11 Tex. 469 | Tex. | 1854
The jury in the Court below, by their verdict, having found that there was no fraud, on the part of the appellants, the question is reduced to one of authority, in law, on the part of the defendant, or appellee in this Court, Lucy Johnson, to make a valid contract. If she was in a situation, to make a legal contract in relation to the property, the sale of which is the subject of this controversy, the verdict of the jury cannot be sustained, and the judgment thereon must be reversed ;■ if she was under a legal incapacity, that incapacity would sustain the verdict. And there can be no doubt, the Court below based its opinion, upon the supposed, legal incapacity of Mrs. Johnson to contract in relation to a sale of the property, the contract for which is sought to be set aside.
The Court below must have rested its opinion of the legal incapacity of Messrs. Johnson, upon two grounds, or one of them. First, The minority of the party; or secondly, upon the fact that she was an administratrix, and the property sold being assets of the estate of her intestate, she had not the legal capacity to sell by a voluntary private sale.
The first question is believed to be settled by our statute. It is as follows: “ That every female, under the age of twenty-
It is however believed, that the opinion of the Court below was based mainly upon the fact of Mrs. Johnson’s being an administratrix of Martin at the time she sold the property; and it is doubtless true as a legal proposition, that an administrator cannot sell the property pertaining to the estate of his intestate, at private sale. This proposition grows out of the
There are many considerations that would give additional force, in the application of these principles, to the precise case
The Court below seems to have regarded the sale as the sale of an adcdinistratrix, and not of the sole heir, when the facts will not sustain any such conclusion, and the presumption is the very reverse; because, as the former, she could not have made the sale, and as the latter’, she was under no legal disability. Or, perhaps, the Court below may have believed that the mere fact of her being the administratrix overshadowed and destroyed all power or capacity to sell her interest as heir. This, as we have shown, is not true.
The Court seemed to have thought that the mere fact of her being the administratrix, without the slightest evidence or probability of outstanding claims or debts, would afford a presumption of law, that such outstanding claims or debts really did exist. We will examine the correctness of this conclusion. The administration had been granted to her near three years, before the sale of the property by her as the sole heir; and
It is very clear that this is not a contest for the benefit of creditors; and it is equally clear, that it is an effort, under color of an administration, to set aside a sale of the wife’s separate property, made by her in strict conformity with the law. In relation to such sales, our decisions show with what scrutinizing anxiety, this Court has uniformly sustained the just and legal rights of the wife, to the protection of her separate property; but we cannot permit her to become a participant with her husband, in a fraud upon honest purchasers ; and as such we are constrained to consider them in this case, from the verdict of the jury, repudiating any charge of fraud against them. In the language of this Court in Hartwell v. Jackson, 7 Tex. R. 582, “such ambidextrous shuffling and “ double dealing between husbands and wives, to the injury of “ third parties, is repugnant to every dictate of honesty, and “ is sanctioned by no principle of law.” And the Supreme Court of the United States in Bien v. Heath, 6 Howard, 247, says, “ The equitable powers of this Court can never be ex- “ tended in behalf of one who has acted fraudulently, or who, “ by deceit or any improper means, has gained an advantage. “ To aid a party in such a case, would make this Court the “ abettor of iniquity. And we suppose that this principle ap- “ plies to the case under consideration. A feme covert acting “ under her own responsibility, under the liberal provisions of “ the Louisiana law, may act fraudulently, deceitfully or in- “ equitably, so as to deprive her of any claim to relief.”
The facts in this case, show that the wife acted upon her own
Without discussing several other questions raised upon the record, in this case, we are satisfied that the Court below erred in its judgment, and that the facts do not sustain the verdict of the jury, and that there ought to have been a new trial granted. The decree is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.