DocketNumber: No. 5932.
Judges: Hall
Filed Date: 5/13/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This is a suit brought by appellee against appellant in trespass to try title to one-half acre of land. Appellee claimed title both by deed and under the 5 and 10 year limitation statutes. R.S. Articles 5509, 5510. Appellant answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, and averred that the purported guardian's deed attempting to convey said land to appellee is void. The issues as thus joined were submitted to the trial court without a jury, and resulted in judgment for appellee for title and possession of said land.
Appellant's first proposition is: "That the Guardianship Deed made by B. V. Griffin as Guardian of Addie Griffin is a void deed and should be cancelled because B. V. Griffin was not the Guardian of Addie Griffin at the time said deed was made. And that the Guardianship Proceedings that sought to appoint B. V. Griffin Guardian of Addie Griffin was a void proceeding and not according to the Provisions and Articles of the Statute of the State of Texas providing for the appointment and qualification of Guardians."
The record reveals that on March 27, 1929, appellant acting as guardian of his wife, Addie Griffin, a person of unsound mind, executed a deed attempting to convey one acre of land to the Blackjack Independent School District (now by consolidation a part of appellee district). No controversy arises here concerning the conveyance of the one-half acre belonging to appellant individually, but only as to the one-half acre belonging to his insane wife. It is an admitted fact that Mrs. Addie Griffin is now insane and was so afflicted on the date of the deed referred to. The trial court found that the land here in controversy was community property of appellant and his insane wife and that it formed no part of their homestead. These findings are not attacked. Under such state of facts the husband would have the undoubted right to convey the land here in controversy without the joinder of his wife whether she were sane or insane. R.S., Article 4619, Sec. 1, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. Art. 4619, § 1; Reynolds Mortgage Co. v. Gambill,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.