32 S.W. 362 | Tex. App. | 1895
This suit was instituted in December, 1893, by the plaintiffs, husband and wife, to recover three hundred and twenty acres of land, claimed as the separate property of the wife, and for rents. The defendant, Laura Ezell, joined by her husband, pleaded not guilty; and for special answer averred, that in December, 1880, she was married to Salathiel Robert, the son of the plaintiffs, and continued to be the legal wife of the said Salathiel until his death, which occurred in December, 1887; that the plaintiffs jointly gave the land to her husband in the month of December, 1880, and assured him that it should be his property in fee, and placed him in possession thereof; and that the said Salathiel, relying upon the assurances so made him, with the full knowledge of both the plaintiffs, made permanent and valuable improvements on said land, and expended much money and labor in making same; that her husband and herself, and their children, occupied said premises from the summer of 1881, as their home, until his death; and that herself and her children, the fruit of her marriage with the said Salathiel, have continued so to occupy the place since his death; that during the life of her said husband, he *177 claimed and used said land as his own, receiving and enjoying, with his wife and children, the rents and profits thereof, to the exclusion of plaintiffs, and with their full knowledge and consent; and that the said plaintiffs, each repeatedly during the life of their said son, acknowledged that he owned said property; and have, since his death, acknowledged that the land was the property of their said son's children; and have promised to make to them a deed of conveyance to the premises. These facts, defendants pleaded in estoppel to the claim of title by plaintiffs; they pleaded also improvements and occupancy in good faith, and also statute of limitation. The plaintiffs replied, denying the gift of the property, and pleading the coverture of the plaintiff Arthusa Robert, in reply to the alleged parol gift set up by defendants, and to their pleas of limitations. Upon trial, the court instructed the jury to find the land for the plaintiffs, and to allow defendants for the value of permanent and valuable improvements, if any, made by the said Salathiel Robert, not to exceed the increased value to the land resulting from the improvements, and that plaintiffs, if the jury allowed for improvements, might recover the reasonable rental value of the lands, exclusive of the improvements, from the time the premises were demanded by plaintiffs of defendants; and if no demand was made, then from the institution of the suit. The jury returned a verdict for the land for plaintiffs, and for improvements for defendants, and for rent in accordance with the instruction given them on that subject. Judgment was rendered in conformity with the verdict, and both parties have appealed to this court.
The evidence, though conflicting, was amply sufficient to sustain the averments of the answer as to the gift of the land, the admissions by plaintiffs of their son's ownership, and of his occupancy and use of the premises, and of the improvements made thereon by him with the knowledge and consent of his parents. The appellee insists that such facts estop plaintiff from denying the defendant's title. It is well settled by the decisions of the Supreme Court of this State, that a married woman can divest herself of title to her land only in the mode prescribed by the statute, unless by some fraudulent representations, or act on her part, which is relied on, and acted on, she is estopped from setting up claims to the land. In the case of Fitzgerald v. Turner,
To estop a married woman by acts in pais, she must make some false and fraudulent misrepresentation by which the purchaser was deceived, and upon which he acted. When the purchaser knows the property is that of a married woman, the law charges him with knowledge that the property can only be conveyed by deed from her and her husband, duly acknowledged by her, separate and apart from her husband, before an officer authorized by the law, to take the acknowledgment. In this case, Salathiel Robert is charged with knowledge that his mother's parol gift of the land to him, if she made such gift, did not convey title to him, and was not binding on her; and, therefore, her subsequent repudiation of such gift, though it had been made with the intention to repudiate it, was not, in law, a fraud upon him. Berry v. Donnelly,
Reversed and remanded.