Tide Water Oil Co. v. Ross

123 S.W.2d 479
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1938
DocketNo. 10680.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 479 (Tide Water Oil Co. v. Ross) 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
Tide Water Oil Co. v. Ross, 123 S.W.2d 479 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

MONTEITH, Special Commissioner.

This is a suit in form of trespass to try title brought by Falvie L. Ross, and after her death prosecuted by Charlie Ross, by next friend, and L. C. Jefferson, individually, and as executor of the estate of Fal-vie L. Ross, appellees, in the district court of Anderson County, against Tide Water Oil Company et al, appellants, for the title and possession of an undivided interest of 34.5284 acres'in 83.66 acres of land, more or less, a part of the John Adams League Survey in Anderson County, Texas, and for the cancellation of two mineral and gas leases and a mineral deed covering said land.

• The case was tried to a jury with stipulations that the court should find any and all issues relative to the residence of the said Falvie L. Ross during the times of the execution of the instruments above referred to.

Appellees alleged that they were the owners of said undivided interest in said iand; that Falvie L. Ross, the wife of Charlie Ross, died on May 22, 1936; that Charlie, Ross had been- continuously insane for about ten years prior to the date of the trial and was insane at the time of the execution of said instruments;- that Charlie and Falvie Ross established and, designated the Iand sued for as their homestead about 1928; had never abandoned or surrendered their homestead rights, and that the land was then the homestead of Charlie Ross; that on or about January 16, 1933, Falvie L. Ross and Charlie Ross executed and delivered an oil and gas lease in favor of John H. Reagan covering said land; that said lease was assigned to P. N. Wiggins, Jr., and that by mesne conveyances the legal title to said leasehold estate became vested in Tide Water Oil Company" and Seaboard Oil Corporation; that on September 5, 1933, Falvie L. Ross and Charlie Ross executed a purported ratifi-cation of said lease, including therein an additional 1.83 acres of land to P. N. Wiggins, Jr.; that on June 18, 1933, Falvie L. *481 Ross and Charlie Ross executed and delivered to Wildman Petroleum Corporation a purported mineral deed, and that this mineral estate was by mesne conveyances assigned to defendants herein, Tide Water Oil Company and Seaboard Oil Corporation; that P. N. Wiggins, Jr., at the time of securing said assignment from J. H. Reagan, and at the time of securing said purported ratification lease, was acting for and in behalf of the Tide Water Oil Company and the Seaboard Oil Corporation.

Appellees prayed for judgment awarding them title and possession of the land sued tor and cancellation of said mineral leases and mineral deed.

Appellants answered by general denial and plea of not guilty and by allegation that they were innocent purchasers for value.

The jury in response to special issues answered that Charlie Ross was insane at the time he executed said mineral leases and deed and that Falvie and Charlie Ross acquired a homestead right in the land in controversy in 1928 which was never abandoned.

The court, under stipulation by the parties, found that Charlie and Falvie Ross, By virtue of reserved homestead rights in Texas, maintained a residence in Anderson County, Texas, from 1929 to 1936; that they lived in a house owned by them in Crescent, Oklahoma, from 1929 to 1936, and that they established and maintained a residence in Crescent, Oklahoma, from 1929 to 1936, and that they maintained a residence in both Texas and Oklahoma during such period.

Judgment was entered based on said special issues and the court’s findings, can-celling said two mineral leases and said mineral deed and awarding appellees the title and possession of the land sued for.

Appellees contend that on account of Charlie Ross’ insanity said mineral leases and deed were voidable and that a court order was essential to enable Falvie Ross to convey her separate mineral estate; that in 1928 Charlie and Falvie Ross acquired and thereafter maintained a homestead right in the land in controversy and that said homestead right made a court order essential to enable Falvie Ross to convey the mineral estates.

Appellants, defendants below, contend that Charlie Ross was sane in 1933, but that if he was' insane in 1933 his wife could convey her separate mineral estate without his joinder; that the statute permitting a wife, in the event of the insanity of her husband, to apply for an order authorizing her to convey her separate estate without the joinder of her husband was not exclusive but cumulative; that she had the right to convey her separate estate without the joinder of her husband assuming him to be insane; that if the statute was exclusive it did not apply to Falvie and Charlie Ross, because they were resident citizens of Oklahoma in 1933; that Falvie and Charlie Ross never acquired a homestead right in the land in controversy, and that if they had ever acquired a homestead right in said land they had abandoned said right; that the acquisition of a homestead right was, in any event, immaterial in that such homestead right did not deny Falvie Ross the right to convey a separate mineral estate without the joinder of her husband, assuming him to be insane.

The parties made the following stipulations : That Falvie L. Ross was the daughter of John Britton Butler; that he lived on the tract of land involved in this controversy until his death in February, 1932; that Amanda Butler was the wife of John Britton Butler and mother of Fal-vie L. Ross; that she also lived on the tract of land in controversy with her husband until her death in 1929; that Falvie Ross inherited from her an undivided interest in said land amounting to approximately 17 acres; that the interest of Fal-vie L. Ross was inherited from her father and mother and constituted her separate estate; that both the father and mother of Falvie L. Ross died intestate; that Fal-vie L. Ross, at the time of the execution of the oil and gas leases and mineral deed involved in this suit, owned an undivided interest in the tract of 83.66 acres amounting to 34.5284 acres; that title to said 83.66 acre tract was originally in Falvie L. Ross’ father and mother as the common source of title and was their community property; that prior to the execution of the oil and gas leases and mineral deed, no order was obtained from any court in Oklahoma or Texas authorizing Falvie Ross to execute such instruments, or any of them, without the joinder of her husband.

The decisive question involved in this appeal is whether or not an order from a district court is an indispensable prerequisite to the conveyance by a wife of her sepa *482 rate property or her homestead, if her separate property, or whether the provisions of Articles 4617 and 4618 (R.S.1925) were cumulative of her rights theretofore recognized and not restrictive thereof.

Article 1299 (R.S.1925) provides that husband and wife shall join in the conveyance of the separate property of the wife and that no such conveyance shall be effective until the same shall have been acknowledged by her privily and apart from her husband.

Article 4621 (R.S.1911) defined the separate property of the wife and provided for the sole management thereof by the husband. This article was amended in 1913, Acts 1913, p. 61, c. 32, giving the wife control of her separate property and providing that if the husband refused to 'join in a conveyance thereof she could obtain authority therefor from the district court of the county of her residence.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tide-water-oil-co-v-ross-texapp-1938.