Phelan v. Phelan

471 S.W.2d 605, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2416
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 23, 1971
Docket7269, 7272
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 471 S.W.2d 605 (Phelan v. Phelan) 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
Phelan v. Phelan, 471 S.W.2d 605, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2416 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

KEITH, Justice.

We review two appeals, separately perfected from different courts, but which involve the competing interests in certain tracts of land. The parties have filed separate briefs and we heard a single argument upon submission of the causes. The single opinion which follows will serve as the basis of separate judgments in the two appeals.

Cause No. 7269 — which we will refer to hereinafter as the “Divorce Appeal”— brings forward for review a part of the divorce decree entered by the Court of Domestic Relations for Jefferson County in Cause No. 76247-C, entitled Georgia M. Phelan v. Francis Dennis Phelan, II. Plaintiff sought a divorce, custody of the children born of the marriage (along with an appropriate order requiring defendant to support the children), a partition of the property rights, attorney’s fees, and costs of suit.

From the undisputed facts in our record, supported by the findings of fact filed by the trial court in the non-jury proceeding, it appears that at the time of the commencement of the divorce suit by the ap-pellee, the husband owned certain oil and gas properties. Whether or not this was separate property or community property is not clear in our record, but, under our ruling herein, such fact is not determinative. During the course of the litigation when the matters of division of the property, custody of the children born of the marriage, appropriate child support orders, and attorney’s fees for the wife were pending before the trial court, the husband executed two instruments in writing. One was an assignment of the bonus and royalty from the lands to his counsel in the divorce suit and was effective until they had received a stated sum therefrom. The other was a conveyance in trust to his sister, Patricia Phelan Malain, of his interest in said lands, to take effect upon the receipt by his lawyers of their fixed sum. The children born of the marriage in issue were the beneficiaries of the trust. Neither instrument contained a warranty. We will refer to these two instruments, collectively, as “conveyances.” We note that each was filed for record immediately after execution and delivery — some several months before the entry of the final decree in the divorce action.

The transcript of the proceedings in the divorce appeal reveals that after the execution of the instruments heretofore mentioned, the wife filed her first amended original petition in her divorce action wherein she brought into the suit as defendants the assignees and grantee in the two instruments mentioned. Allegations were made that the husband had sought to oust and deprive the divorce court of jurisdiction over such properties; that both instruments were invalid. She prayed for final judgment of partition of the property of the parties in the divorce action as such *607 “estate existed at the commencement of this suit,” i. e., before the execution of the instruments heretofore mentioned.

The husband filed a motion to strike such allegations; and, after the same was presented to and considered by the court, such allegations were stricken. In the verified motion to strike we find the following allegations were made:

“This Defendant [husband] would further show the Court that the Plaintiff [wife] herein did heretofore on December 8, 1970, file in the 136th Judicial District Court of Jefferson County, Texas, in Cause No. D-95169 and entitled Georgia M. Phelan vs. Patricia Phelan Malain, H. P. Robichau, Jr., and William C. Ross, Jr., her original petition directly attacking the conveyances referred to in the portion of Plaintiff’s First Amended Original Petition filed herein, [being the property involved in this appeal] here sought to be stricken, and praying that the Court enter judgment that said instruments were and are ineffectual to convey, transfer or assign to Patricia Phelan Malain, H. P. Robichau, Jr., and William C. Ross, Jr., any right, title or interest of any character whatsoever in or to the properties therein described and that they be permanently enjoined from executing any and all instruments purporting to convey, transfer or assign any of said properties, or any interest therein, to any other person. That the parties to said suit now pending in the 136th Judicial [District] Court of Jefferson County, Texas, have heretofore answered said pleading and all of said parties are now before that Court for the adjudication of the matters which this Defendant here moves the Court to delete from Plaintiff’s First Amended Original Petition in this cause.”

Upon the trial of the divorce suit, while the husband was giving testimony concerning the property now in issue before us, in answer to a question propounded by his own counsel, said:

“Q. Do you own any of those properties now?
“A. No, sir.” [Emphasis supplied]

During the course of the hearing on the divorce action, the husband introduced the two conveyances into evidence. In the final decree from which the appeal is perfected, the trial court, in effect, ignored the two conveyances executed during the course of the litigation and awarded to the wife an undivided one-fourth interest in the lands covered in the conveyances, even using the recordation data thereof as the legal description. In his appeal the husband does not assert any present ownership in the mineral interests involved in the divorce action, although he carefully refrains from a repudiation of the two conveyances.

His single point on appeal in the divorce action is this:

“The Court erred in awarding Appellee an undivided interest in real property which was not owned by Appellant at the time of trial and that portion of such judgment is void.”

In Cause No. 7272 — which we will refer to as the “Injunction Appeal,” — the following sequence of events is established in our record: The assignees and grantee in the conveyances heretofore mentioned brought suit in the 58th District Court of Jefferson County, Texas, to enjoin Frank Rollins, Constable of Precinct No. 1 of Jefferson County, Texas, from “making any sale of the * * * [property described in the two conveyances] * * * under and by virtue of a notice of execution sale and levy dated March 10, 1971, and under and by virtue of an execution issued out of the Court of Domestic Relations for Jefferson County, Texas, in Cause No. 76247-C, styled Georgia M. Phelan vs. Francis Dennis Phelan, II.” This execution issued in divorce action which we have under review and the order of sale which was enjoined would have sold only the husband’s interest in the land described therein.

*608 In the pleadings in the injunction suit, the assignees and grantee [husband’s lawyers in the divorce suit case, and his sister, the trustee] made these allegations :

“V.
“Plaintiffs would further show unto the Court that there is presently pending in the 136th Judicial District Court of Jefferson County, Texas, Cause No. D-95169, styled Georgia M. Phelan vs. Patricia Phelan Malain, H. P. Robichau, Jr. and William C.

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Bluebook (online)
471 S.W.2d 605, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelan-v-phelan-texapp-1971.