69 Tex. 267 | Tex. | 1887
Miniard Gilliam, who was the
After the agreement was made, Gilliam lived about fifteen months. On his death the agreement, in so far as it affected the benefit certificate payable on the death of Mrs. Gilliam, was canceled, she repaying, or agreeing to repay,' such sums as the appellees had paid thereon. After the death of Gilliam, which occurred on April 4, 1886, the appellees asserted a claim, under the agreement made with him, to two thousand dollars of the money that then fell due.
The evidence shows very clearly that Mrs. Gilliam had full knowledge, during the life time of her husband, of the agreement which he had made with the appellees, and of all facts which affected the' rights of the parties to the money due on the certificate. With such knowledge, Mrs. Gilliam, on May 29, 1886, executed and acknowledged before a notary public the following instrument: “Know all men by these presents, that I, Mrs. Sallie Gilliam, wife of Miniard Gilliam, deceased, hereby agree that the contract made and entered into between my husband, Miniard Gilliam, and Messrs. Alford Brothers, of Overton, Rusk county, Texas, remain in full force and effect, and that I consent that the agreement in the matter of his assigning two thousand dollars of his policy in the A. L. of H. shall be carried out in full and to the letter.” Subsequently to this, a draft was sent by the order to Mrs. Gilliam, payable to herself or order, for the entire sum by the terms of the certificate due on the
Thus the matter was settled between the parties, and there is* no conflict in the evidence as to'the fact that Mrs. Gilliam was in' full possession of any fact necessary to a proper understanding of her rights at the time she executed the paper copied, as well' as at the time she gave the appellees a draft for one thousand six hundred dollars, the balance in bank. There is nothing in. the record tending to show that the appellees made any fraudulent representation to her as to the effect of any act she did.
The only thing as to which there was a conflict at all material in the evidence, was that Mrs. Gilliam stated that the appellees agreed to give her something in addition to the fourteen hundred dollars, to enable her to build a house. This was denied by the appellees, and the court instructed the jury that if they believed from the evidence that this matter was as stated by Mrs. Gilliam, then they would find in her favor for the sum for which she sues. The finding of the jury was for the defendants. Under the conflict of evidence, this finding is conclusive on this issue, and as the charge of the court as to this was as favorable to the appellant as she could ossibly ask, this matter need not be further considered.
This action was brought to recover the sixteen hundred dollars paid by Mrs. Gilliam to the appellees, and damages for its detention. The petition is full of charges of fraud, deceit, misrepresentation and oppression, but for the sake of humanity, we are glad to be able to say that the evidence of the appellant herself relieves the appellees from those charges, except as to the» conflict to which we have referred. The court below, in effect, instructed the jury that the contract between the husband of Mrs. Gilliam and the appellees, under the rules of the order to1 which the former belonged, conferred no right whatever upon the latter. As this charge was in favor of the appellant, it is unnecessary to inquire whether it was entirely correct. It certainly went as far as she could ask.
There is another rule enforced, both at law and in equity, which would defeat a recovery in this case on the ground that the money was paid under a mistake of law, for'it is well settled that money paid under a mistake of law with respéct to liability to make payment, but with full knowledge of all the facts on which the claim for payment is based, and on which the right to resist it depends, can not be recovered. (Pomeroy’s Equity, 851; Bispham’s Equity, 189; Galveston County v. Graham, 49 Texas, 303.)
The assignments of error not disposed of in what has been already said relate to the admission and exclusion of evidence, and to the giving and refusing of instructions. The petition was full of averments that the contract between Miniard Gilliam and the appellees, as well as all transactions between them and the appellant, were brought about by fraud, misrepresentation, concealment and deceit, and the appellees wer.e permitted: to prove the facts attending the entire transactions, and in this there was no error, as the evidence tended to show that the entire transactions were open and free from misrepresentation or-other invalidating influence. The court, as before said, informed' the jury that the contract between the husband and the appellees conferred on the latter no right whatever, and the fact that this contract, together with facts attending its execution, were admitted in evidence, could not have prejudiced the appellant, but was proper to enable the jury fully to understand the known facts under which she acted in paying the money which she now" seeks to recover.
The appellant was permitted to prove that she was very poor and had a large family dependent upon her, and that she paid for the house in which she was living at the time of the death of her husband with a part of the money which she received; but she was not permitted to state that this house was about to be sold under a vendor’s lien. It is urged that this was error. We do not see that this evidence was pertinent to any issue in the case. The poverty of the appellant was a fact which certainly ought to have prompted the most generous action on the part of the appellees; and whether they exercised it, under the facts of this case, is a matter which they must answer for before the tribunal of their own consciences, but it can not affect the legal rights of the parties.
The charges given presented the law of the case as favorably for the appellant as the facts would justify; and those refused, which were correct and applicable to the case made, were substantially embraced in the charges given. The appellant, on the death of her husband, doubtless had rights under the certificate in her favor which she could have enforced, through which she might have realized a greater sum than she received; but by her
Courts have power to enforce rights, but they have no power, where rights have been voluntarily surrendered by acts binding in law, to reinstate and enforce them simply because a settlement has been made in which one party did not receive as much as, under the law, she would have been entitled to.
There is no error in the judgment, and it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Opinion adopted November 23, 1887.