293 S.W. 621 | Tex. App. | 1927
Appellant, J. W. Good, instituted this suit on the 4th day of May, 1925, to establish homestead rights in a tract of land consisting of 200 acres, and to enjoin the appellees, who are his children and grandchildren and husbands of his married daughters, from interfering with his use and enjoyment thereof. The injunction prayed for was granted, but appellant failed to make a bond, and no writ was issued. Appellees answered by a plea of not guilty and a general denial, and pleaded specially that appellant and his deceased wife, who owned the property, were not living together at the time of her death; that appellant did not have possession of said premises at that time; and that, since her death, he had abandoned said premises as a homestead. The case came on for trial in January, 1926. It was submitted to a jury on special issues, in response to which the jury found, in substance, that appellant and his deceased wife, Mary Bell Good, were not living together and treating each other as husband and wife at the time of her death, and that, after her death, appellant left said premises with the intention never to return and occupy the same as a homestead, or that he formed such intention after leaving the same. The court rendered a judgment that plaintiff take nothing by his suit, and that the defendants go thence without day. This judgment is here presented for review.
Section 52 of article 16 of the Constitution of this state provides that the homestead shall not be partitioned among the heirs of the deceased during the lifetime of the surviving husband or wife, or so long as the survivor may elect to use or occupy the same as a homestead. The right thus conferred is confirmed by express statutory provisions. R.S. arts. 3496, 3497, and 3501. This right to the continued use of the homestead as it existed at the time of the death of the husband or wife vests immediately in the survivor, unless it has been forfeited by abandonment. In order to show an abandonment which will operate as a forfeiture of such right, it is incumbent upon those claiming the benefit of such a forfeiture to show that the surviving member of the marital partnership abandoned the deceased member; that such abandonment was without just cause or excuse; and that it continued until the dissolution of the marital partnership by death. Linares v. De Linares,
It appears from the testimony that, at the time of the death of the wife, the cultivated lands were rented out, and that most of the rents for that year had been collected by her. Appellant seems to have remained in undisputed possession of the residence until about January 1, 1925. While there is nothing in the pleadings with reference to a will, there is parol testimony in the record that Mrs. Good left a will, and that Ed Good, one of the children, was appointed administrator under the same. He asserted the right to possession of the home place as a part of her estate. He rented the farm to a tenant for the year 1925. Appellant either consented to such renting or acquiesced therein, and permitted the tenant to take possession of the premises and all of the residence, except one room, which he reserved for himself. He testified that he also reserved the right to keep his live stock on the place and to let them run in the pasture. He also testified that he continuously asserted his right to the use and occupancy of said homestead, and that said administrator denied same. Appellant cooked, ate, and slept in the room reserved by him. He was absent considerable during the first part of 1925 on account of the serious illness of his son Enoch, who died in the early summer of that year. According to his testimony, continual friction existed between him and appellees with regard to his claim of homestead rights, and such friction resulted in the filing of this suit on May 4, 1925, as hereinbefore stated. Shortly after filing this suit appellant went to work for Mrs. Barnhill, a widow residing in that community. In June, 1925, he married her. She resided on a tract of land consisting of 100 acres, which is referred to as hers, though the nature of her title thereto was not shown. After his marriage to her, appellant lived at her home until her growing crop was matured and gathered. He kept all his personal effects, except some wearing apparel, in his room on the old homestead. He visited the same after his marriage only from time to time. These visits were made during the daytime. He continuously and strenuously insisted on his homestead rights in the premises in controversy in this suit. The tenant occupying the premises sometimes left and locked up the house. The testimony shows that on such occasions appellant would remove a screen and enter his *624 room by a window. Later on appellant changed the lock on the door to his room and kept the key. One of the appellees testified that he made a key to fit the new lock, entered said room, removed all appellant's property therefrom, and stored the same in a garage, thus forcibly taking possession of said room. Appellant and his second wife rented her place for the year 1926. They could not then move into the homestead in controversy because appellant was forcibly excluded therefrom. At the time of the trial of this case they were occupying temporary quarters rented by them, awaiting the result of such trial. There is nothing in the record indicating that appellant ever claimed or asserted homestead rights in the 100-acre tract of his second wife.
The right to the use and occupancy of the homestead having once vested in the surviving husband or wife, such right is presumed to continue until there is affirmative proof of abandonment. Laucheimer Sons v. Saunders,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded.