41 S.W.2d 1044 | Tex. App. | 1931
This appeal was to the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, but transferred to this court by the Supreme Court. Annie Jones, appellee, wife of Ed Jones, deceased, filed this suit in the district court of Harris county against American National Insurance Company, the city of Houston, and appellant, Sylvia Wilson Reedy, to recover $1,000, the proceeds of an insurance policy of group insurance issued by the American National Insurance Company to the city of Houston, for the benefit of the employees of the city of Houston. The policy, on its face, was payable to "Sylvia Wilson, friend," meaning Sylvia Wilson Reedy. The city of Houston answered, claiming no interest in the proceeds of the policy. The insurance company answered, tendering the proceeds of the policy into court, to be awarded by the court to the legal claimant, also it impleaded the husband of appellee, Sylvia Wilson Reedy, and by its interpleader prayed for its costs, with $50 attorneys' fees. Appellant answered claiming the policy under a contract between her and Ed Jones, whereby under a partnership agreement she was to be the beneficiary under the policy, and further that Ed Jones died testate and by his last will devised to her the proceeds of this policy. In due order of pleading, as a matter of abatement to plaintiff's cause of action, she pleaded the pendency of the probate of the last will and testament of Ed Jones in the county court of Harris county. By supplemental petition appellee pleaded that the contract under which appellant claimed the proceeds of the policy was in violation of good morals, in that it was a contract whereby Ed Jones and appellant were to live together in adultery, that Ed Jones was at the time of the making of the contract and at the time of his death the lawful husband of appellee, and that appellant, at the time of the making of the contract and at the time of the death of Ed Jones, was the lawful wife of C. H. Reedy. Contained in the policy was a statement signed by Oscar F. Holcombe, mayor of the city of Houston, that "the City of Houston has arranged this insurance for all employees, without cost, as added compensation for duty well performed." The trial was to the court without a jury with judgment in favor of appellee against appellant for the proceeds of the policy, with an award of $50 attorneys' fees to American National Insurance Company, and $296 to H. E. McCoy, undertaker, for the burial expenses of Ed Jones.
In support of its judgment the trial court filed conclusions of fact and law to the effect that at the time of the making of the contract pleaded by appellant she and Ed Jones were living together in adultery and that the contract was entered into "for the purpose of carrying out and aiding the unlawful cohabitation of Ed Jones and Sylvia Wilson Reedy," and further "that the purported will, which has not been probated, was made at and near the time of the contract and really, as a matter of fact, should be considered with it, for it was to encourage the unlawful cohabitation of said parties and by reason thereof said will, if probated, should not pass the title to the property in suit." The court further found that Sylvia Wilson Reedy, appellant, "had no insurable interest in the life of Ed Jones, deceased." Upon the facts stated, the court concluded, "as a matter of law, that the purported contract attached to the plaintiff's pleadings, as well as the purported will, which has not been probated, should not, and could not, under the facts, pass the title to anything owned by Ed Jones to Sylvia Wilson Reedy."
In Becknal v. Becknal (Tex.Civ.App.)
And further: "The jurisdiction of the district court in this domain of the law is appellate." The Commission of Appeals, in O'Neil v. Norton, 29 S.W.2d 1060, 1061, said: "It is well-settled rule in this state that when an administration on the estate of a deceased person is pending in the county court or it is made to appear that a necessity for it exists, the district court only has appellate jurisdiction and has no original jurisdiction to decree a partition or distribution or settlement of the estate among the heirs of decedent until the administration in the county court has been finally concluded."
It follows that the judgment of the district court should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.