contracted so as to render it inadequate; therefore the decisions of this court which involve those questions are wholly inapplicable to this case.

If Woeltz and wife had removed from lot 14 with the fixed intention to not return to it, the fact being clearly proved by their declarations or otherwise, this would constitute an abandonment of the homestead right. Woolfolk v. Rickets, 41 Texas, 362; Cline v. Upton, 56 Texas, 323. Why could they not, by the same acts, abandon a part of the lot ? *153 The act of setting the land apart for a business house was an abandonment of it for residence purposes. Medlenka v. Downing, 59 Texas, 39.

In the case of Wynne v. Hudson, 66 Texas, 9, this court definitely held that the husband; without the consent and concurrence of the wife, might abandon a part of the homestead property as such and devote it to a use inconsistent with the residence homestead rights, and that by so doing the property would lose its character as homestead and its protection under the Constitution. In that case the wife was not consulted about the transaction, and the husband did not intend by his acts to abandon the property as a homestead or to give up the exemption which the Constitution secured to him, but had in view the use of it for purposes which were held by the court to be inconsistent with its use as a residence homestead, and therefore his acts, against his own will and consent and without the concurrence of his wife, worked a forfeiture of the homestead exemption to that portion of the property.

If the husband, without the consent of the wife, can cut off a part of the homestead occupied by the family and strip it of the constitutional exemption, then certainly the husband and wife, concurring in intention and acts, may accomplish the same thing. There is no question made in this cage that Woeltz and his wife agreed that they would limit their residence homestead to the north half of lot 14 in block 30, in San Antonio, and that they would devote the south half of the said lot to occupancy by a business house to be constructed upon it. The intent to do this is testified to by both Woeltz and his wife, and they each testified that, in order to carry out this intent, there was dug upon the southeast corner of the south half of that lot a cellar, constituting the foundation for the house to be built, and so far their acts were consistent with their intent to separate that part of the property from the homestead.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 943, 94 Tex. 148, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-woeltz-tex-1900.