Thigpen v. Russell

118 S.W. 1080, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 211, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 1080 (Thigpen v. Russell) 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
Thigpen v. Russell, 118 S.W. 1080, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 211, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 319 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

In this case appellants, heirs at law of John Thigpen, deceased, seek to have partitioned between themselves a tract of 200 acres of land, the homestead of said John Thigpen during his lifetime and at the time of his death. The defendants are Mrs. 8. A. Russell, the widow of said Thigpen, and A. 8. Russell, her husband. After the death of Thigpen, as the result of partition proceedings between his heirs and his widow, the 200 acres in controversy, which was the separate property of John Thigpen, was set apart-to his widow as her homestead so long as she *213 should elect to use the same as such, to revert to the heirs of John Thigpen upon the termination of the homestead right. It was specially adjudged that she should have no life estate in the property.

It was alleged by plaintiffs that the defendant, now Mrs. Bussell, had ceased to use or occupy the property as her homestead and had abandoned the same, and that thereby the property became subject to partition. The fact of abandonment was denied, and is the only issue in the case. The case was tried by the court without a jury and judgment rendered for defendants Bussell and wife, from which plaintiffs appeal.

The trial court prepared and filed conclusions of fact which were excepted to by plaintiffs and are as follows:

“1. I find that the defendant, Susan A. Bussell, was married to John Thigpen in 1876, and a short time afterwards she and said John Thigpen moved on the 300 acres of land in controversy and occupied it as their homestead until John Thigpen’s death, which occurred about ten or eleven years ago, having occupied it for a period of about twenty-two years.
“2. That the estate of John Thigpen was by decrees of the District Court of Goliad County partitioned between Susan A. Bussell and the heirs of John Thigpen, being the plaintiffs in this case or their ancestors, on the - day of October, -, and the - day of ¡November, A. D. 1897, éxcept the 300 acres in" controversy, which was expressly reserved from partition and declared to be the separate property of John Thigpen, deceased, and in said decrees the said 300 acres was set apart to said Susan A. Bussell as the surviving widow of John Thigpen, as a homestead so long as she might elect to use or occupy the same as such.
“3. That a short time after said decree of partition said Susan A. Bussell went upon said land and made some improvements and lived upon it for about one year, when she left to reside elsewhere, because she could not get any suitable person to live on the place with her, ¿he having no children, and rented the place, and continuously since said date to this present time she has rented said land, and the same is now in possession of her tenant.
“4. I find that from time to time since said land was set aside to her she has caused the premises to he kept in repair and has added some improvements.
“5. I find that said land was the separate property of John Thigpen.
“6. That in 1903 defendant Susan A. Bussell married her co-defendant, A. S. Bussell, who at the time of her marriage to him resided in Milam County, Texas, and since her said marriage she has resided with her husband in Milam County, Texas, making occasional visits to Goliad County to look after this piece of property.
“7. That at the time of his marriage defendant, A. S. Bussell, owned and lived on some hotel property in Milam County, which he shortly afterwards lost on account of not being able to pay off an indebtedness that existed on said property, and that after the loss of the hotel property defendants rented various places to live on until in ¡November, 1906, Mrs. Bussell borrowed $500, with $350 of which *214 she purchased a house and some lots in Milano, Milam County, Texas, and since said time she and her husband have resided on said property.
“8. That at the time of the purchase of said lots in Milano it was the intention of defendants to draw the papers in such way that the property would belong to Bran Y. Burke, a boy ten years old, who lives with defendants, but on account of the way the papers were gotten up this purpose was not accomplished and the title to said property is in defendant, Susan A. Russell.
“9. I find that the defendant, A. S. Russell, is a surveyor by profession and has an income of probably $200 per annum.
“10. I find that defendant, Susan A. Russell, owns property consisting of several town lots in the town of Fannin, Goliad County, Texas, and the property in Milano, and she has no income other than that received from the land in controversy, which she has each year received and used for her support and maintenance, and I find that defendant, A. S. Russell, owns an interest in several tracts of land in Milam County, Texas.
“11. I find that the house on the 200 acres of land in controversy is out of repair, and has been since the last marriage of Susan A. Russell, and since then has not been fit for occupancy.
“12. I find from the continued declarations in the matter that it has been the intention of Susan A. Russell to return to and occupy the land in controversy as her home as soon as her husband could arrange his business affairs in Milam County so as to leave them, and could get money with which to repair the improvements on said land so as to render them fit for occupancy, and that it was not their intention to occupy the lots in Milano as their homestead.
"13. I find that both Mrs. S. A. Russell and her husband have ■offered to sell their homestead right to the land in controversy.”

The foregoing findings of fact are approved by us without qualification, with the exception of that embraced in. the eighth paragraph, which will be later referred to in disposing of the third assignment of error.

From these conclusions of fact the court found, as a conclusion of law, that Mrs. Russell had not abandoned the homestead on the 200 acres of land.

The trial court permitted certain witnesses to testify, over the objection of appellants, to declarations made by appellees as to their intention to move back to and reoccupy Mrs. Russell’s home on the land in controversy. To the admission of this testimony appellants excepted and the ruling of the court is made the basis of the first assignment of error.

In so far as the testimony of appellees themselves is embraced in this assignment, it stands on altogether different ground from that occupied by the testimony of the other witnesses, and was in no sense their declaration of their intention, but their testimony under oath as to such intention. This testimony is not subject to any of the ■objections to the admissibility of their mere declarations to third persons during their absence from the home, as set out in the various propositions under the assignment. The testimony of Bego, Burns *215

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 1080, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 211, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thigpen-v-russell-texapp-1909.