Stone v. Jackson

210 S.W. 953, 109 Tex. 385, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 70
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1919
DocketNo. 2573.
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 953 (Stone v. Jackson) 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
Stone v. Jackson, 210 S.W. 953, 109 Tex. 385, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 70 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

While Cleyton Jackson and Maria Jackson were husband and wife they acquired 225 acres of land in Jasper County, in consideration in part of Cleyton Jackson’s note for $50, due on the 1st day of January, 1880. The note was secured by only an implied vendor’s lien on the land. Maria Jackson died in 1883. On December 22, 1888, Cleyton Jackson conveyed the 225 acres to T. M. Stone, in consideration in part of the payment by T, M. Stone of said purchase money note for $50, which was then barred by limitation, or in consideration in part of money furnished by T. M. Stone to pay the barred note.

This suit was by the heirs of T. M. Stone, as plaintiffs, to recover the 225 acres from the heirs of Maria Jackson, as defendants. The trial court gave plaintiffs judgment for the 225 acres, and on appeal the judgment was reversed, and judgment rendered awarding one-half the 225 acres to plaintiffs and one-half to defendants. A writ of error having been granted, the Supreme Court referred the cause to section B *387 of the Commission of Appeals, who recommended that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be affirmed.

The controlling question presented is of far-reaching importance and is whether the surviving husband is empowered to convey community land, in order to secure the discharge of a community debt, after the expiration of the period required by the statute of limitation to bar the debt.

Nothing is "clearer in our law, as declared both by statute and by repeated decisions of this court, than that the community property of the husband and wife is subject to the payment of the debts contracted by either of them during the marriage, except when otherwise specially provided, such exception having no application to the facts of this case; and that the heirs of the wife, on her death, are entitled, not to one-half of the community property as it may then exist, but to one-half of what may remain, after the discharge of the debts to which such property is liable. Arts. 4627, 3592, Rev. Stats.; Jones v. Jones, 15 Texas, 147; Carter v. Conner, 60 Texas, 60.

It is equally clear that the "husband is not only ordinarily entitled to the exclusive management and disposition of the property of the community estate during the marriage, but that such right or power of management and disposition, for the purpose of discharging the ordinary debts of the community estate, continues and is likewise exclusive, after the death of the wife, it having been determined that this right or power of the surviving husband overrules that of the administrator of the estate of the wife. Primm v. Barton, 18 Texas, 227; Good v. Coombs, 28 Texas, 50; Moody, Administrator, v. Smoot, 78 Texas, 123, 14 S. W., 285; Levy v. Moody, 87 S. W., 208.

Under these rules there can be no reasonable doubt of a surviving husband’s right and power to dispose of community property, for the purpose of discharging ordinary community indebtedness, save such community property as may be exempt, under recent legislation, from such disposition, unless it can be said that upon the husband becoming entitled to defeat the enforcement, by law, of the community indebtedness, through limitations, he is deprived of that right and power.

In the early case of Stramler v. Coe, 15 Texas, 211, the heirs of the wife sought to defeat a conveyance by the husband in 1853, of land belonging to the community estate of the husband and wife, in satisfaction of the husband’s bond for title, executed in 1835 during the lifetime of the wife, upon the ground that the right to enforce specific performance of the bond was barred at the date of the wife’s death in 1851. In sustaining the title of the vendee of the husband, Chief Justice Hemphill, speaking for the court, declared: “The conveyance of Price, after the death of his wife, being but the completion of the preexisting arrangement, made during the existence of the matrimony, must be held as valid as if made in the lifetime of the wife. As surviving partner, he had authority to perfect a transaction commenced during the partnership, and this rule is of special force and application in cases, *388 of conjugal partnership, in which there is a head that has the entire control of the affairs of the partnership, with no restraint except that it shall not be abused with fraudulent intent against the rights of the other partner. Such being the rights of the husband, as head of the community and as surviving partner, the heirs of the wife can not repudiate his acts and contracts, begun before, but finished after, the death of their mother. They receive their mother’s interest, but encumbered with burdens which have the same binding force and effect upon them, as they have upon the husband and surviving partner.” After reviewing the facts relied on to show that limitation had run against an action to enforce the bond for title, Chief Justice Hemphill announced the following conclusion of the court: “The circumstances were not such, it is believed, as would, at the death of Mrs. Price, have defeated a prayer for specific performance; but whether they were or not, they were certainly not such as ivould deprive the head of the community, who had made the contract, from the right of carrying it into execution by his voluntary act ”

We do not think that the question presented here differs in principle from that considered in Stramler v. Coe. And, if the husband possessed the power, in that case, to convey the entire interest of the community in performance of an obligation contracted by him during the marriage, though limitation had barred suit to enforce the obligation, so, in our opinion, the surviving husband must be held, in this case, to have possessed like power to malee a conveyance of community land, as against any claim of his wife’s children, when such conveyanee was executed to satisfy a community debt, though the husband might have defeated a suit on the debt by means of limitation.

In Leatherwood v. Arnold, 66 Texas, 416, 1 S. W., 174, it is said that “the survivor is a trustee of a unique character. He is the owner in his own right of one-half the trust estate. By qualifying under the statute he acquires over the whole the same right of management, control and disposition possessed by the managing partner, during the life of the partnership.” That this right of a managing partner includes the right to both renew a debt of the partnership and pay it with the firm assets, after the debt has been outlawed by limitation, is positively 69 Texas, 393, 8 S. W., 812, when he says: “If during the existence of declared by this court in the opinion of Judge Stayton in Stout v. Bank, the partnership a debt owed by it should become barred by the statutes of limitation, no one would doubt that the act of one partner in reviving it by a new promise would bind the firm, and power to pay such a debt stands on the same ground as does his right and power to revive it when barred.” It is well settled that all the power to sell property belonging to the community estate, to pay community claims, which may be exercised by the regularly qualified survivor, vests in the survivor who fails to qualify under our statutes. For, failure to qualify in nowise restricts or limits a survivor’s power to apply community assets to the discharge of community debts. Dawson v. Holt, 44 Texas, 178; *389 Sanger Bros. v.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 953, 109 Tex. 385, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-jackson-tex-1919.