Schuster v. L. Bauman Jewelry Co.

15 S.W. 259, 79 Tex. 179, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1514
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1890
DocketNo. 3188
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 15 S.W. 259 (Schuster v. L. Bauman Jewelry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schuster v. L. Bauman Jewelry Co., 15 S.W. 259, 79 Tex. 179, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1514 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.

This action was brought by appellee to recover of appellants, F. L. Schuster and Sophia Schuster, his wife, three separate parcels of land in Bowie County. One, a tract of 20 acres, was conveyed to the wife February 17,1881; another, a city lot, January 19, 1882; and the third, also a tract of 20 acres, September 25, 1885.

The husband being indebted to appellee, the latter, subsequent to the last conveyance, caused an attachment to issue against his property and to be levied upon the lands in controversy. A judgment was obtained against Schuster on the attachment, and by virtue of an execution issued thereon the lands were sold by the sheriff and were bid off by and conveyed to the appellee.

Notice was given at the sale that the lands were claimed by Mrs. Schuster as her separate property. Whether they belonged to her separate estate or not was the question upon the trial of the case. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for undivided two-thirds of the first parcel and for the whole of the third, and for the defendant Mrs. Schuster for the whole of the second and an undivided third of the first.

The title of the defendant Mrs. Schuster to each parcel of the land in controversy was dependent upon a different state of facts as disclosed by the evidence.

[182]*182The court in its charge to the jury did not apply the law to the facts of each of the three transactions, but gave the following general instructions:

“You are instructed that the judgment which has been offered in evidence before you in favor of plaintiff against F. L. Schuster and the execution issued on said judgment, the levy of the same on the land in controversy, and the sheriff’s deed thereto will aúthorize you to render your verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the land in controversy unless you believe from the evidence that the land in controversy is the separate property of the defendant Mrs. Sophia Schuster, that it was purchased and paid for with money given to her by her mother, and that the plaintiff had notice that the land in controversy was the separate property of Mrs. Sophia Schuster at the time they purchased it at sheriff’s sale, in which event you will find for the defendants.”

And again, “The burden of proof is on Mrs. Sophia Schuster to show by a preponderance of evidence that the land in controversy is her separate property; that it was purchased and paid for with money given to her by her mother; and if she has failed so to show, you will find for plaintiff.”

It is complained that these instructions were erroneous and misleading-. They are correct as applied to the lot conveyed to Mrs. Schuster January 9,1882, and for that lot the verdict and judgriient were in her favor. But .as to the tract of land previously purchased they were not strictly correct, and as we think may have misled the jury to her prejudice. That tract of land was purchased for and conveyed to her, and at the time of the purchase she paid $100 in money given to her by her mother. There were two deferred payments, each for $100, for which she and her husband gave their promissory notes to the grantors in the conveyance. These notes were paid with money borrowed by her for the purpose. The money so borrowed was repaid with funds given to her by her mother after the deed was executed.

■ The husband testified to these facts, and also that he did not buy the land for himself, but for his wife. There -was no testimony tending to any contrary conclusion. He also swore that at the date of the transaction he was solvent, and gave the dates of several gifts of money to his wife by her mother, the several items amounting to $1600.

The principle applied in Ullman v. Jasper, 70 Texas, 446, is the law of this case. There the wife, having separate funds, purchased two lots, partly on a credit. Ror convenience the cash payment was applied wholly to one lot, the other being bought wholly on a credit. The deferred payment was made with the wife’s means, though *the note of the husband was given for it. It was shown that the vendor did not look to him for payment. It was held that the lot purchased on a credit and conveyed to her in her name and paid for with her money became her sep1 arate property. It is true that in the present case the wife borrowed the [183]*183money to make the deferred payments. But she repaid the loan with her separate money. We do not see that this makes any substantial difference between the two cases. The property was bought for the benefit of Mrs. Schuster’s separate estate and was directly paid for in part with heir money. It was understood that the balance was also to be paid from her separate funds; and it was in fact so paid, though not directly. A special instruction should have been requested upon the point. But the charge given admits of the construction that unless the notes given for the purchase money were directly paid with Mrs. Schuster’s separate money she could not claim the benefit of the payment, although her funds paid the loan with which the debts to the grantors were discharged. If the jury did not so construe it they should have found a verdict for her upon this issue. The charge was at least misleading, and calls for a reversal of the judgment as to the tract of land conveyed to Mrs. Schuster on February 17,1881.

As to the land purchased September 36, 1885, we have quite a different case. The wife’s equity in such cases arises from the actual investment of her separate money or the transfer of her separate property. That tract was paid for in part with a pony valued at $100, and Mrs. Schuster executed two promissory notes amounting to $300 for the balance of the purchase money, with a mortgage on the land to secure them. At the time of the trial they had not been paid. Her husband testified that the1 pony had been given to her by her son, and that the son, -who was only nineteen years old, had worked and made money and bought the pony. The son testified to the same facts. The father is entitled to the services of his minor son. But he may emancipate him and make his future earnings his own; and it may be that creditors have no claim upon the filial obligation and can not complain that such action is in fraud of their rights. But until he is emancipated the son’s earnings belong to the father, and the creditors of the latter have the same right to look to them and to the property in which they are invested as to any other effects of their debtor. If the son of the defendants had been emancipated at the time the pony was bought, he and his father best know the fact. Neither of them testified to any formal emancipation or to any circumstance reasonably sufficient to justify the inference that an emancipation in fact actually existed. It results that the pony was in law the property of the father, and the mother acquired no separate right in the land which was paid for in part by it. As to this branch of the case the court, at the request of the appellee, gave an instruction which cured any imperfection in the main charge existing by reason of its generality. That instruction was as follows:

“If you believe from the evidence that the purchase price paid by Sophia Schuster or by F. L. Schuster for the tract of land deeded to the said Sophia Schuster on the 36th day of September, 1885, was $300, con[184]

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W. 259, 79 Tex. 179, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuster-v-l-bauman-jewelry-co-tex-1890.