65 Tex. 159 | Tex. | 1885
The charge of the court in reference to the interest which the appellants would be entitled to, if entitled to recover at all, was erroneous, for under the will of James E. Box his wife took only a life estate in whatsoever interest in the land he may have owned.
This, however, would be a matter of no importance, if, under the facts, the appellants were not entitled to recover at all, which would be true, if Mary Box, through the will of her husband, or otherwise, had the yowerto make the°two conveyances to B. A. Beeves. Whether this was so depends on the true construction of the will of James E.
The land in controversy was acquired during the time James and Mary Box were husband and wife, and the court very correctly charged the jury that the burden of proving that the land was paid for with the separate property of James E. Box, rested upon the appellants who claim the land as a part of his separate estate.
James E. Box made the following provisions in his will which have direct reference to the tract of land of which that in controversy is a part: “I desire and will that my said wife, Mary Box, remain and live on the place where I now reside, unless in her judgment she should think best to remove, in which case, she desiring it,- my executors are hereby authorized and empowered to sell all, or any portion, of said home tract or parcel of land, and that she raise, control and educate my said children in such way and manner as she thinks best.” “Be it understood that should my wife, Mary Box, think proper to remain on the place where I now live, and desire to sell any portion of said tract or parcel of land, I will that my executors .shall have Mi power to sell such parcel or parcels of land in such quantity or quantities as may be thought most desirable.”
The will farther provided that the two executors named (Mary Box not being one) should have “fall power each to appoint his successor in case of death or removal of either one or both of them, merely giving them the general supervision of all my estate.” The will provided that no action should be taken in the probate court other than the probate and registry of the will. The will was probated soon after the death of the testator, but only one of the executors qualified, and he died soon afterwards, and no farther action seems to have been taken in the probate court in reference to the estate. In the years 1854 and 1855 Mary Box sold the two small tracts of land in controversy to R. A. Reeves, under whom the appellees claim. There was no evidence that any part of the money paid to Mary Box by Reeves for the land in controversy was ever invested in other lands, but the inferences to be drawn from the evidence are very strong that the money so received was used for the support of the widow and children of James E. Box. Under this state of facts the court below gave the following charge:
“In the construction of the will of Box, in evidence before you, I instruct you that if, at the time the deeds were made by Mrs. Box, the executors were dead, that she desired in her judgment to. remove from the home place mentioned in said will with her children and sell
This is assigned as error.
This instruction was evidently given, as upon its face it professes to be, to guide the action of the jury in determining the power Mary Box took under the will of her husband, and the effect of her acts, such facts existing as are referred to in the charge, and was not intended to inform the jury what the effect of her conveyances to Beeves would be, if made by her, as the survivor of the community, if the land belonged to the common estate.
Two inquiries arise under this charge :
1st. What power, if any, did the will give to Mrs. Box to sell the land in controversy? That the testator intended his wife should, during her widowhood, enjoy the entire property of his estate, not necessary for the payment of his debts, for the support of herself and the support, maintenance and education of their children, is manifested by the will. That the desire of the wife that all or a part of the tract of land, of which that in controversy is a part, should be sold, was to be regarded by, and to influence the executors to sell, is also manifested by the will.
The testator evidently contemplated that exigencies might arise on which it would be his desire that the land should be sold, and to his wife he confided the power to determine whether these exigencies had arisen, but this seems the extent of the power conferred upon her.
The executors were expressly empowered, by the will, to sell, which involved the determination of the price for which it be sold, as well as all other terms upon which it should be sold, while no such power was conferred on the wife. To the wife was confided the exercise of judgment as to whether the land, or a part of it, should be sold, and to this it was the duty of the executors to have due regard; but to the executors was confided the power to determine according to their best judgments every other fact necessary to be determined before a sale could be made, as well as the power to consummate a sale.
2d. Are there any facts extrinsic of the will, stated in the charge and found in the evidence, taken in connection with the will, which would confer upon the wife the power to sell, or that would operate as an estoppel against the appellants?
We find nothing in the charge which, if true, could confer on the wife the power to sell the land. After the death of the executors, it presents the ordinary case of an estate without administration, and it surely cannot be held that such condition of an estate empowers the wife of a deceased person to sell lands belonging to his estate, even to raise money for the support of herself and their children. If this be necessary, the law provides how, when, and to what extent, it may be done. At the time the land was sold, and for a long time after-wards, one of the appellants was a minor, as was the person through whom the other claims, and if it was proved that the money received by Mrs. Box from the sale of the land in controversy, was used by her in the support and education of her children, it is not perceived how that could estop them from claiming their respective shares.
The elements necessary to create an estoppel are wanting. It appears that Mrs. Box did purchase two hundred acres of land with a part of the money received from Jackson for a part of the same tract of land of which that in controversy is a part, which she sold to him, and that this two hundred acres of land went into a partition of land which was made between Mrs. Box and her children, after her marriage with her second husband. -
If the facts in reference to the sale of the tract of land to Jackson, the subsequent acquisition of the two hundred acres, and its partition were such as to bar any right of the children of James Box, it would be their right to recover the land sold to Jackson, upon the ground that they had received property, the proceeds of that sale. In this case it does not become necessary to examine that question, for such transactions could certainly have no bearing on their right to recover the land in controversy. The partition between Mrs. Box and her children, whether correctly made or not, was made by a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter, and, if it had jurisdiction of the parties, binds them as to the subject matter in reference to which the
If it should appear in this case that the land in controversy was of the community estate of James Box and his wife, after the lapse of so great a period of time as transpired between the sale of the land to Beeves and the institution of this suit, nearly thirty years, much might be presumed as to the existence of facts which would have clothed Mrs. Box, as survivor, with power to make the sale. Uremendi v. Hutchins, 48 Tex., 352; Id, 56 Tex., 419. The charge, however, was not based on such powers as the wife possibly may have had over community property as survivor, but upon her rights and powers under the will, and upon such facts as were referred to in the charge, some of which the evidence contained in the record fails to show ever existed. It was error to give a charge based on facts which there was no evidence to establish, for such a charge was calculated to mislead.
The court instructed the jury, if they believed that Beeves had five years’ possession of the land prior to March 25, 1862, under circumstances which would make the five year period of limitation ordinarily operate, then they were authorized to find in favor of the defendants as against Mrs. McClung. There were no facts sufficient to authorize the giving of this charge, for one of the tracts was conveyed to Reeves April 13, 1854, and the other July 10, 1855, at which time W. H. Box, the father of Mrs. McClung, was a minor who did not arrive at his majority until December 16, 1861. No possession was shown by Beeves prior to the death of James Box, therefore limitation did not run against his minor son until his majority, after which the possession of Beeves continued only for a few months.
As the case is presented, it becomes unnecessary to consider what might be the rights of the defendants should it appear that the land was community property.
For the errors noticed the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Beversed and Bemanded.
[Opinion delivered November 3, 1885.]