Ruenbuhl v. Holland

250 S.W.2d 455, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1616
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1952
DocketNo. 12398
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 250 S.W.2d 455 (Ruenbuhl v. Holland) 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
Ruenbuhl v. Holland, 250 S.W.2d 455, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1616 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice. '

This appeal is from a judgment of the 56th District Court of Galveston County, Honorable C. G. Dibrell, Judge Presiding, •without a jury, determining in final and substantial substance this:

That the appellee, James B. Holland, is the sole and only surviving heir at law of the said Wilhelmina E. Cassel, also known as Minnie E. Cassel, by virtue of being her adopted son by estoppel, and as such he is entitled to inherit under the laws of descent and distribution of the State of Texas all of her property, real, personal and mixed, of whatsoever nature and wheresoever situated.

The suit had been filed by the appellee, himself, in the County Court of Galveston County, Texas, under authority of Article 3590, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, against the heirs at law, by blood relationship, of Mrs. Wilhelmina R. (Minnie E.) Cassel, deceased, one of whom was the appellant herein, seeking — against the contention of appellant, that no such adoption had ever been made, — to have himself declared to be the adopted son and heir of Mrs. Cassel and her husband, Charles H. Cassel, both then deceased.

The County Court had, likewise, rendered judgment in the appellee’s favor. In this Court, on his appeal from the judgment so adverse to him, in the District Court, the appellant, at much' length, through some 48 points of error, urges that the trial court’s judgment was in error, and insists that no such adoption by estoppel, or any other way, nor any agreement or contract, to enter into any such an adoption, as was held to exist, had been shown; further, that the evidence was insufficient to support either the judgment itself, or the trial court’s stated findings of fact in support thereof, that under the law, no valid adoption by estoppel had been shown, nor had any valid agreement to make one ever been made; further,'that the court improperly overruled appellant’s exceptions and objections to evidence it received, both oral [456]*456and documentary, in a number of recited particulars.

It would be supererogatory for this Court to undertake a detailed recitation of what is so detailed concerning all of the appellant’s stated 48 points of error.

It is, therefore, deemed sufficient to say that appellant’s ultimate contention is, as indicated, that the pleadings and evidence were not sufficient to establish any such adoption as the trial court declared, or to support its findings of fact in aid of its judgment to the contrary; and, further, that in arriving at such final conclusion, the trial court had reversibly erred in overruling a number of appellant’s objections to certain oral, as well as documentary, evidence it received.

None of appellant’s presentments, it is determined, should be sustained. Upon the contrary, this Court is constrained to hold that, under the well-settled law and procedure obtaining in this State, where there is a wealth of authority on the adoption by estoppel doctrine, that the appealed-from judgment constituted the valid adjudication of one.

As recited, the Court filed extended findings of both fact and law, none of which does this Court find to be without support in the evidence and the law, as appellant so urges. Indeed, it is concluded that the Court’s first five findings of fact comprehensively meet the test of what constitutes an adoption by estoppel in Texas, as declared by our Supreme Court in Cavanaugh v. Davis, Tex., 235 S.W.2d 972, 974. Not only so, but after careful examination of the statement of facts, this Court is unable to find any lack of support in the evidence for such findings. They are accordingly, thus, in substance, copied:

No. 1

That on or about October 1, 1914, Charles H. Cassel and wife, Minnie Cassel, contracted and agreed with James B. Holland, and with his older brother, Ilarry Holland, the person who, at said time, was vested with the legal custody and control of the said James B. Holland, a minor, and with Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Gills, of Coalgate, Oklahoma, who stood in loco parentis to the said James B. Holland, that, if the said James B. Holland would 'be placed in their home in Texas City, they would adopt him, and make him their adopted son.

No. 2

That, pursuant to said contract and agreement, the said James B. Holland did forthwith enter the home of the said Charles H. Cassel and wife, and thereupon and thereafter, during the minority of the said James B. Holland, the parties assumed and lived in a relationship wholly consistent with that of parent and child, and wholly inconsistent with any other status.

No. 3

That from and after the date he entered the home of Charles H. Cassel and wife, Minnie, the said James B. Holland fully and faithfully performed the duties of a child to the said Charles II. Cassel and wife, and said adoptive parents received all the benefits and privileges accruing from such performance, and, by their representations, induced such performance, under the belief of the existence of the status of adopted child.

No. 4

It is my opinion, and I so find, that after the making of the contract and agreement aforesaid, and after the child, James B. Holland, had entered the home of the Cas-scls, and performed and assumed the relationship and status of a child toward the Cassels, the said Charles H. Cassel and wife, Minnie E. Cassel, undertook to effect a statutory adoption of the said James B. Holland, but failed to do so, because of some defect in the instrument of adoption, or in its execution, or acknowledgment, or because of a failure to record it.

No. 5

If I am not justified in drawing from the evidence the conclusion of fact stated in paragraph 4 of these findings (finding of fact 4 above quoted), I find and conclude, as a matter of fact and law, that those holding and claiming under Minnie E. Cassel are and should be estopped to deny to James B. Holland the status and rights of an adopted [457]*457child of Minnie E. Cassel; otherwise, a fraud would he perpetrated upon the said James B. Holland.

Appellant earnestly and ahly urges that the Supreme Court, in the cited Ca-vanaugh v. Davis case, held in his favor—to the effect that there 'had been no proof in this instance of a contract or agreement to adopt this appellee—and in this connection, he cites this excerpt from the Court’s opinion in that cause:

“In no case has this Court upheld the adoptive status of a child in the absence of proof of an agreement or contract to adopt.”

Appellant did not, however, read far enough into the Court’s opinion in that cause, since it also, later on therein, in further reference to the agreement there under consideration, made this declaration of the law that fits the facts in the case now at Bar, to-wit:

“It was not necessary, however, that there be direct evidence of the agreement. It like any other ultimate fact could be proved by the acts, conduct and admissions of the parties and other relevant facts and circumstances.”

See, also, in this connection, these further authorities: Cubley v. Barbee, 123 Tex. 411, 73 S.W.2d 72; Jones v. Guy, 135 Tex. 398, 143 S.W.2d 906, 142 A.L.R. 77; Garcia v. Quiroz, Tex.Civ.App., 228 S.W.2d 953

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W.2d 455, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruenbuhl-v-holland-texapp-1952.