Wright v. Wright

3 Tex. 168
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 3 Tex. 168 (Wright v. Wright) 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
Wright v. Wright, 3 Tex. 168 (Tex. 1848).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Hemphill

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was instituted by the appellee (who was plaintiff in the court below) for the purpose of obtaining a divorce-from her husband, John D. Wright, and for the delivery to-her of her separate property, and the one-half of the common, property of the conjugal partnership.

[173]*173She prayed also for an allowance of the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars as alimony during the pendency of the .suit,- and that an inventory should be made of her separate and the community property in the possession of the husband; and that he be enjoined from disposing of the same in any way whatever, and for such other relief as she might be entitled to under the circumstances of the case.

She states that, as one of the colonists of Martin De Leon under his first contract, she was placed in the possession of one league of land west of the Guadaloupe river. That whilst she owned that and other property specified in the petition, she intermarried in 1828 with the appellant, John D. Wright, who afterwards, without the knowledge of. the petitioner, procured, in 1833, a grant to be made to him of the said league of land in his own name, which fact was concealed from the petitioner until 1836, when she acquired the knowledge of it by chance. That the said John D. Wright left Texas in 1835, and that the petitioner occupied and managed said property until 1842. That in the mean time she disposed of the stock of cattle for a sum still due and unpaid, and the evidence of which indebtedness is in the hands of the husband or his agents. That since the marriage the amount of acquired community property, which is specified, is considerable; and that all the property, separate and common, is in the possession of the said John David Wright.

She then makes the general allegation, that the said appellant is guilty of excesses, cruel treatment and other -outrages towards the petitioner, and that such treatment is of such a nature as to render it insupportable for her to live longer with him.

The defendant pleaded a general exception or demurrer for insufficiency, and answered, denying generally all the allegar tions and statements of the petition, and especially averring that he was not guilty of the excesses -and cruel treatment laid to his charge.

The appellee, in the petition, after the usual prayer -for divorce from the bonds of matrimony and a separation of property, prayed further, that the sum of two hundred and fifty [174]*174dollars be allowed her for her support during the pendency of the suit, and that the court would cause an inventory of the separate property of the petitioner, and the community property which is in the possession of the defendant, and an injunction restraining him from disposing of the same in any manner whatever.

At the first term of the court after the commencement of the suit, on motion of the plaintiff, an order was made for the allowance of alimony, and for an injunction restraining the defendant from selling, or otherwise disposing of, or removing, the property in the plaintiff’s petition mentioned.

Many witnesses were examined orally and by deposition, and exceptions were taken to various opinions of the court overruling objections to the admissibility of much of the evidence.

The jury found that the plaintiff was entitled to her prayer so far as the divorce was concerned, and for two hundred dollars, the proceeds of a house and lot received by the defendant, and for one hundred head of cattle nowin the possession of the defendant, and the one-half of the other property, cattle included, money and demands.

The decree of the court was in conformity with the finding of the jury, with the further order that the cause should be continued as to the other issues.

The appellant assigns eleven distinct grounds of error, some of which will be noticed, but without regard to their numerical order of arrangement.

The first is, that the order granting the injunction was erroneous on the grounds that there was no sufficient cause alleged in the petition for the grant of the writ, and that the petition was not verified by affidavit.

By section 6th of the act concerning divorce and alimony [Laws 1841, p. 21], the court is authorized to make such temporary orders respecting the property and the parties, as they may deem necessary and equitable; and by the 9th section, the husband is prohibited, after the commencement of the action, from contracting any debts on account of the community, or to dispose of any lands or slaves belonging to the same; and any [175]*175such alienations, made with a fraudulent-view of injuring the rights of the wife, are declared to be null and void.

The 10th section provides that, at any time during the pend-ency of a suit, the wife may, for the preservation of her rights, require an inventory and appraisement of both the real and personal estate which are in the possession of the husband, and an injunction restraining him from disposing of any part thereof in any manner.

These and other provisions of the statute show clearly that, in the contemplation of the legislature, the rights of the wife might be endangered during the progress of 'the suit; and full powers are vested in the court to mate all their orders and issue such writs as may be necessary for their conservation. The terms are emphatic, that the wife may require an injunction restraining the husband from the disposition of any part of the property in any manner, and it would seem to be imperative on the courts to issue such writ whenever it may be demanded by the wife. From the language employed, if construed literally, it would appear that but little discretion can be exercised in determining upon the application, and that the writ, when desired, would be one of right, and would issue almost as a matter of course.

Tiie general statutory provisions, however, regulating injunctions, require applications for their restraining orders, and answers thereto, to be verified by the oath of the parties filing the same. [1 vol. Laws of State, p. 405.]

This, in the opinion of my brethren, to which I assent with some hesitation, is sufficiently comprehensive to control applications for" the writ in this as well as in all other civil suits, whatever may be the object or character of the controversy.

In coming to this conclusion, it will be necessary to reconcile an apparent discrepancy between the provisions of the 4th section of the act under which this suit was brought [20,. Laws of 1841], and the general provisions regulating the granting and trial of injunctions. The latter requires both petition and answer to be sworn to; the former declares that the defendant shall not be compelled to answer on oath, nor the petition to be taken for confessed, for the want of an answer, [176]*176but the decree shall be rendered upon full and satisfactory evidence, independent of the confession or admission of either party.

In suits for divorce, the petitioner is not restricted to the main purpose for which relief is prayed, viz.: dissolution from the bonds of matrimony, but may also pray for a separation of property and for the custody and management of the children.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tex. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-wright-tex-1848.