283 S.W. 271 | Tex. App. | 1926
The court admitted as evidence, over appellant's objection thereto, a marriage license issued in Harrison county, February 12, 1910, toWillie Thompson and Lula Whittaker, and a certified copy of a judgment of the district court of Panola county, rendered March 24, 1911, divorcing Wiley Thompson and Lula Thompson. The ground of the objection to the marriage license as that it did not "prove that a divorce had been granted between Wiley Thompson and Teter Thompson," the appellee here. The ground of the objection to the judgment was that "it did not prove a divorce had been granted beteen Wiley Thompson and Teter Thompson, the contestant; that such a marriage might be had between Wiley Thompson and Lula Thompson and a divorce decree have been entered divorcing them, still such marriage might have been bigamous." We do not think the testimony should have been excluded on the grounds specified, and therefore overrule the assignments presenting the matter.
Appellant complains because the trial court, over his objection thereto, on the ground that it was within the inhibition in the statute with reference to testimony as to statements by and transactions with deceased persons in actions by and against executors and administrators of such persons (article 3690, Vernon's Sayles' Ann.Civ.St. 1914) permitted appellee to testify as a witness that she "lived with Boyd Holman, the deceased; that she began living with him 29 years ago, and lived with him until his death; that she and Boyd had 8 children." We think the objection should have been sustained and the testimony excluded (Edelstein v. Brown,
Over appellant's objection on the same ground, the court permitted the witness Ida Leafall to testify that she was "the daughter of Teter Thompson or Holman (appellee), and Boyd Holman was her father, and that Boyd Holman treated her as a daughter and provided for her as a daughter." If any of the testimony was within inhibition of the statute, the statement of the witness that she was appellee's daughter was not; and therefore, the objection being to all of it alike, it was not error to overrule it. Wells v. Hobbs,
Appellant insists, and we agree, that the finding of the jury that Wiley Thompson procured a divorce from appellee after he separated from her was contrary to the testimony. Our agreement is predicated on the testimony of appellee as a witness in her own behalf that she never procured a divorce from Wiley Thompson and that she never was served with notice of the fact, if he ever sued her for a divorce. The effect of this testimony we think was to show that Wiley Thompson and appellee were never divorced, and so rebut a presumption that they had been, which might otherwise have been indulged. Nixon v. Land Cattle CO.,
The judgment will be reversed and the cause will be remanded to the court below for a new trial. *273