Blethen v. Bonner

53 S.W. 1016 | Tex. | 1899

For the purposes of this opinion, the following is a sufficient statement of facts proved on the trial: Plaintiff in error and Levi P. Blethen were married in the State of Massachusetts in the year 1863 and lived together as husband and wife until about April, 1865, when they separated. Mrs. Blethen has resided in Massachusetts ever since. Levi P. Blethen remained in Massachusetts and carried on business until the year 1878, when he removed to this State, bringing with him about $25,000, the greater part of which he had accumulated while he resided in Massachusetts, after the marriage and during the separation from his wife.

There was deeded to Levi P. Blethen, March 16, 1878, 540 acres of land; February 3, 1880, 248 acres; and February 12, 1880, 640 acres, all situated in Bosque County, Texas, and together constituting the subject of this litigation.

In the District Court of Bosque County on the 20th day of January, 1880, Levi P. Blethen secured a decree of divorce from plaintiff in error.

All of the defendants claim under Levi P. Blethen. Mrs. Blethen sued for one-half of the land, claiming it under the community laws of this State. The land was paid for with money brought to this State by Blethen, who claimed that the common law was in force in the State of Massachusetts during the time of his marriage with the plaintiff, and that the land was his separate property.

The following clause of the Constitution of Massachusetts, which was adopted in the year 1780, was read in evidence: "All the laws which have heretofore been adopted, used, and approved in the province, colony, or State of Massachusetts Bay, and usually practiced on in the courts of law, shall still remain and be in full force until altered or repealed by the Legislature, such parts only excepted as are repugnant *143 to the rights and liberties contained in this Constitution." There was no other evidence offered to prove that the common law was in force in the State of Massachusetts at the time that the rights of the parties accrued. The court instructed the jury as follows: "The court instructs you that the undisputed evidence in this case shows that the common law was the law and rule of action in the State of Massachusetts, where she and her husband, L.P. Blethen, resided at the time of her marriage, and the court further instructs you that, under the common law, the husband became the absolute owner of all personal property belonging to the wife after her marriage. * * * Now, if you find that the defendant Blethen borrowed the sum of $400 from his wife and afterwards acquired the money in Massachusetts with which he purchased the land in controversy, then you are instructed that you will find for the defendants the land claimed by each of them, and so say."

The jury found a verdict for the defendants, which was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

Under the laws in force in the State of Texas at the time Blethen claims to have acquired the money with which he bought the land, the wife, upon the facts proved, would be entitled to one-half of it. Blethen and those who claim under him pleaded that the laws in force in the State of Massachusetts, at the time the money was acquired, made it his separate property. The pleadings presented the issue, what was the law upon this subject in the State of Massachusetts between the years 1863, the date of the marriage, and 1878, the time of Blethen's removal to Texas? The burden was upon the defendants to prove the law under which they claimed rights different from those accorded to them by the laws of Texas. The paragraph of the Constitution of Massachusetts introduced in evidence does not establish that the common law was in force in that territory at the time it was adopted, and furnishes no basis for a presumption that it prevailed there when the alleged right had its origin, if, indeed, such presumption would be indulged after so great a lapse of time.

There being no evidence of what the law upon the subject was in Masachusetts at the time in question, courts of this State must apply that which prevailed here, because it is the only applicable rule of decision known to them. Crosby v. Houston,1 Tex. 203; Bradshaw v. Mayfield, 18 Tex. 21 [18 Tex. 21]; Porcheler v. Bronson, 50 Tex. 555 [50 Tex. 555]; Houston, etc., Railway Co. v. Baker,57 Tex. 422; Tempel v. Dodge, 89 Tex. 68 [89 Tex. 68]. If one seeks in our courts to support a claim to property different from that secured by the laws of Texas, it is reasonable that he should be required to inform the court what the law is that he seeks to have enforced in this jurisdiction. It is true that in many of the States, perhaps in the greater number, in the absence of evidence, the courts will presume the common law to be in force in a sister State; but the rule stated above is established in this State by an unbroken line of decisions, and we believe it furnishes a safer guide than the indulgence in presumption, *144 for we know that frequent radical changes have been made by the legislatures of most of the American States in the rules of the common law, especially those which govern the rights of married women.

The defendants in error claim that the judgment should be affirmed as to Levi P. Blethen because, as to him, the plaintiff's action was barred by the statute of limitation, and as to the others, because they are innocent purchasers; but those issues were not submitted to the jury, and the facts are not such as to justify us in saying that the defenses claimed are, beyond controversy, good. It is therefore ordered that the judgments of the District Court and Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

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