222 S.W. 587 | Tex. App. | 1920
This is an action for partition of property, real and personal, and for damages arising from a conversion of certain personal property, instituted by appellee against Bertha Stoppelberg and John Stoppelberg. The appellants are mother and son, and appellee, a widowed daughter and sister, in law. The property sought to be partitioned consisted of five tracts of land, seven bales of cotton valued at $1,050, 4,500 pounds of seed cotton, 200 bushels of corn, two tons of unbaled hay, and two tons of fodder. The property, alleged to belong to appellee alone and to have been converted by appellants, consisted of cattle, hogs, automobile, horse, piano, two organs, motorcycle, bicycle, buggy, and set of harness. Appellants answered that four of the five tracts of land, described in the petition, were the separate property of Bertha Stoppelberg, and that lot No. 1, block 17, in the city of Galveston, sought to be partitioned, belonged one-third to appellee and two-thirds to appellants; that all the personal property sued for was the separate property of Bertha Stoppelberg, except one bicycle and one motorcycle. Appellants filed a cross-action against appellee for conversion of two bales of cotton, one silver railroad watch, one small cooking stove, and one chest of blacksmith tools. No jury was demanded, and the trial judge rendered judgment in favor of appellee for a one-eighth interest in and to two tracts of land, one of 147.6 acres, and the other of 145 acres; for one-sixth of the Galveston lot; for one-half of seven bales of cotton, seed cotton, corn, tops, and fodder, all of the value of $1,830, and for the other personal property sued for, and for $250, her interest in improvements on the 82 1/2-acre tract, and rendered judgment in favor of Bertha Stoppelberg for the 82 1/2-acre tract and for $86.87 1/2, being one eighth of amount of purchase money paid by the said Bertha Stoppelberg on the 145-acre tract.
The findings of the court are sustained by the evidence. They show that Bertha Stoppelberg was the widow of Henry G. Stoppelberg, who died intestate in 1905, leaving as his heirs appellants and Paul Stoppelberg, the husband of appellee. Paul Stoppelberg, to whom appellee was married on September 11, 1918, died intestate on October 17, 1918, and at his death owned the personal property described in the petition, with the exception of one horse, one buggy, one set of harness, one piano scarf, one open-face silver watch, one tool chest, and one stove, which belong to appellants. He also died possessed of a one-fourth interest in and to the 147 1/2 and 145-acre tracts, which he inherited from his father, who owned a one-half interest therein at the time of his death; Bertha Stoppelberg owning the other half. Two-thirds of the Galveston lot was the community property of Bertha Stoppelberg and her deceased husband; the other third being the separate property of her said husband. Bertha Stoppelberg paid $695 on the purchase price of the 145 acres of land, after her husband's death.
The court permitted William Schroeder to testify that John Stoppelberg, one of the appellants, had told him that certain of the personal property belonged, in equal parts, to him and his brother, Paul Stoppelberg, and that action is made the basis of the first assignment of error. No doubt the testimony was admissible as between appellee and John Stoppelberg, and, being tried before the judge, without a jury, the presumption will prevail that it was used only on the point and between the parties to which it could legally apply. Appellee had alleged that she and John Stoppelberg jointly owned the cotton, sorghum, and corn tops, and Schroeder testified that John Stoppelberg told him, not that all the personal property but that the last-mentioned property, was owned in equal parts by him and Paul. Appellants seem to ignore the fact that the admission was made by one of the parties, and cites authorities on declarations made by third parties to sustain the assignment. The presumption will prevail that the trial judge considered it as bearing upon the case against John Stoppelberg, especially as there is sufficient competent evidence to sustain the judgment. Lindsay v. Jaffray,
The findings of the court show that on January 27, 1919, interrogatories to Bertha Stoppelberg were filed by appellee, and a commission issued to take her depositions. Efforts were made to obtain her depositions from time to time, but the officer failed to obtain the same, although her house was visited, and a subpœna and attachment issued for her. Appellee introduced her testimony and rested as did appellants also. Appellants afterwards asked to be allowed to introduce evidence, and when Bertha Stoppelberg was introduced as a witness in her own behalf, and was asked questions covered by the direct interrogatories, appellee objected, and asked that said interrogatories be taken as confessed. The objection was sustained, and the witness was not permitted to answer questions covered by the interrogatories. The court found that Bertha Stoppelberg "failed and refused" to answer the interrogatories, and the notary public to whom the interrogatories were delivered certified that Bertha Stoppelberg and John Stoppelberg denied him admission to their house, and declined and refused to appear before him. The interrogatories were filed six months before the trial, and a subpœna was served on Bertha Stoppelberg on January 28, 1919, commanding her to appear and answer the interrogatories, and she was tendered a fee for her attendance, but she failed and refused to attend. An attachment was then issued for her, but she could not be found by the officers. Appellants filed a motion after she was not allowed to testify to matters about which the interrogatories were propounded, and then a motion was filed that Bertha Stoppelberg be allowed to answer the interrogatories at that time. The motion was sworn to by Bertha Stoppelberg, in which she stated that she was 70 years of age, and did not obey the summons to appear and answer the interrogatories because she was sick and in mental distress at the recent death of her son, Paul, but went to Giddings to consult with her attorneys about answering the interrogatories, and was seized with influenza, and was not able to answer the interrogatories, and then went to Houston for treatment, and was not able to answer until her trial came off. As to refusing the notary public admission to her house and refusing to appear before him, no answer was attempted. No time to consult with attorneys was requested. The returns of the officers are not contradicted, and no testimony was introduced by appellants to sustain their motion. As said by this court in Weinert v. Simang,
"A number of cases have been cited by appellant to show that the court should have set aside the certificate of the officer and have permitted appellant to testify, but none of them hold that this court has the authority to determine that the action of the court in deciding against appellant on his motion to suppress the certificate in the first instance and to have another hearing on it in the second instance was erroneous, in the absence of a statement of the facts upon which the motion was tried."
The interrogatories are authorized by Rev Stats. art. 3680, and taking them as confessed is authorized by article 3685. The finding of the trial judge would be sustained In the face of the affidavit, as the court could reject its contents if he desired. It was not supported by evidence. There was nothing tending to show any attempt to intrap appellants in taking the depositions.
It was clearly within the discretion of the court to refuse to allow Bertha Stoppelberg to testify and to allow appellee to introduce the interrogatories to her in rebuttal of appellants' evidence. No abuse of discretion has been shown in this case. Jones v. Wright, 92 S.W. 1010; Railway v. Morris, 144 S.W. 1163; Ayers v. Harris,
Bertha Stoppelberg disclosed in her motion that, while she was so sick and mentally distressed that she could not go to Bastrop to answer interrogatories, she was able to go to Giddings to consult her attorneys, and her sickness did not prevent her from going to Houston and remaining away until July 10, 1919, when the case was tried, when she was able to go to Bastrop and offer to testify. Her own motion tended to show that she was evading the answering of the interrogatories. In the cases cited by appellants, evidence was introduced to show that there was no willful refusal to answer the interrogatories. Appellants relied alone on their motion to vacate the official certificate of the notary public. The law does not require no, tice to parties to a suit, nor to their attorneys, in order to take their depositions, and a failure to issue such notices was not evidence of a design to intrap appellants. Article 3682, Rev.Stats. They knew about the matter, and refused to answer the interrogatories. The third, fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments of error are overruled.
The 145-acre tract of land having been bought during the marital relation *590
between Bertha Stoppelberg and her deceased husband, the presumption obtains that it was community property, and the burden was upon her to establish that it was her separate estate. The fact that the deed was executed to Bertha Stoppelberg did not destroy the presumption that the property was community. Payment of the balance of the purchase money on the 145-acre tract out of insurance money on the life of the deceased husband by the surviving wife did not destroy the community character of the property, and stamp it as separate estate. The court properly decreed the property to be community, and charged appellee with her proportionate part of the purchase money paid by Bertha Stoppelberg. Allen v. Allen,
The ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth assignments of error are overruled. There was testimony tending to support the judgment of the court as to the cotton bales, the seed cotton, and other personal property.
The question of the homestead rights of Bertha Stoppelberg in the 82 1/2-acre tract of land is sought to be raised in the brief of appellant, but not in pleadings or proof. The improvements on the land were made with community funds, and appellee was entitled to her share in the same. It is the well-settled law of Texas that the separate estate of one member of the community must reimburse the community for any proper improvements made in good faith upon the separate estate with community funds. Furrh v. Winston,
The cases which appellants claim hold, where it is shown that the consideration in a deed taken in the name of the wife was the separate property of the husband, the presumption will arise that the husband made a gift to the wife, whether the recital in the deed shows it or not, do not so hold. They hold that where the evidence shows that the purchase money was the separate property of the husband, which he gave to the wife, the presumption of a gift to the wife of the land would arise, although the deed did not so recite.
In this case the only testimony tending to show that the husband intended to make a gift of the 147 acres of land to Bertha Stoppelberg is the testimony of John Stoppelberg, a defendant, and, of course, interested party. He testified:
"I was not present with my mother when she bought the tract of 147 acres of land from Meyer, the second tract. I was not present at the time the deed was executed. As to whose money paid for that land, my mother paid for it. I don't recollect how much she paid for it; I think it was $600. I know why the deed was made to my mother. It was made to her because father said he did not want to pay the land off; that if she wanted to pay she could buy and he would furnish the money. The deed was made to Bertha Stoppelberg."
No inkling is given as to when and where the father made the declaration, nor to whom it was made. If made when the trade was consummated, John Stoppelberg was not there, and it is so inconsistent as to be unreasonable for the husband to say that he did not want to pay for the land, but that the wife could buy and he would furnish the money. That might be a loan, but not a gift to the wife, and it might be separate property or money belonging to the community, that he was lending. The evidence was too vague and unsatisfactory to be credited, and evidently it was rejected by the trial judge. The deed from Meyer recites the payment of $600 on November 1, 1899. In order to rebut the legal presumption that the property was paid for with community funds, the only testimony is the vague and indefinite assertion of one of the appellants that at some time and some place, not designated, the husband had said he would not pay for the land, but would let his wife have the money. The evidence was ignored, and it should have been ignored.
According to the theory of appellants, the husband of Bertha Stoppelberg bought no land, although he seemed to have the money, but gave his wife free rein in dealing in real *591 estate on her own responsibility and for her own separate use and benefit. She had no money, but was compelled to look to his pock et while living and to insurance on his life after his death for the payments made of what is claimed to be her separate estate. What the idea was for taking the different deeds of conveyance in the name of the wife remains unexplained. Different motives might be assigned for such conduct of a husband, but it is unnecessary to indulge them, and all that is proper to presume is that the property was bought for the community and placed in the name of the wife.
The judgment will be reformed so as to eliminate the lien granted on the 82 1/2-acre tract, and, as reformed, will be affirmed.