Pinkard v. Pinkard

252 S.W. 265, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1923
DocketNo. 966.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 252 S.W. 265 (Pinkard v. Pinkard) 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
Pinkard v. Pinkard, 252 S.W. 265, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 254 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

Suit by Gladys Pinkard, by her mother as next friend, against- appellants, seven in number, for the partition of a tract of 126 acres of land, alleging that she and appellants were the sole joint owners of said *266 land. Appellants answered by general denial, plea of not guilty, and specially denied that appellee was a child of Lee Pinkard, deceased, through whom, as children, all parties claimed, and hence that she was not entitled to any portion of the land.

The ease was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered finding that appellee and appellants were the sole joint owners of the land, one-eighth each, and ordered that the land be partitioned, and the court appointed commissioners to partition said land, who afterwards reported that the land had been by them equitably partitioned. The report of the commissioners was duly approved by the court, and judgment entered vesting title to said land in the parties according to their respective shares, as provided and found in the report of the'Commissioners. Motion for a new trial being overruled, appellants bring this appeal.

The record discloses that Lee Pinkard was the father of appellants, and that they were his children by hi§ first wife, who was dead; that the land was the separate property of Lee Pinkard at the time of his death; that he married Ida Stewart, mother of appellee, August 14, 1919, and that appellee, Gladys Pinkard, was born December 12, 1919, and that Lee Pinkard continued to live with his wife until about February 14, 1920, when they separated and he sued her for and obtained a divorce. The litigants are negroes. The legitimacy of Gladys Pinkard is thp only question in the case — was she the daughter of Lee Pinkard? Appellants’ three assignments and the propositions thereunder all go to raise the above question, and will be considered together.

The rule is well established that a child bom in lawful wedlock is presumed to be legitimate, and antenuptial conception does not weaken the presumption of legitimacy arising from postnuptial birth. Therefore, it appearing that appellee was born after the marriage of Lee Pinkard and her mother and while they were living together as man and wife, the presumption is that Lee Pinkard was her father, and this presumption must prevail until overcome by sufficient credible evidence. 8 Ency. of Evidence (Legitimacy) 163; McCulloch v. McCulloch, 69 Tex. 682, 7 S. W. 593, 5 Am. St. Rep. 96; Patterson v. Gaines, 6 How. 550, 12 L. Ed. 553; State ex rel. Burkhart v. Ferguson, 187 Iowa, 1073, 174 N. W. 934, 8 A. L. R. 428; Dennison v. Page, 29 Pa. 420, 72 Am. Dec. 644; Zachmann v. Zachmann, 201 Ill. 380, 66 N. E. 256, 94 Am. St. Rep. 180; Powell v. State, 84 Ohio St. 165, 95 N. E. 660, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 255, note; Westfall v. Westfall, 100 Or. 224, 197 Pac. 276, 13 A. L. R. 1428; 7 C. J. 945, § 15. Appellants do not contest the fact of their father’s marriage to appellee’s mother, nor that appellee was born some four months after said marriage, but they do insist that appellee is not and cannot be a child of their father, Lee Pink-ard, for the reason, they say, that he was not acquainted with and had not associated with the mother of appellee prior to' the fourth Sunday in April, 1919, and did not see her again until about the last of May, 1919, and was not married to her until August 14, 1919, and that appellee was' born December 12, 1919, and was a fully developed nine months’ child at birth — in other words, ap-pellee being a fully developed nine months’ child at birth, and their father not having known or associated with the mother of ap-pellee prior to the fourth Sunday in April, 1919, it was impossible for their father to have been the father of appellee, on the ground of nonaccess.

Roxana Irwin, daughter of Lee Pinkard, cestified that her father and Ida Stewart, ap-pellee’s mother, married August 14, 1919, and that appellee was born December 12, 1919; that her father lived with Ida until February 14, 1920, when he carried her away and after-wards got a divorce; that her father never met Ida until the fourth Sunday in April, 1919, she knows, for on that day at a dinner at her house she introduced them, and they said they had never met; that her father did not see Ida any inore until the fourth Sunday in May; that they had lived in that county all their lives, but some 16 miles apart; that the child (appellee) was not her father’s child, and nobody ever claimed it was; that Ida did not claim it was, but would not say whose it was.

James Pinkard, son of Lee Pinkard, testified that he was living with his father at the time his father married Ida, and that he got acquainted with her the day they married; that the child was born December 12, 1919; that his father and Ida separated February 14, 1920; that after the child was born his father moved into another room, he knew, because he was living with them; that bis father did not claim the child, and he never heard any one say it was his father’s child.

Zeno Pinkard, son of Lee Pinkard, testified;

“My father was blacker than I am, and I suppose I am aS black as I can be. The child’s mother is blacker than I am. The child is of a very bright color.”

Elbert Brewer, son-in-law of Lee Pinkard, testified that he met Ida Stewart on August 14, 1919; that the baby was bom December 12, 1919; that he was living with Lee Pink-ard at the time the child was born; that Lee Pinkard stayed at 'home and did not run around.

This was all the evidence introduced by appellants on the trial of the case, but on the hearing of their motion for a new trial they offered:

(1) Pearl Johnson, who testified that she knew Lee Pinkard and his wife, Ida; that *267 she helped to wait on Ida when she gave birth to appellee; that the child was full grown and a nine months’ baby; that she knew it was not a seven months’ baby.

(2) Francis Jackson, who testified that when Ida got sick Lee came after her, and she went and was the midwife when the child was born; that the child was a full grown nine months’ baby, and was white. “I’m not going to say if it was a nigger baby or not, but it was mighty white. Of course, it was not Lee Pinkard’s. Lee Pinkard couldn’t any more have a baby like that than I could, and you know I couldn’t.”

(3) Jane Bennett, who testified that Lee Pinkard brought Ida to her house to live; that she did not remember the month, but that it was cold; that the child seemed to be about two months old, and was of a very bright color; that Ida told her it was not Lee Pinkard’s child.

(4) F. B. Kimball, who testified that he saw Ida in his father’s office; that Roxana Irwin (one of the appellants) came to the office and asked him about a case of this kind, and that he got her to bring Ida to the office, and that he asked Ida “point blank” if the child was Lee Pinkard’s, and that she said it was not; that after the trial he went to see Ida, and that she then denied that she had told him that Lee Pinkard was not the father of the child.

As exhibits to the motion for a new trial, appellants attached affidavits of:

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252 S.W. 265, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinkard-v-pinkard-texapp-1923.