Papoutsis v. Trevino

167 S.W.2d 777
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
DocketNo. 11190
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 167 S.W.2d 777 (Papoutsis v. Trevino) 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
Papoutsis v. Trevino, 167 S.W.2d 777 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

Gilbert Trevino brought this suit and recovered judgment against Theodore Pa-poutsis and his wife, Reyes Ibarra Papout-sis, who have appealed.

The obvious purpose of appellee in bringing the suit, maintained under the thin veneer of an action for divorce, was to obtain from Reyes Ibarra Papoutsis, his [778]*778claimed wife under an alleged putative marriage, an interest in certain real properties in Bexar and Nueces Counties, to which she held the admitted record title. In the count for divorce Trevino prayed for dissolution of the bonds of an alleged putative common law marriage which he sought to superimpose upon her prior and existing common law marriage with Pa-poutsis. No ceremonial marriage was involved, since none had been previously resorted to by either of the three involved parties to establish a marital relation. Reyes Ibarra Papoutsis was the alleged common law wife in each purported union. Theodore Papoutsis was her first and continuing common law husband, while Trevino was the superimposed putative husband. In this action Trevino obtained an annulment of his alleged putative marriage to the versatile Ibarra, as well as judgment for one-half of all property acquired by her during the period in which he shared in her divided favors.

The whole controversy makes a sordid mess which courts of equity ought to ignore, leaving the parties to lie in the bed or beds of their own making.

The record is verbose in the extreme. The pleadings cover sixty-four of the four hundred fourteen pages in the transcript; the statement of facts includes 952 pages, plus several hundred documentary, photostatic and photographic exhibits. A full, complete and accurate substance of the material testimony could easily have been encompassed within a tenth of the space actually occupied.

The suit was tried upon Trevino’s fourth amended original petition, five supplemental petitions and three trial amendments, and upon nine defensive pleadings of appellants. In his fourth amended original petition Trevino complained of “Reyes Trevino, alias Reyes Ibarra, alias Reyes Ibarra Papoutsis, and Theodore Papoutsis.”

The record shows that Reyes Ibarra was divorced from a former husband, one Cruz, in 1928; that thereafter she engaged in business and bought properties only under her maiden name, Reyes Ibarra; that in 1930, while a resident of Corpus Christi, she entered into a common law marriage there with Theodore Papoutsis, also of Corpus Christi, and has ever since actively and openly maintained that relation there with him. In 1940, after this suit was brought, she and Papoutsis were married in a legal ceremony.

After her common law marriage to Pa-poutsis, Reyes Ibarra, who will be referred to hereinafter as “Ibarra,” contracted for and acquired title to four parcels of real property in San Antonio and one in Corpus Christi. These are the properties involved in this suit. Before the trial Papoutsis conveyed all his interest in those properties to his wife, Ibarra.

In the meantime, however, in 1933, ap-pellee, Trevino, a resident of San Antonio, claims he had contracted a common law marriage with Ibarra, without knowledge of her existing marriage to Papoutsis, and that this marriage continued until 'late in 1939, when they separated. Trevino further claims that, as he had had no knowledge of Ibarra’s existing union with Pa-poutsis, and upon her representation that she was unmarried, he became her common law husband, and was entitled to a community one-half interest in the said properties acquired by Ibarra, which, it was alleged, she acquired during the period of the alleged putative marriage between them. Trevino prayed for a divorce from Ibarra and a division of the alleged community property. His claims are thus described in appellants’ brief, which appellee does not question here:

“ * * * Plaintiff also alleged that if he were mistaken in saying he was validly married.to Reyes Ibarra, he was the innocent party to a putative marriage between them, which should be declared void and he be given a share of the property alleged to have been accumulated during said marriage. He further alleged, in the alternative, that if he was mistaken in his claim that there was a putative marriage, then there was an express oral agreement that he and Reyes Ibarra would acquire property in her name to be jointly owned by them. In the further alternative, plaintiff asked that he recover the sum of $11,700 claimed to have been advanced to Reyes Ibarra for the purchase of the properties involved. Plaintiff further claims, in the alternative, that if he be mistaken in his other claims, then there was a partnership between him and Reyes Ibarra, and that he is entitled to recover his own-ha}f undivided interest in the property.”

The cause was submitted to a jury upon fifty-three special issues. The jury found all the elements requisite to establish a common law marriage between Ibarra and Pa-poutsis in the fall of 1930, and made like findings in support of Trevino’s claimed [779]*779common law marriage to Ibarra in June, 1933, without notice to him of the existing marriage between Ibarra and Papoutsis, and in reliance upon her -representation that she was not then a married woman; that Trevino contributed to the purchase of the properties acquired by Ibarra, advanced monies to her for that purpose, upon her agreement to take title for the joint benefit of both. The jury further found that Trevino advanced specified amounts to Ibarra “to be used in the purchase of the” several properties acquired by her, and title to all of which had been taken and held in her name.

The trial court rendered judgment annulling the marriage between Trevino and Ibarra, and divided the properties involved equally between them. Papoutsis and his wife, Ibarra, have appealed.

As stated, Ibarra and Papoutsis, both resident of Corpus Christi, entered into a common law marriage there, in 1930. They continued to live together there as husband and wife until the relation was confirmed by a ceremonial marriage in 1940, shortly after this suit was filed against them by Trevino. At and before her marriage to Papoutsis, Ibarra was operating and is still operating a cafe in Corpus Christi, and she conducted and still conducts all her business affairs under the name of Reyes Ibarra. Her husband, Papoutsis, was and is still in charge of a cold drink stand in a local drug store in Corpus Christi.

In 1933, while Ibarra was temporarily in San Antonio, she and Trevino, according to jury findings, entered in an agreement to be husband and wife without any ceremony, which resulted in a series of assignations over a period of years, ending in a row in 1939, whereat they terminated their alleged marital relation. After their first assignation, of short duration, Ibarra returned to Corpus Christi and continued her relation with her husband Papoutsis, as if nothing had happened. She continued to live with him as before, except for occasional assignations with Trevino in San Antonio.

It should be said here that Ibarra vigorously denied the alleged marriage agreement with Trevino, or that Trevino ever furnished her any money for the purchase of property or for any other purpose.

In various ways appellants assail the jury findings and judgment of the court thereon in support of appellee’s theory that he and Ibarra entered into and maintained a putative marriage entitling him to a community interest in the property title to which was acquired by Ibarra in the course of the alleged putative marriage.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W.2d 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/papoutsis-v-trevino-texapp-1942.