Peterman v. Peterman

55 S.W.2d 1108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1933
DocketNo. 1036.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 1108 (Peterman v. Peterman) 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
Peterman v. Peterman, 55 S.W.2d 1108 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LESLIE, J.

This is an appeal by H. L. Peterman, defendant below, from a judgment against him in favor of his former wife, Chloeris Peter-man, on seven promissory notes. The parties will be referred to as in the trial court.

The primary defense in the lower court was failure of consideration, and the numerous errors assigned relate directly or indirectly to the trial court’s rulings which pertained to that defense.

The parties were married in 1918. They accumulated some community property. A daughter was born to them. September, 1929, Mrs. Peterman procured a divorce and was awarded the custody of the child, then eight years of age.

While the divorce suit was pending, and prior to the decree, the parties entered into a written separation agreement, adjusting property rights. This was filed with the record in the case and confirmed by the court’s carrying such arrangement into the judgment; the suit being one for division of community property, as well as divorce and custody of child. The agreement made an equitable adjustment of property rights and contained the following provisions:

“Now therefore, for the purpose of settling, disposing of and eliminating from the said suit all controversy between the said parties as to the ownership and as to a division of the property of every kind owned, held or claimed by them or either of them, it has been and is hereby agreed by and between the said parties as follows:
“First: H. L. Peterman, defendant in the said cause, has agreed and does hereby agree and promise to pay to the said Chloeris Peter-man, plaintiff in said cause, or to her order, the full sum and amount of two thousand six hundred eighty-three and 90/100 ($2683.-90) which shall become payable and be paid in installments as follows: The sum of two hundred ($200.00) dollars on the 15th day of August, 1929, and a like sum of two hundred ($200.00) dollars on the 15th day of each and every month thereafter until the full sum *1109 of $2683.90 shall have been paid, without interest.
“Second: The said H. L. Peterman hereby further agrees that he will pay to the said Ohloeris Peterman the sum of Sixty ($60.00) per month for the support, maintenance and education of their little daughter Kathryne Peterman, until the said Ohloeris Peterman shall remarry, in the event of the granting of a divorce in the above mentioned cause, conditioned however, that the said Ohloeris Pe-terman shall give to the said child that kind and loving care and attention to which she is rightfully entitled from her parents. It being fully understood that the said Ohloeris Peterman shall have and is hereby given the right to the care and custody of the said Kathryne Peterman so long as she may give to her such care and attention as hereinabove mentioned, and that the said H. L. Peterman shall have the right to visit the said child as often as he may see fit.”

The stipulations as to property rights became almost literally the terms of the judgment, which decreed that the defendant pay plaintiff “as her part of the community property,” $2,683.90 in thirteen monthly installments each for $200, except the last, for $283.-90. The custody of the child was awarded thé mother “so long as the said Ohloeris Peter-man shall give to said child the proper mother love, care and treatment,” and she was given a further judgment against the defendant “for the sum of $60.00 per month for the education, care, support and maintenance of said child.” The judgment awarded the defendant, Harry Peterman, “title in fee simple to lots 9 and 10, Blk. P ⅜ * ⅜ city of Breckenridge,” and “all household goods, kitchen furniture, automobile, stocks, bonds or other personal property owned by the plaintiff and the defendant at the time of said separation.” The judgment granted the right to the plaintiff to mature all unpaid installments upon defendant’s default in the payment of any one of them, and she was adjudged a lien on said lots to secure payment of the installments, but the lien was subject to a prior vendor’s lien against the property.

The defendant complied with the terms of the judgment for a time, and then defaulted, in part at least, in the payment of several of the installments. The unpaid portion of each such installment was reduced to the notes in suit and delivered to plaintiff in lieu of such obligation and extension of time.

The defendant answers plaintiff’s suit with plea of failure of consideration. He alleges the execution of the original agreement and the judgment based thereon, and incorporates in his answer the portions of the agreement and judgment above set out. The failure of consideration is alleged to lie in the facts (1) that at the time of the written agreement and the entry of the judgment, and at the execution of the notes sued on, “it was mutually understood and agreed by and between plaintiff and defendant that the love, care, treatment, support, maintenance, and education of said child mentioned in said decree and ⅜ * * in said agreement meant and should include instructions in music * * * and the placing of said child under * * ⅜ a competent music teacher” ; (2) that plaintiff had received and misapplied the $60 installment payments without defendant’s knowledge or consent; and (3) that the plaintiff had failed to comply with the above agreement and understanding, and that such payments would not have been made by defendant but for his reliance upon such agreement as to music, etc.

The defendant then sets up that, in compliance with the agreement and the terms of the judgment, he paid $1,020 for the maintenance and education of the daughter, and $1,854.50 on the $200 installments. That these sums amounted to $2,874.50, an amount in excess of $2,683.90, which the judgment required that he should pay plaintiff for her interest in community property.

The defendant then seeks to offset the judgment for $2,683.90 with said payments, by alleging that he did not know until June 15, 1930, that the plaintiff had- not given the child music instructions and that she had failed to use the $60 payments for the benefit of said child; and he alleges that the first four of said notes were delivered prior to said date and information, and that the last three were executed and delivered after receiving such information, but not until “he reproached her for having failed” to give the child instruction in music, and she “orally again promised .and agreed with the defendant that she would thereafter give or cause to be given such music lessons,” etc. That all the notes were given by defendant in his reliance on such material promises and considerations as to music, etc., which promises were in terms violated and disregarded by plaintiff.

The defendant therefore contends, in the alternative, that, since the $1,020 so paid by him, or at least $690 thereof, had been “diverted and misapplied” by plaintiff, she has therefore become indebted to him for such an amount, which he is entitled to have applied in satisfaction of the judgment of $2,-683.90 awarded her for her -interest in the community property. .This amount, plus $1,-854.50 paid on that judgment, would practically satisfy the same.

We now pass from the statement of the case to a consideration of the propositions upon which the appeal is predicated.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterman-v-peterman-texapp-1933.