Ross v. Kornrumpf
Ross v. Kornrumpf
Opinion of the Court
The amended petition did not set up a new cause of action. The cause of action declared on in the original petition was the right to the land in controversy, alleged to have been obstructed and interfered with by the defendant. In the amended petition it is the same, with the facts of the case and the relief sought more particularly specified. But the setting up of a new cause of action does not subject an amended pleading to a demurrer for that cause only. It merely charges the plaintiff with the previous costs, and lets in any defense which could have been pleaded had the suit been commenced at the date of tiling the amendment.
The ruling of the court upon the other exceptions did not work any injury to the defendants, and, if wrong, it was a mere irregularity, in no way affecting ultimately the merits of the controversy, or the rights of the parties, and can afford no ground for reversing the judgment. Hardy v. De Leon, 5 Tex., 233.
All inquiry into the validity of the judgment rendered in Travis county was effectually closed by the charge of the court holding it to be valid and binding, so that the defendant was not injured by any allegations as to the irregular manner in which the judgment was obtained.
And for the same reason the improper admission of testimony to prove these allegations cannot operate to reverse the judgment. This does not present a case where the court has attempted, in its
There was no error in permitting plaintiffs to introduce in evidence the copy of deed from Harris to Kornrumpf. Our statute does not require that the affidavit of loss of the original shall be made before the trial begins in order to let in a certified copy. R. S., art. 2257. The certified copy must be on file for three days before the trial, and this gives the opposite party sufficient time and opportunity to attack it, if he chooses so to do.
The appellants’ assignments of error do not seem to question the right of Kornrumpf to convey property to his wife in payment of money of hers previously used by him, thereby making it her separate estate free from liability for his debts. That is not an open question in this court, having been settled in favor of the wife’s right in the case of McKamey v. Thorp, 61 Tex., 648.
The objection raised to Mrs. Kornrumpf’s title is based upon the’ fact that the deed to Hugo, through whom she claims, was not recorded until after the judgment against her husband had been registered in Kinney county, where the land was situated.
The title which Mrs. K. really derived through this deed and the subsequent conveyance to her by Hugo was that of a resulting trust in the land; the apparent title was vested in the community of herself and husband. As to bona fide purchasers and contract lien creditors without notice, she is held to this apparent title; as to all others, including creditors with mere statutory liens created by judgment or execution, she can claim the resulting trust arising from the manner in which the land was acquired. McKamey v. Thorp, supra; Parker v. Coop, 60 Tex., 111.
At the time the deed was made to Hugo, the state, as plaintiff in the judgment against Kornrumpf, held such a statutory lien upon the land, and to this right of the state the appellant was subrogated by reason of her purchase at the execution sale. Having acquired no other right in or to the land previous to her said purchase, her title must stand or fall accordingly as she had or had not notice of Mrs. Kornrumpf’s real interest in the land when the purchase was made at the sheriff’s sale. And this is the vital question in the case.
The téstimony upon this point was conflicting. A witness for plaintiffs testified that he heard the attorney for Mrs. Kornrumpf
But it further appears from the record that the court, over the objections of appellant, permitted the appellee, Edward Kornrumpf, to testify that when the sheriff came to him with the execution, he told the sheriff that the land was the separate property of his wife. He stated that Mrs. Boss was not present at the time, and there is no proof that this conversation was ever communicated to her. Neither is it shown that Mrs. Kornrumpf was present at the conversation. This testimony was therefore illegal and should have been excluded. It could not be admitted to rebut any presumption of estoppel that might arise from the silence of Mrs. K. or her husband, when her rights were about to be invaded. She was not present, and nothing that her husband could have said or done under the circumstances could have prejudiced her right to the land.
For want of the presence of Mrs. Boss or any one representing her it was worthless as evidence of notice. But upon this point it was calculated to have an injurious effect upon the minds of the jury. The question of notice vel non was a pure question of fact submitted to their decision. By admitting the evidence the court necessarily led the jury to believe that it was important on that question. They may have concluded —- and it was a proper inference — that as the court admitted the statement though Mrs. Boss was not present, and the evidence was objected to specially on that account, that it was not necessary that she should be present in order to affect her with notice of the statement; that a fact brought to the knowledge of the sheriff who made the levy was presumed to be known to subsequent purchasers at the sheriff’s sale.
Had the case been tried before the judge alone, we might presume that the illegal testimony was discarded by him in making up his decision. But when submitted to a jury, it must appear that it could
Such is not the case here. Each party had produced evidence sufficient to establish his side of the question at issue. In such case a feather’s weight of illegal testimony must not be thrown into the scales to turn them in favor of either of the litigants.
We think that the court erred in the admission of this testimony, and that it may have operated to the prejudice of the appellant, and for this error the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
[Opinion delivered June 16, 1885.]
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ann Ross v. Emma Kornrumpf
- Cited By
- 21 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Pleading — Cause of action.— An amended petition which sets up a right in the plaintiff to land, which had been before asserted in the original petition', and which specifically sets forth the facts which constitute the alleged unfounded claim of defendants to such land, does not set up a new cause of action; nor is a new cause of action set up by specifying more particularly the relief sought. 0. New cause of action.— When a new cause of action is set up by amended petition, its effect is to subject the plaintiff to all costs incurred up to the filing of the amendment, and to let in any defense which could have been pleaded had the suit been commenced at the date of the filing of the amendment. 3. Practice.— A ruling by the district judge, which, though wrong, could not have affected the final judgment, can afford no ground for a reversal. 4. Practice — Certified copies. — Though the certified copy of a deed relied on as a muniment of title must be on file in the cause three days before the trial, to authorize its introduction in evidence, it is not necessary that the party offering it should make affidavit to the loss of its original before the trial of the cause begins, in order that it may be read in evidence. 5. Husband and wife — Deed — Separate property.— The wife may receive a valid conveyance of the separate property of her husband to herself, so as to constitute it her own separate estate free from liability for his debts, when such conveyance is made in payment of money belonging to her which the husband had previously used. 0. Execution sale — Community property — Resulting trust — Notice.—A deed was made by a third party conveying land to a married woman, which the vendor had purchased from the husband of said woman, and had his deed re-' corded after a statutory lien thereon had been fixed by the registration of a judgment in the county against the husband, but which deed was made before the registration of the judgment. After the conveyance to the wife the land was sold under that judgment to satisfy the husband’s debt. In a suit involving title between the purchaser at execution sale, and the wife, who claimed that the land had been acquired by her in payment of a debt due her from her husband, held: (1) The title of the wife, if the land was purchased with her separate means, was that of a resulting trust in the land, the apparent title being vested in the community estate of herself and husband. (2) As to bona fide purchasers, and contract lien creditors without notice, the apparent title in the community would prevail. (3) As to all others, including creditors with mere statutory liens, created by judgment or execution, the wife may claim the resulting trust arising from the manner of its acquisition. (4) Thus, the purchaser at execution sale acquired no title, if at the time of the purchase he had notice of the real interest of the wife in the land, and that it had been acquired by her separate means. 7. Practice — Evidence. — When a verdict is rendered in a case in which each party has established his case by evidence, and the verdict, if the case were properly tried, could not, under established rules, be disturbed, no matter for which party it is rendered, the necessity for guarding against illegal evidence is manifest. Then the slightest illegal testimony which might possibly have influenced the result will be fatal, and afford cause for a reversal of the judgment.