Slavin v. Wheeler
Slavin v. Wheeler
Opinion of the Court
It appears that sometime prior to the 1st day of May, 1883, J. B. Slavin and his wife, who is the appellant, levied on the land in controversy,'but that prior to the date mentioned they had ceásed to live on the land, and were living in the town oí Ma-comb, on a place which was probably the community of Slavin and wife. While they were living in Macomb, in May 1, 1883, Slavin sold the land in controversy to Thornton under whom the appellee holds. Thornton paid for the land, and according to the testimony of Slavin as of others, the bond for title made to Thornton by Slavin was not executed by the appellant for the reason that, it was not then claimed or believed to be by Slavin. any part of his homestead. There is some conflict of evidence as to whether Mrs. Slavin knew of the sale of the land and consented thereto. She states that she did not, and that she always intended to return to the place to live; and she further stated, that, she and her children cultivated it after they had moved into the town of Macomb.
The appellant and her husband continued to live in the town for several years, keeping a tavern; .after which Slavin bought ariother tract of land on the same grant as that in controversy which was improved, and to which he and his family removed, where they resesided until about June 1882, at which time Slavin havingbeen ap
The court gave to the jury a very full and fair instruction, clearly submitting to them whether at the time of the sale by Slavin to Thornton, the former with his family had abandoned the property in controversy as a homestead. It is urged, however, that the court erred in giving the following instruction: “If you believe from the evidence that James B. Slavin, acting in good faith towards his wife, and with no intent to defraud his wife out of her homestead rights, moved upon another place of his own, with a view of abandoning his old homestead and acquiring a new one; you will find for the defendant.”.
The facts in paóof were ample to justify the finding that at the time Slavin sold the land to Thornton, it had ceased tobe the homestead of himself and family. He and they had removed to another, which they owned, and whatever may have been the intention of his wife, it is evident that Slavin'never expected ag-ain to occupy it as a home; that such was his intention is manifested not only what had transpired before the sale to Thornton, but by his continued assertion for about twenty years of homestead claim to other land, which, during that time, was owned and occupied by himself and family as a homestead.
There was evidence which showed that the homestead, in good faith, with no desire to injure his wife, prompted alone by what he conceived to be for the best interest of the family of which he is the
At the time of the execution of the bond for title by Slavin to Thornton, and at the time the latter paid the former for the land, Slavin with his family were occupying in the town of Macomb a place which he, or he and his wife owned, which they owned as a home. This then was in law and in fact at that time the homestead of the family, and the fact that the land in controversy may have been cultivated by the family after they had made their home in the town, could not give them any homestead rights in the rural property; for the homestead cannot be of a mixed character. (Rogers v. Ragland, 42 Tex., 422.)
It has often been said that the most satisfactory evidence of the abandonment of a place once a homestead, is the acquisition of another. Tested by this, the land in controversy was doubly abandoned as a homestead.
It is contended in this case, that a homestead is not abandoned so lohg as a wife, who may have voluntarily removed to another with her husband and childeen, may retain an intention to return to it, even though the husband may have no such intention, and may have provided another of which he or the community is the owner, equally as valuable, comfortable, and every way desirable as the one formerly occupied, and suited to his business. In other words, it is contended that the right to betermine where the home shall be, depends on the arbitrary will of a wife.
Such a proposition finds no sanction in law, and is in opposition to those laws.of nature which make the husband the natural head and protector of the family, whose will when justly and not capriciously or fraudulently exercised, to enable him to fulfill this high trust, ought not to be lightly disregarded.
The constitution protects to the wife the home of the family, and an attempt of the husband frudulently to abandon it, prompted by
The court, under the facts of this case, did not err in giving the charge complained of, nor in overruling the motion for a new trial, and the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ELIZABETH SLAVIN v. JUBE WHEELER
- Status
- Published