Steves v. Smith

107 S.W. 141, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 126, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 141 (Steves v. Smith) 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
Steves v. Smith, 107 S.W. 141, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 126, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 31 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

— On December 27, 1905, the appellee, Rafaela R. Smith, a feme covert, whose husband, Chas. M. Smith, had deserted her, brought this suit against Johanne Steves, a feme sole, Albert Steves, John W. Tobin, as sheriff of Bexar County, and others, for the purpose of enjoining Tobin as sheriff from placing *129 Albert Steves in possession of certain premises described in her petition which Tobin as sheriff sold to Albert Steves by virtue of an order of sale on December 1, 1905, and to annul and cancel the judgment of decree upon which the order of sale was issued.

The grounds upon which the relief was sought are that the property was acquired by herself and husband, the deed being made to him, on May 19, 1892; with the intention and for the purpose of making it their homestead; that on June 8, 1892, her husband borrowed $1,000 from Johanne Steves for which he executed to her his promissory note payable one year after date, and at the same time made a deed of trust on the premises to Ernest Steves to secure Johanne in the payment of the note; that such deed of trust was executed by her husband alone without her knowledge or consent, after the property had been designated as their homestead by making such improvements thereon as evidenced their intention and purpose to occupy it as their home. That the judgment under which the property was sold by the sheriff was recovered on said note on January 20, 1898, against her husband, and, as against him, plaintiff and others, decreed a foreclosure of said deed of trust made by her husband to secure its payment, and ordered the sale of the property in controversy to satisfy it; that the property being the homestead of her husband’s family, the decree of foreclosure thereon was void, for that she was never cited to answer the suit, never waived citation, accepted service nor appeared and answered in the case, and her purported waiver and acceptance of service, appearing among the papers in the case, being as to her a forgery.

The appellants answered by general demurrer and a general denial and pleaded specially that on June 8, 1892, when the deed of trust was given on the property by Chas. M. Smith, he was" unmarried and not entitled to a homestead, and did not occupy the property; that prior to the rendition of the judgment foreclosing said deed of trust plaintiff herein, Eafaela E. Smith, entered her appearance in the suit by a written memorandum which was filed with the papers in the cause on April 22, 1897, and tho¿ such written memorandum had remained on file ever since that time, and that she did appear in said cause and had notice of said judgment and was bound thereby. Defendants also pleaded the four years statute of limitation, and also declared on the injunction bond, given by plaintiff in this case and prayed judgment against her and her sureties thereon for the rental value of the property from the time of the issuance of the injunction up to the date of trial.

The case was tried before a jury and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.

There are two questions presented by the assignments of error to which all others are subsidiary. They are:

1. Was the .lot in controversy the homestead of Chas. M. Smith at the time he executed the deed of trust to secure payment of the note which he made to Mrs. Steves for the money she loaned him?
2. Was the decree foreclosing the deed of trust by virtue of *130 which the property was sold by the sheriff, void as against the plaintiff, Eafaela E. Smith?

Our consideration of these questions will embrace the assignments of error and the conclusions of law and fact relating and pertinent thereto. They will be considered in the order stated.

1. One' of the questions subsidiary to this one is, Were Chas. M. Smith and Eafaela B. Smith husband and wife- when the money was borrowed by the former from Johanne Steves and the deed of trust made by him to secure its payment? For if such relation did not then exist between them the property could not at that time have been their homestead, and there would be 'an end of the question. It is not claimed by the plaintiff that the rites of matrimony had then been celebrated between them by license in accordance with the statutory requirement. According to her own testimony, this was not done until September 28, 1897, at which time their marriage was celebrated, under a license in which her name appears as E. Eamon, by Father Munoz, a priest, at San Fernando Cathedral, in San Antonio, Texas. But her claim is that she was then his wife, by virtue of a common law marriage existing between them. The evidence upon this issue is not stated in the brief of either party, and, as it might be contended by appellants that the statement contained in their brief showing a statutory marriage long subsequent to that time was an implied negation of a prior common law marriage, we have had recourse to the stenographer’s record of the testimony upon this issue and. found it sufficient to' support a verdict upon it in favor of the appellee’s contention.

But the contention of appellant is, conceding there was such marriage, that neither Mrs. Steves nor Ernest Steves, the trustee in the deed of trust, had notice of the existence of such relation at the time the money was loaned and the mortgage executed to secure, its payment, and that they acted upon a well-founded belief, induced by the statement made them by Chas. M. Smith, that he was at that time unmarried," neither knowing anything to the contrary or having knowledge of any fact which would induce him or her to believe such statement was false or put them upon further inquiry. We believe that this contention is fully sustained by the uncontroverted evidence. What, then, is the legal effect of the estáblishment of the facts thus contended for by appellants? This question is fraught with perplexities which should be untangled before answering the principal inquiry under investigation.

The relation of husband and wife brought into existence by a common law marriage is precisely the same as that which attaches to a marriage entered into in conformity to the written law. The rights, privileges, duties and obligations of the contracting parties are, under the law, the same 'in either kind of marriage. A different kind of evidence is required to establish the celebration of one from, what" is essential to prove the other. This can make no difference in the relation of the parties, which is that of husband and wife under either form. The license to marry and the return thereon by the officer or minister celebrating the rites of matrimony between the parties, nor the record thereof were intended as notice *131 to the public in the sense that a written instrument is which is required or permitted by the statute to be recorded. These are matters of evidence, primarily intended for the benefit of the parties and those claiming rights growing out of their relation as husband and wife.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 141, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 126, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steves-v-smith-texapp-1908.