Torres v. Gersdorff

287 S.W. 668
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1926
DocketNo. 7606. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 668 (Torres v. Gersdorff) 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
Torres v. Gersdorff, 287 S.W. 668 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FEY, C. J.

This is an action of trespass to try title to lot 6 and 4.9 feet of lot 8, block 3, new city block 321, on North Pecos street, between West .Travis and West- Salinas streets in the city of San Antonio, instituted by appellee, Frank Gersdorff, against Mary Torres, Roy Torres, Modesto Torres, and E. J. Torres. The cause was tried by jury, and a verdict instructed in favor of appellee. In the judgment it is recited that Mary Torres had been adjudged insane, and was confined in the San Antonio State Hospital for the Insane, and that she had appeared through her guardian ad litem, Robert G. Harris, duly appointed by the court. Et J. Torres and Modesto Torres were dismissed from the suit because of the death of Modesto Torres, and because E. J. Torres, being absent from the state, had not been served. Mrs. Mary Torres is the mother of Roy Torres, and the guardian ad litem was appointed at his instance and request, on the ground that she was insane.

Modesto Torres was the common source of title, and there was- testimony tending to show that he conveyed the land to appellee by deed dated July 17, 1923, which was in form a general warranty deed. There was evidence tending to show that the property in controversy was the separate estate of Modesto Torres, and that he and Mary Torres occupied it as their homestead. The evidence showed that Modesto Torres and Mary Torres were man and wife. The property was a homestead when it was conveyed to appellee. Mary Torres, although at home when the deed to appellee was executed, did not join in the deed. She had been in the asylum for some time previous to that time. It was admitted that no guardianship proceedings or community administration had been applied for or granted. The district court recited that Mary Torres was insane when a guardian ad litem was appointed to represent her.

*669 It is a presumption of law that all men are sane, and the burden rests on the party pleading insanity to establish such insanity, but, when it is proven that a person has been legally adjudged to be insane, the presumption of insanity will continue until an adjudication of a return to reason has been made. The burden of showing the restoration of reason rests on him who asserts it. 2 Chamberlayne, Mod. Ev. § 1043; San Antonio v. Porter, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 444, 59 S. W. 922; Herndon v. Vick, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 583, 45 S. W. 852.

It is recited in the judgment of the trial court that Mary Torres had prior thereto “been legally adjudged to be insane by the county court of Bexar county, Tex., and being now confined in the San Antonio State Hospital, one of the insane asylums of the state of Texas.” Upon what evidence that recital was founded we know not.

There is testimony to the effect that Modesto Torres, on or about April 12, 1923, borrowed $1,250 from the Southern Finance Corporation to enable him to pay taxes and an assessment for paving about his property. The corporation applied $589.34 to the paving company, $240.89 taxes to the city of San Antonio, $331.19‘taxes to Bexar county, and paid $924.50 in cash to Modesto Torres. He failed to repay the loan, but on July 19, 1923, sold the property to appellee in order to obtain money to pay off the mortgage given to secure the loan. The loan, with accrued interest, was paid, and the balance of the money „was paid by Gersdorff to Modesto Torres. The deed to the property grew out of, and was based upon, a mortgage on the Modesto and Mary Torres homestead.

Mary Torres may have been insane in 1915, when the court, in its judgment, finds her to have been insane, but, unless there was a legal adjudication of the fact of insanity by a constitutional tribunal under constitutional procedure, the judgment did not avail; and, in the absence of such judicial action, the legal presumption of sanity attaching to all citizens would still attach to her. It is alleged by appellee in a supplemental petition that Mary Torres was adjudged to be insane by the county court of Bexar county on or about July 21, 1915, and that was followed up by an admission by the guardian ad litem that his ward, Mary Torres, “was legally adjudged to be insane on July 21, 1915.” The only law in effect at that time authorizing the adjudication of insanity was the act of 1913, which provided for a commission, composed in whole or in part of physicians, to be appointed by the county judge, to whom was given the power to pass upon the sanity or insanity of persons brought before it. General Laws 1913, pp. 341-347. That act repealed all laws and parts of laws in conflict with its provisions. That law was held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, as it had been held by at least two Courts of Civil Appeals prior thereto. White v. White, 108 Tex. 570, 196 S. W. 508, L. R. A. 1918A, 339. No other law was in effect when Mary Torres was declared a lunatic, and consequently she must have been declared a lunatic under that unconstitutional law. Her incarceration in the insane asylum was therefore illegal and void. The declaration of the trial court in its orders and judgment could have had no higher authority than the illegal and void report by the commissioners appointed by the county judge in 1915. All the presumptions must be indulged that Mary Torres was confined in the insane asylum under th,e terms of the act of 1913, because it was not declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court until 1917, two years thereafter. There is nothing to indicate that any other law was invoked. The recitals of the court in its judgment were the only evidence in the ease upon which it was possible to base a finding of insanity. The admissions of the guardian ad litem as to the state of mind of his ward can have no force or effect in a court of law, equity, and justice. He had no authority to admit any fact that would undermine and destroy the defense of the ward that he had been appointed to defend. The pivotal fact, the state of mind of Mary Torres when the mortgage and deed were executed in 1923, was not combated by the guardian ad litem, but the insanity of the ward was admitted and the defense she might offer destroyed. Such admissions will not be considered. To sustain such admissions would render farcical the appointment of guardians ad litem in courts of justice. As said by this court in Madero v. Calzado, 281 S. W. 328:

“In suits of this character, nothing can be admitted against the interest of the absent defendant and the one chosen to represent that interest in a case stands in court to insist that .no pleading shall go unchallenged, no step shall be taken, no act done, no evidence produced, which shall in any manner be legitimately the subject of an objection or exception.”

Such guardian ad litem is appointed to assist the court in protecting the rights of the ward and not to lessen the labors or give material aid to the plaintiff in the case. Admissions in such eases by the guardian ad litem against the interests of the ward will be disregarded, and no judgment based on such admissions will be sustained.

The right to recover the homestead of this woman, in this case, depends upon the enforcement of an exception to the provisions of the Constitution protecting the homestead from forced sale, and from voluntary sale, unless the wife joins the husband, in the prescribed manner, in the deed of conveyance. The ruling is sought to be justified on the ground that the “hopelessly insane” wife is civiliter mortuis, that is, legally dead, and on this the Constitution is ignored to *670

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Related

Wright v. Jones
52 S.W.2d 247 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1932)
Gersdorff v. Torres
293 S.W. 560 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torres-v-gersdorff-texapp-1926.