210 S.W.2d 207 | Tex. App. | 1948
Appellee, Thomas T. Lewis, an attorney at law in Dallas, instituted this action against the appellants, Frank O. Long and his wife, Vena Long, to recover an attorney's fee alleged to be due and owing to him by the appellants as compensation for his services in representing Mrs. Long in a suit for divorce filed for her by appellee against her husband in a district court of Dallas County on September 11, 1945. The divorce suit never came to trial but was dismissed at the request of Mrs. Long, in person, on January 8, 1946. Appellants filed only a general denial and the case was submitted to a jury upon special issues in answer to which the jury found that both Mrs. Long and appellee acted in good faith in filing the divorce suit; that the allegations of her petition in the divorce suit were probably true; that the conduct of her husband, Frank O. Long, constituted such cruelty as rendered her further living with him insupportable; and that a reasonable attorney's fee for the services rendered by appellee to Mrs. Long in the divorce suit was $1,500. The trial court entered judgment in favor of appellee for the amount found by the jury as being a reasonable fee, to which appellants duly excepted and perfected an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth District at Dallas. The case is before us for review upon a transfer ordered by the Supreme Court equalizing the dockets of the Courts of Civil Appeal.
Appellants contend the judgment is erroneous and should be reversed because the evidence fails to reveal that Mrs. Long had legal grounds for a divorce or that the divorce case was filed in good faith on the part of either Mrs. Long or appellee. The petition filed by appellee on behalf of Mrs. Long in the divorce case was not introduced in evidence but a copy of it was attached as an exhibit to appellee's petition in the instant case and the record indicates it was considered throughout the trial as though it had been introduced. The divorce suit was filed upon the theory of cruel treatment under Sec. (1) of Article 4629, Revised Civil Statutes 1925, Vernon's *209 Ann.Civ.St. art. 4629(1), which provides that a divorce may be decreed where either party is guilty of excesses, cruel treatment or outrages toward the other, if the ill treatment is of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable. The allegations of cruelty and ill treatment alleged in the petition were general and charged, simply, that the parties were married and had lived together until the 5th of September, 1945, when, on account of the matters and things complained of, Mrs. Long was compelled to, and did, separate herself from her husband. The things complained of were that long prior to the separation the defendant began toward plaintiff a series of cruel treatments that became such as to render their further living together as husband and wife unbearable and insupportable and that, as a consequence thereof, plaintiff was compelled to, and did, separate herself from the defendant since which time they had not lived together as husband and wife.
Appellee testified that when Mrs. Long first consulted him about instituting the suit for divorce, she told him that she and her husband had never gotten along with each other as husband and wife and related an incident that happened about four years prior to that date, the details of which were that her husband was making good money and was providing her with an allowance of only $150 per month, out of which she had to discharge the utility bills, laundry bills, expense of keeping the yard in order, buying clothes and maintaining their two children. She told appellee that she, at that time, consulted another lawyer in Dallas concerning a divorce and that he communicated with her husband which resulted in an increase of her allowance to $250 a month. He said Mrs. Long further told him that, during the entire time she and Mr. Long had been married, they had absolutely no common friends and that her friends were not friends of her husband; that Mr. Long was high-tempered; that he was given to flying into rages at any little thing that came up; that he made "ungovernable remarks over nothing;" that he had frequently told her he had no love for her, and that she further stated that Mr. Long had no feelings or care for his wife or his children. He said she told him that Mr. Long's only love was for money and that during the time they had been married, they had no social life, attended no shows, and had no dinners out. She further told him that, upon one occasion, she suggested they go out for dinner at night and that her husband said he was not going to furnish his wife a household allowance and then pay for dinners outside. He said she further told him that, when Mr. Long came in at night or when he was at home, he remained to himself and in another room away from her; that they had no home life or companionship and there was very little conversation between the members of the family in their home.
Mrs. Long was called as a witness by the appellee. She testified that, when she first discussed the divorce suit with appellee, she told him she desired a divorce because she and her husband could not agree, principally about money. She said she asked appellee if she had grounds for divorce, and that he said it was not necessary to go into that matter at that time. She further testified that, during the alleged estrangement, and while the divorce suit was pending, she and her husband and children remained in their home together, took their meals together and spent their evenings together. She said that, during the years immediately preceding the filing of the suit, the family made a number of trips on summer vacations to New Mexico and other places and that, with one exception, her husband went with them and drove the automobile. None of her testimony made as strong a case for divorce as the statements appellee said she made to him concerning their marital relations, and neither the testimony of appellee nor that of Mrs. Long was denied or contraverted in any manner except in so far as they differed with each other as to the details of their first conversation.
The law is well settled in this state that fees and compensation for services rendered to the wife by an attorney in a divorce suit may be recovered by the attorney from the husband in cases in which the wife has reasonable grounds for instituting the *210
suit, or for her defense in a suit by him, where the suit or the defense is instituted or urged in good faith by her. Yeager v. Bradley, Tex. Civ. App.
The theory upon which such fees are recoverable is that the services of an attorney in such cases constitutes "necessaries" and they fall within the category of groceries and other items classed as necessities for the sustenance and support of the wife and children. If, however, the wife does not have sufficient grounds for a divorce or, if the suit is not brought in good faith on the part of either the wife or the attorney who represents her, neither the husband nor the community estate is liable for the attorney's fee. Hill v. Hill, Tex. Civ. App.
Since Mrs. Long did not have legal grounds upon which to base her suit for a divorce, the suit could not have been instituted in good faith and she was therefore without power to bind her husband or the community estate for the attorney's fee which constituted the basis of appellee's suit. The findings of the jury to the effect that Mrs. Long and appellee were acting in good faith in filing the suit were wholly without evidence to support them and the judgment entered by the court was therefore erroneous and cannot be allowed to stand.
The record indicates the case was fully developed and we conceive of nothing that could be gained by another trial. The judgment of the court below will therefore be reversed and judgment here rendered that appellee take nothing by this suit.