Woods v. Hardware Mut. Casualty Co.

141 S.W.2d 972, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 503
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1940
DocketNo. 8923
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 141 S.W.2d 972 (Woods v. Hardware Mut. Casualty Co.) 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
Woods v. Hardware Mut. Casualty Co., 141 S.W.2d 972, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 503 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

This litigation arose in connection with the workmen’s compensation insurance of James Woods, a negro workman who was killed in the course of his employment with Sapp Motor ' Company, the insured. Ap-pellee, Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, the insurer, admitted liability for his death and paid one-half of the insurance to the minor children .of the deceased. A controversy arose, however, between appellant, Ina Woods, and appellee Penóla Woods, as to which one of them .was the widow of James Woods, deceased, and entitled under the Workmen’s Compensation statutes to the remaining one-half of the insurance. Each of them filed a claim with the Industrial Accident Board to be awarded the compensation insurance. Ina appealed from the award of the Board; and at the conclusion of the evidence the trial court instructed the jury to find Penóla to be the widow of James Woods, deceased, and judgment was accordingly rendered awarding her the insurance in question; hence this appeal.

Ina (appellant) introduced in evidence a marriage license and the minister’s return thereon, showing her marriage as Ina Murphy to James Woods (the deceased) on August 27, 1930. She testified that before her marriage to him she knew he had been married to Penóla (appellee),' but he told her that Penóla had filed suit and obtained a divorce from him; and that she married him in good faith believing that he was divorced, and continued to live with him as his wife until his death.

Penóla (appellee) introduced in evidence a marriage license and the minister’s certificate thereon, showing her marriage as Penóla Johnson to James Woods (the deceased) on June 30, 1923. She testified that in the fall of 1927, James Woods sold their household furniture and sent her and their two small children to the home of her parents, and told her that he was going to the home of his parents; and that they never lived together thereafter, her parents supporting her and children without any aid of her husband. She further testified that in December, 1927, she filed suit for divorce ‘against said James Woods in the District Court of Milam County, paid her lawyer and thought that when she paid her lawyer the divorce was granted. The Clerk of the court exhibited the dockets, records, and minutes of the court, showing that the divorce suit had been filed but that the divorce had not been granted, and that the case was still pending on the docket as a “live case.” The lawyer who filed the suit died in 1934. The Clerk’s record showed that the costs, including costs of a final judgment, had been paid. Penóla further testified that she thought her divorce had been granted, and that she mariied Brown Stennett, by ceremonial marriage in December, 1928, and lived with him as his wife and bore him children; but that he later divorced her and that she had not married again.

The evidence is undisputed that all of the parties involved in the aforementioned marriages lived in Cameron, Texas, knew each other and knew of the several marriages mentioned; and that no divorce proceedings other than above mentioned were filed in Milam County where all of the parties continuously lived, except for short trips to the west to pick cotton, or to other places looking for work. Both Ina and Penóla, in good faith, believed that Penóla had obtained a divorce from James Woods in her suit, before Ina’s marriage to him and before Penola’s marriage to Brown Stennett, and that neither of them knew that the divorce had not been granted until after the death of James Woods, when the question of his insurance arose.

Appellant offered the testimony of Brown Stennett, excluded on objection of appel-lee, to the effect that he and Penóla agreed to get married, but that both were married to other parties. That they went together to a lawyer’s office and employed him to get their respective divorces. That he paid the lawyer’s fee and court costs in both cases. The records of the District Court of Milam County show that his suit for divorce and the aforementioned suit by Penóla for divorce were filed the same day by the same lawyer. Stennett further of[975]*975fered to testify that in January, 1928, both he and Penóla appeared in. the court and that a hearing was had of their respective divorce cases, and that the judge announced the granting of Penóla’s divorce first, and then granted his divorce. The record fully sustains by docket entries and formal judgment the granting of the divorce of Brown Stennett; but contains no entries or minutes showing any action of the court in the case filed by Penóla against James Woods, the deceased. This testimony as to the judge’s announcing the granting of Penola’s divorce was excluded upon the objection of appellee that a judgment of a court of record could not be proved by parol or other extrinsic evidence in this a separate suit.

Under the above stated facts and proceedings, appellant presents the following related questions for determination:

1. That the testimony of Brown Stennett was erroneously excluded, and if admitted it and other facts and circumstances in the record would have raised a jury question as to whether Penóla had been actually divorced from James Woods prior to the time he married Ina.

2. That Ina was shown to be at least the putative wife of James Woods at the time of his death, and entitled to one-half of the insurance or benefits in suit under the terms of Art. 8306, Secs. 8.and 8a, of the Workmen’s Compensation Laws of Texas.

3. That in any event Penóla was es-topped to deny the validity of Ina’s marriage to James Woods und'er an irrefutable presumption that Penóla had been legally divorced from James Woods, arising from the fact of her subsequent marriage to Brown Stennett and the subsequent judgment granting him a divorce from her.

The records of the District Court •showed that no decree of divorce had been actually entered in the suit of Penóla against James Woods for divorce; and that said suit, on which all parties relied and in good faith believed that the divorce had been granted to Penóla, was still pending as a live case on the docket of the court. Appellant could not in this separate and different suit prove by the oral or extrinsic testimony of Brown Stennett that an oral judgment had been announced by the trial judge granting to Penóla a divorce in her said suit. The. record of such a judgment is the best evidence thereof. It can be proved only by the original instrument or a duly certified copy thereof, unless the record has been lost or destroyed. Where no record of the judgment has ever been made, its absence or proof that it was actually rendered may not in another suit' be supplied by oral or extrinsic proof. In such a case the proper procedure is to proceed in the court in which the claimed judgment was rendered to have it entered nunc pro tunc, and, when properly recorded, such judgment will be available as evidence in another suit. Wallis v. Beauchamp, 15 Tex. 303; Brown v. Reese, 67 Tex. 318, 3 S.W. 292; Turley v. Tobin, Tex.Civ.App., 7 S.W.2d 949, error refused. Since the oral or extrinsic testimony of Brown Stennett was not admissible to show that Penóla was granted a divorce by the oral announcement of the judge of the court in which the case was pending, it necessarily follows that such testimony raised no jury question as to whether Penóla had - actually been divorced from James Woods. Nor was there any testimony raising a jury question as to whether Penóla had been granted a divorce in any other suit or county.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W.2d 972, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-hardware-mut-casualty-co-texapp-1940.