Hughes v. Hughes
Hughes v. Hughes
Opinion of the Court
The appellant, M. E. Hughes, instituted this suit against W. G. Hughes for 160 acres of land, and in the first count of her petition alleges that she and M. H. Hughes, deceased, were married and moved to Hall county as husband and wife; that M. H. Hughes is dead, and he died in August, A. D. 1913; that prior to his death, on the 16th of March, 1912, he deeded the land in controversy to W. G. Hughes, signing the deed alone, which was not joined in by the appellant; that the land at the time of the conveyance was community property of appellant and her husband, and was the homestead prior thereto, and at that date; that the deed was void and of no force and effect, for the reason that appellant did not join in the execution thereof; and that the property constituted their homestead at the time and prior to the execution of said deed, and she sued for the rents, etc., and possession of the land.
The second count in the petition is in the form of an ordinary trespass to try title. To this petition the appellee, W. G. Hughes, answered by the three-year statute of limitation and a plea of not guilty, which plea was sworn to.
The facts show that M. H. Hughes and M. E. Hughes, as husband and wife; purchased and settled upon section 4 of block 2, J. Pointervant survey, on the 11th day of November, A. D. 1895, and that the section of land was a full 640 acres, and that they resided on the south part of the section until they separated as husband and wife. The land in controversy is the south 160 acres of said section. At the time of the execution of the deed by M. H. Hughes to W. G. Hughes appellant and her husband had separated, and the deed to the 160 acres of land was executed by M. H. Hughes, without being joined by his wife, the appellant. The land is described as beginning at the southeast corner of the section; thence west 1,900 varas to its southeast corner; thence north 475 va-ras, east 1,900 varas, and south to beginning 475 varas. Mrs. Hughes testified in general terms that at the time of the separation and before that time the homestead was on the south part of the section, and at one place *848 appears to state it was on title south %. The other testimony is clear that the improvements, house, etc., used by them as a home was not on the .160 acres so conveyed by the husband, and while the evidence is not clear just where the house was situated, it appears that the land in question during the time Hughes and.‘his wife lived together was segregated from the rest of the section by a wire fence, with a renter’s house thereon. The evidence is very indefinite as to what use the 160 acres was put. The effort, in this case appears to have been 'to show that Mrs. Hughes, in a division, did not get as good land as her husband. We are not able to find that the husband at any time dedicated the 160 acres to homestead use. The facts by. some of the witnesses, while not clear, indicate that the farm was, in fact, north of the house, and that the house and improvements in which they resided was north of the 160 acres in question. We think the court, from the evidence, was warranted in finding that the husband dedicated the land north of the 160 acres to homestead use, and that the land in question was not at any time part of the homestead, and we impute to the court such a finding. The facts further show that M. H. Hughes and his wife, Mrs. M. E. Hughes, at the time the deed was executed, were husband and wife, but were living apart; that previous thereto the wife sued the husband for divorce, alleging substantially that on the 29th day of October, 1908, her husband struck her in the breast with his fist and struck her on the .head with a knife, and that his conduct was such that she was obliged to leave and did leave him and placed herself under the care of her son, T. Hughes, since which time she had not dared to live with him. The suit for divorce was tried in the district court of Hall county, and upon hearing the evidence the court refused to grant the appellant a divorce from her husband, and rendered a judgment refusing her a divorce. In that case she swore to her pleadings. Upon the trial of this case she testified her husband left her upon having a quarrel about some chickens on a Friday, in 1908, but came back in about three days, and said nothing at that time about her leaving the place. She testified after her husband left her she filed the suit upon the advice of some one that she would have to do so to get any part of the land. She further testifies that she did not leave the place willingly, but was given notice to quit. It further appears that she and her husband thereafter entered -into an agreement, by which she took 180 acres of land on the north end of the tract, two cows and calves, three horses, and $200 in money, and moved on that land and built a house on it, and has since been living on it for about five years before the institution of the suit, and was then living on it. At the time-she signed the agreement she was at her son’s house in Donley county.
The evidence in this record is in a very unsatisfactory condition. Counsel in the case present in their brief matters not in the record and assume positions in no way supported by the record. There is no allegation that the husband disposed of the land in fraud of the rights of the wife in the homestead.
“By this plea (not guilty) they admit nothing, but demand strict proof of everything necessary to sustain the plaintiff’s action.”
Again that court said:
It “goes directly to the points in dispute under the evidence, and throws upon the plaintiff the burden of proving everything in relation to these points that is necessary to maintain his suit and entitle him to recover.”
It is clearly stated, we think, in that case that the plea of not guilty is a denial of the plaintiff’s allegation, and puts him upon proof of everything necessary. If under the amendment of the statute with reference to pleadings the denial was not specific enough, an exception should have been taken thereto on that ground, and, having failed to do so, we believe the appellant should be held to have waived her right to a better plea. It has been recently held that the amendment of the law with reference to pleading was made, in part at least, for the benefit of the litigants, informalities of which they could waive, and the record as here presented, we think, clearly indicates a waiver by the appellant before the trial court, and we so hold. Railway Co. v. Tomlinson, 169 S. W. 217.
We find no error in the judgment of the court requiring a reversal, and the case will therefore be affirmed.
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