Oldham v. McIver

49 Tex. 556
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 49 Tex. 556 (Oldham v. McIver) 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
Oldham v. McIver, 49 Tex. 556 (Tex. 1878).

Opinion

Roberts, Chief Justice.

The question as to whether Phillis Oldham, under the facts found by the jury in this case, was the wife of William Oldham at the timé of his death, so as to be entitled to a homestead and other property exempt [564]*564from administration, has been decided by this court adversely to such a claim. She being one-half African blood, and he being white, they could not have been man and wife at the time of his death under the laws of this State. (Clements et al. v. Crawford, 42 Tex., 601, and others, overruling Honey v. Clark, 37 Tex., 705; Frasher v. The State, 3 Tex., (Court of Appeals,) 263.)

The main objection to the judgment, relied on m the brief of appellants, is that the court erred in its action upon the defense of res judicata set up to this proceeding of certiorari to revise and set aside the order of the County Court, setting apart to her and to her children the homestead and other exempted property.

At the January Term of the County Court of Burleson county in 1869, upon her application for herself and children, the said order was made, setting apart to them the homestead and other exempt property, as the widow and children of William Oldham, as being the constituents of Ms family, left at the time of his death, in 1868.

The estate having been administered on by Williamson S. Oldham in 1868, an order had been obtained for renting the farm, and farming stock, and implements of said estate, in-. eluding the said homestead and exempted property, which had been rented to Teaff & Thompson for the year 1869, and they had taken possession of the same previous to the order of the County Court setting apart the homestead and other property.

To prevent the execution of an order from the County Court then in the hands of the sheriff, directing him to put her and her children in possession of said homestead and exempt property that had been set apart to them, said renters, Teaff & Thompson, in February, 1869, filed a petition for an injunction in the District Court of Burleson county, maldng said Phillis, and her said children, and said administrator parties, as defendants in the suit. The defendants filed answers, and at the Spring Term, 1869, of said District Court a judgment [565]*565was rendered in said suit, determining that Teaff & Thompson should retain the homestead and other exempt property during the year 1869, and hold it as tenants of Phillis and her said children, and at the end of the year turn it over to them, and pay to them $780, its rental value for the year, as assessed by the jury, (to ascertain which was the only matter submitted to or found by them in the trial of the case,) and that amount should be deducted from the rent note given by Teaff" & Thompson to the administrator, and that they should be released from that amount of the debt due at the end of said year to the administrator for the rent of the whole of the property so rented by them, including the homestead and exempt property. This judgment was carried out, and has never been appealed from or reversed; and this is the judgment which is set up by Phillis and her children as res judicata, as conclúding and estopping the administrator de bonis non, A. W. Mclver, from disputing the fact that she was the lawful wife and her said children the hems of William Oldham, deceased, at the time of his death, in 1868, in this proceeding by certiorari, instituted by the administrator to revise and set aside the order of the County Court, made in •January, 1869, setting apart to them, as his widow and children, said homestead and exempted property.

Under the law as it existed in 1869, the County Court was authorized to set apart to the widow and children of the deceased, if he had such, the homestead and exempted property. (Paschal’s Dig., art. 1305.) This gave that court the right to ascertain the fact that she was his lawful wife, and that certain of her children were his- heirs, and to make the order thereon setting apart the property. That was an adjudication of that fact by a competent court, having jurisdiction of the matter, as pertaining to the estate of William Oldham, then being administered in said court. That order conclusively established that fact in any other suit or proceeding in which it was or might be involved, or be put in issue, until set aside by appeal or certiorari, directly, and not collaterally, attacking [566]*566its validity - as a judgment -of court establishing that fact. That is what the administrator sought to do by this proceeding of certiorari, instituted in the District Court in February, 1869, the next month of the same year the order was made. By the statute, he was entitled, at any time within two years, to this remedy by certiorari, issued from the District Court by order of the district judge, “ to remove the proceedings to the District Court, there to be revised and corrected.” (Paschal’s Dig., art. 480; Act of 1848.) The trial is de novo in this proceeding in the District Court, the same as upon appeal from the order of the County Court sought to be revised and corrected. (Moore v. Hardison, 10 Tex., 471.) The fact, therefore, of her being the lawful wife of William Oldham, upon which said order was founded, was on this trial subject to be disputed and disproved by the administrator; and if successfully done, a predicate would be laid for the action of the District Court in revising and correcting said order of the County Court.

Where there had been an order of the County Court distributing an estate, and this remedy was resorted to, Chief Justice Hemphill said: “ The proceedings are to be revised and corrected. They are not final, in an appellate sense, until after the lapse of two years. This judgment may be reversed or reformed as the law may require, and the property redistributed according to the very right of the parties to the cause. Any rights which may have grown up under the judgment of the County Court prior to the supersedeas, cannot be disturbed; as, for instance, rights claimed through public sale under the judgment, &c.” (Dunham v. Chatham, 21 Tex., 249.) This case, for the revising of said order of the County Court, was not tried and determined in the District Court until the September Term, 1874, several years after the injunction suit brought b.y Teaff & Thompson had been determined, and the judgment therein executed, in favor of Phillis and her children. It is not shown that there have been any rights of third ¡Demons' intervening, in reference to this [567]*567property, that would prevent the order of the County Court from being corrected, if found to have been erroneously made. After Phillis and her children (Otho and Eutis) appeared and answered in this case, at their instance it was ruled by the District Court that they, in this proceeding, occupied the position of plaintiffs, and required the title of the case to be changed, and it thenceforth proceeded in accordance with said ruling, as exhibited in the pleadings and in the orders and judgment of the court. And it was in this attitude that they, as plaintiffs, set up against the administrator, as defendant, in what is styled an amended petition, “ that the matters in controversy in this suit have heretofore been fully adjudicated and settled by the judgment and decree in the cause numbered and known on the docket of this court as number 1005,”—it being the injunction suit heretofore referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Tex. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldham-v-mciver-tex-1878.