State v. Barrow

14 Tex. 179
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 Tex. 179 (State v. Barrow) 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
State v. Barrow, 14 Tex. 179 (Tex. 1855).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The question to be determined is, whether the slave, levied on as the property of the husband, became his .in virtue of his marital rights, upon the gift to the wife in Tennessee, according to the laws of Tennessee, or became separate property of the wife, according to the laws of this State; in other words, whether the acquisition of the property was governed by the laws of Tennessee or Texas.

It does not appear in what State the marriage of the parties was celebrated. It does appear, however, that they had resided many years in the State of Mississippi; and that' they [181]*181had abandoned their residence there with the avowed intention of removing and fixing their future residence in Texas ; and were actually in transitu, and only sojourning temporarily on a visit in Tennessee at the time of receiving the gift to the wife. They carried out their original intention, continuing their journey into, and fixing their residence permanently in this State. Upon the facts of this case, it must, we think, be held that the laws of this State, and not those of Tennessee, governed the acquisition of the property. There would be more reason to hold that the laws of Mississippi, (which, it is in evidence, recognize the right of separate property in the wife, and which, it might be presumed, in the absence of proof to the contrary, are the same as our own laws upon that subject,) rather than those of Tennessee, should govern the marital rights of the parties in the acquisition of this property ; upon the principle, that not having acquired a domicil in Texas, facto et animo, they still retained their former domicil in Mississippi. For the general rule in relation to domicil is, that the original domicil is not gone until a new one has been actually acquired. (Story, Conf. Laws, Sec. 47.) It is very clear that they had not acquired a domicil in Tennessee, where they were merely on a visit, and while they were actually in transitu, to establish their future residence in this State. If they still retained their matrimonial domicil in Mississippi, upon the principle of the case of Edrington v. Mayfield, (5 Tex. R. 363,) it might, perhaps, be contended that the gift took effect and vested the property in the wife according to the laws of that State. That, however, is not the view of the law contended for on behalf of the appellant. It would not support his case. But the doctrine of the Spanish Law, and that which has received the sanction of the Courts and jurists of this country, is that in cases where there has been a change of domicil, as in the present, the law of the actual, and not the matrimonial domicil, will govern as to all future acquisitions of movable property. (Saul v. His Creditors, 5 Martin, N. S. 573; Story on Con. of Laws, Sec. 176, 187.) Property acquired after the re[182]*182moval is governed by the law of the actual domicil. It would seem, therefore, that after the removal of these parties from the place of their former domicil in Mississippi, the property acquired should be governed by the law of the domicil which they had in contemplation at the time of its acquisition. And if we have regard to the intentions of the parties, it must, we think, be held that the gift took effect according to the laws of this State. Erom the moment of quitting the place of their former residence in Mississippi, the husband and wife looked to this State as the place of their future residence, and to its laws to govern their marital rights for the future. Their acts and declared intentions concurred in pointing to the laws of this State as those to which they meant to be subjected, by their future domicil. By them it must be deemed they intended to be governed in their future acquisitions. And the donor made the gift of the property to the wife, evidently with the view of its being enjoyed by her in this State, and of course subject to the influence of the laws of this State. The laws of this State, therefore, must be held to govern the acquisition of the property, and by our laws the property in the slave, acquired by gift from her father, became separate property of the wife, and as such was not subject to be taken in execution for her husband’s debts. And this disposes of the question, and requires an affirmance of the judgment in this case.

And here we might close this opinion. But the present is deemed a fit occasion, in connection with this subject, to refer to one of our former opinions, (not referred to in argument) as to the correctness of which I am apprehensive there may be reason to hesitate, and which may require qualification, in order that it may not mislead as to the doctrine which the authorities assert, and which it will be proper for the Court to maintain. I refer to the case of McIntyre v. Chappell. (4 Tex. R. 187.) There is, it is true, no conflict between our decision in that case and the present. There the place of domicil of both the parties had been previously in Tennessee, and was unchanged at the time of the marriage. There was merely [183]*183an intention expressed, but manifested by no act, of removing to this State. We considered the case as coming within the principle, that where the place of domicil of both the parties is the same with that of the contract and the celebration of the marriage, the place of celebration is the matrimonial domicil. (Story on Con. of Laws, Sec. 192.) And I am not authorized to say that the Court is not satisfied with that decision, or would not apply the same rule to a case similar in all its circumstances. But I am constrained to say, that subsequent examination of the subject, though less thorough than I should desire before expressing a decided opinion, has caused me to feel less confident in the correctness of the decision than when it was made. It is to be regretted that our means of investigating the subject, and forming a correct judgment, were at the time so very limited. Had we had access to authorities which have since come to our notice, (and we referred to all that were at that time accessible,) if the decision had not been different, the language of the Opinion, at least, might have received some qualification. In one of the cases there cited, (Ford’s Curator v. Ford, 2 Martin, N. S. 574,) the Court, it is true, held this language : “We think it may be safely laid down as a prin- “ ciple, that the matrimonial rights of a wife who, as in the “ present case, marries with the intention of an instant removal “ for residence in another State, are to be regulated by the laws “ of her intended domicil, when no marriage contract is made, “ or one without any provision in this respect.” But the Court in that case rested their decision in no small degree, if not mainly, on the fact that the husband’s domicil being at the time established in Loidsiana, upon general principles drew to it that of the wife ; “ because the wife, who by her marriage fol- “ lows the husband’s domicil, is presumed to have had in view “the law of that domicil which by the marriage is to become “ hers. The general rule (the Court said) is to attend to the “ law of the husband’s domicil, rather than that of the place in “ which the contract is entered into.”

But in repeated decisions since made by the same Court, the [184]*184general principle asserted in the extract from the opinion first above given, has been referred to and adopted as affording the-rule of decision. Thus, in Allen v. Allen, (6 Robinson, R.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Tex. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barrow-tex-1855.