The Tangled estate
of A.R. Collins
Decided
by the Court of Civil Appeals
MARRIAGE
STATUS
In a
Texas Case of an Experienced and
Confiding School Girl
THE
COURT HOLDS THAT
The Marriage
Should Be Sustained and the Lady's
Rights as Survivor Protected.
The
case of A.M. Ingersoll and B. F. Coleman
vs. Ada A. McWillie, appealed from
Grayson county, in which the discussion
of what constitutes matrimony cut __
figure, was affirmed last Wednesday in
the court of civil appeals, Chief
Justice Lightfoot rendering the opinion,
as follows:
The statement by appellants is
concurred in by appellees and is
adopted, as follows:
The is a contest over the right to
administer upon the estate of A. R.
Collins, deceased. The case
originated in the county court of
Grayson county, Tex., in February
1893. A. R. Collins died intestate
at his home in Grayson county.
Afterward C. T. Daugherty was duly
appointed by the count court of Grayson
county as administrator gave the bond
and took the oath required by law.
On Feb. 17, 1894, the said C. T.
Daugherty departed this life without
having fully administered said
estate. After the death of said C.
T. Daugherty, Mrs. Ada A. McWillie and
N. S. Ernst filed their application in
the county court of said county for
letters of administration de bonis non
upon the estate of said Collins, and
afterward A. M. Ingersol and B. F.
Coleman contested the appointment of
Mrs. Ada A. McWillie and N. S. Ernest,
and requested that they be
appointed. A trial was had in the
county court of said county, which
resulted in the appointment of Mrs.
McWillie and Ernst. From the
judgment appointing them administratrix
and administrator of this state,
Ingersol and Coleman appealed to the
district court of Grayson county. In
said last mentioned court the parties
amended their pleadings. The
applicants, Mrs. A. McWillie and N. S.
Ernst, after setting out the
jurisdictional facts and the necessity
for administration, alleged that the
said decedent left as his surviving
wife, Hortense Collins and two children,
to-wit, Walter Collins, aged 16 years
and Gretchen Collins, aged 18
months. They also alleged that
they were entitled to letters of
administration upon said estate by
reason of the renunciation in the favor
of said Hortense Collins. They
also alleged that they were entitled to
administer by reason of the indorsement
and request of many creditors of said
estate. They further alleged that
they were entitled to administer in
their favor of Mrs. Lucy Wilder, who
resides in the county of Tennessee,
state of New York, who was the aunt and
next of kin of the said A. R. Collins,
deceased, after the said Hortense
Collins, Walter Collins, and Gretchen
Collins; and they also alleged that N.
S. Ernst was a creditor of said estate,
and that his co-applicant, Ada A.
McWillie is a cousin of said Collins,
and the nest of kin to him residing in
the state of Texas, after the said
Hortense, Walter and Gretchen Collins.
"The amended application of the said A.
M. Ingersol alleged that he was the
first cousin of the said A. R. Collins,
deceased, and that he was a citizen of
Grayson county, Texas, and that he was
in no way disqualified to act as such
administrator; that the applicant, Ada
A. McWillie, was a married woman and
only a second cousin of said A. R.
Collins, deceased; that the said
Hortense Collins was not the surviving
wife of said A. R. Collins, as claimed
by her; that she already had a suit
pending in the district court against
the estate of A. R. Collins, whereby she
seeks to establish the fact that she is
such surviving wife. After
alleging other facts not necessary to be
state here, said Ingersol alleged that
is he was not entitled to administer
alone or with another, then he averred
that B. F. Coleman was a suitable person
to administer upon said estate, and
waived his right to administer in favor
of said Coleman.
"The amended
protest, and application of B. F. Coleman
alleged that he resided in Grayson county,
and that he was not disqualified by law
from having letters of administration
granted him upon said estate; that at the
time of his death the said Collins was an
unmarried man, and did not leave surviving
him any father or mother, and that the
sole surviving next of kin o said Collins
was Walter D. Collins, who was about 17
years of age, and who resided in Grayson
county, Texas, and who was a son of the
said decedent; that the said Walter D.
Collins, by power of attorney duly
authenticated and filled, renounced any
right he might have to administer upon
said estate in favor of the applicant B.
F. Coleman, and that said Walter D.
Collins would renounce any right he might
have to such appointment in open court in
favor of Coleman; that M. A. Daugherty,
who resides in McLennan county, Texas, is
the duly appointed and qualified guardian
of the person and estate of said Walter D.
Collins, and that the said Daughtery will
in open court renounce his right to be
appointed administrator of said estate in
favor of the applicant Coleman; that
excluding from consideration the said
Walter D. Collins, the following persons
are the next of kin of the said A. R.
Collins, deceased, to-wit: William W.
Collins, who resides in Calhoun county,
Michigan; S. A. Collins, who resides in
Jackson county, Michigan; both of whom are
uncles by blood of the said A. R. Collins,
deceased, and both of whom by power of
attorney duly authenticated, have
renounced any right they may have to
administer upon said estate in favor of
applicant Coleman; that, excluding from
consideration the son and two uncles above
named, and the following are the next of
kin of the said A. R. Collins, deceased,
to-wit: Addison C. Collins, W. B.
Collins, Charles E. Collins, Cynthia W.
Wallace and Ida Palmer, each and all of
whom reside in Westenaw county Michigan;
that the five persons last named were each
first cousins by blood of the said
decedent, and that each and all of said
five cousins, by powers of attorney duly
authenticated and filed herein, have
renounced any right that they and each of
them may have to administer upon said
estate in favor of the applicant
Coleman. And said B. F. Coleman
alleged that a large number of the
creditors of the said estate desired and
requested his appointment as such
administrator. The said B. F.
Coleman also represented that at the time
of his death she said A. R. Collins left
surviving him no wife; that the person
named in the application of N. S. Ernest
and Ada A. McWillie be the wife of A. R.
Collins, to-wit: Mrs. Hortense Dix
Collins, was not in fact and in truth the
surviving wife of said decedent; that
after the death of said A. R. Collins and
after the appointment of said C. T.
Daugherty, the child of the said Hortense
Dix Collins, through its next friend, A.
G. Moseley, made an application to the
county court of Grayson county for an
allowance of $5000 in lieu of a homestead,
and also an allowance for one year's
support and maintenance, and for an
allowance of articles of exempt property
not found in kind among the property of
the said application they said county
court adjudged and decreed that the child
of Hortense Dix Collins was entitled to an
allowance of the character and nature
above named to the amount of $5135; that
after the rendition of said judgment, the
administrator of said estate, Daugherty,
appealed from such judgment in the manner
provided by law, and that such appeal is
now pending in this court; that , while
ostensibly the said Hortense Dix Collins
is not a party to the said last named
suit, and is not by name a party to
this suit, yet , in truth, she is a party
to the issue joined, as well in this suit
as the one just mentioned; that the said
N. S. Ernest and Ada A. McWillie are
seeking to be appointed administratrix and
administrator upon the renunciation in
their favor by the said so-called Hortense
Dix Collins, and also upon the application
of the said Ada A. McWillie, as next of
kin to the said A. R. Collins, deceased,
when in fact and in truth the said Ada A.
McWillie is only a second cousin of said
decedent. The prayer of the contestant and
applicant, B. F. Coleman, was that letters
of administration de bonis non be not
granted to said Ada A. McWillie and N. .
Ernst, but that he be appointed as such
administrator and for all equitable,
general and special relief."
In the
district court the appeals of B. F.
Coleman and A. M. Ingersol were
consolidated upon motion of
Ingersol. The consolidated causes
were tried in the district court of
Grayson county on May 10, 1884 and
resulted in a verdict and judgment in
favor of Mrs. Ada A. McWillie and N. S.
Ernst, from which this appeal is taken.
There was
much controversy in the testimony, but
from the verdict of the jury and the
judgment thereon the conclusion is
established that Hortense Dix was educated
by A. R. Collins by the consent of her
mother with the view of naming her his
wife; that after she finished her
education he actually entered into the
marriage state with her, each mutually
agreeing that they would then and
thereforward be husband and wife, and upon
the faith of such mutual agreement and
promise they then co-habited and lived
together as such husband and wife, and so
continued, and that said A. R. Collins
after such agreement and cohabitation
recognized said Hortense as his wife and
introduced her to his friends as such, and
such relation continued until his death,
and that at the time of his death, in
February, 1893, he left her as his
surviving widow. She renounced her
right to administer on said estate to
appellees.
The first
assignment of errors as follows: "The
court erred in permitting the witness,
Hortense Dix Collins, over the objections
of contestants, B. F. Coleman and A. M.
Ingersol, to testify in the fact the
so-called marriage between herself and A.
R. Collins, deceased, which testimony is
fully set forth in contestants' bill of
exceptions No. 1, for the reasons: 1. That
said witness in the light of her testimony
was the wife and their-at-law of A. R.
Collins, deceased, and she was incompetent
to testify to such fact and was
incompetent to testify to any transaction
with A. R. Collins or any statement made
by him by reason of the inhabitation
contained in article 2248 of the revised
civil statutes of the state of Texas, all
of which fully appears by reference to
said bill of exceptions No. 1. 2. Such
witness was incompetent to testify to the
facts set forth in said bill of exceptions
No. 1 for the reason that there was
another suit pending in the court to
establish the fact that she, the witness,
Hortense Dix Collins, was the surviving
wife of A. R. Collins, deceased, all of
which is fully set forth in said bill of
exceptions No. 1." The court did not
err in admitting the testimony of Hortense
Dix Collins to prove the marriage.
Under revised
statutes, article 2246, it is provided
that no person shall be incompetent to
testify because a party to the suit or
interested in the issue to be tried.
Under article 2248: "In actions by or
against executors, administrators or
guardians, in which judgment may be
rendered for or against them as such,
neither party shall be allowed to testify
against the others as to any transaction
with or statement by the testator,
intestate or ward;" and the provisions of
the article are extended to the heirs or
legal representatives.
This is not
an action by or against executors,
administrators, guardians, heirs or legal
representatives "in which judgment may be
rendered for or against them as
such." It is a contest among certain
parties who do not claim to be heirs for
letters of administration upon the estate
of A. R. Collins, deceased. Whatever
judgment might be rendered in the case
would not be for or against either party
in any relation which he sustained at the
time such testimony was introduced - as
executor, administrator, guardian, heir or
legal representative - although such trust
relation might be created by the judgment
to be rendered. In so far as the
witness is concerned any right which she
might have to administer upon the estate
would grow out of her relation to the
deceased, as "surviving wife," and not, as
an heir. This right would exist even
if all the estate was the separate
property of the husband and he had willed
the whole of it to other parties without
naming an executor [R. S. Art. 1861].
It has been
held by our supreme court that "the terms
of the statute will not be extended so as
to embrace those not especially mentioned
therein. In the case of Newton vs.
Newton, 77 Texas, 608, it was held by
Judge Gaines that the provisions of Art.
2248 could not be extended so as to
embrace legatees of devisees. The
court says: "This court has held that the
exceptions could not be extended by
implication to a class of persons not
named, although the reason for embracing
them was equally as strong as those which
existed for including the persons
expressly designated." Roberts vs.
Yarboro, 41 Texas, 451; Markham vs.
Caruthers, 47 Texas, 25.
This
statutory proceeding for the appointment
of an administrator de bonis non, is not
strictly an action inter parties, in which
adverse interests are so put in issue that
any judgment can be rendered for or
against the representative of the estate
as such, but it is a proceeding to place a
proper party at the head of the
administration. whatever might be
the result, no judgment can be rendered in
this case against the administrator as
such, or against an heir or legal
representative as such. In the
appointment of an administrator the court
considers first, "the surviving husband or
wife," as such; second, "the nearest of
kin" - without regard to whether they are
heirs or not, and without regard to any
interest they may have in the
estate. The result would be the same
if the next of kin competent to administer
were not the heirs, or if every vestige of
property had been willed to some
charitable institution - without naming an
executor. [Wallace vs. Stephens, 74 Texas,
559; Wootens vs. Hale, 83 Texas, 564;
Potter vs. Bank, 102 U. S., 163; Berry vs.
Sawyer, 10 Fed. Rep., 286].
In the recent
case of Martin vs. McAdams, 27 S. W. Rep.,
255, our supreme court holds that a
contest for the probate of a will to such
an action as comes within the terms of the
statute, and that one of the children of
the devisor, a party to the proceeding,
and a devisee under the will, is a
competent witness to prove his handwriting
in the will, and cannot be excluded under
Art. 2248; but the ruling of the court is
placed upon the ground that such testimony
is not of a transaction with or statement
by the testator.
We do not
think that any judgment rendered in this
case could be used to establish any fact
beyond that embraced in the direct
result. in the case of English vs.
Murray, 13 Texas, 467, Judge Hemphill
says: "Letters of administration are
conclusive that the person therein
appointed is such [2 Phillie, p.29]
But the decree granted letters is one
which does not arise out of an adverse
suite between parties, and in the language
of the books, there is no reason for
allowing it any further effect than that
of establishing the rights and abilities
incident to the estate and legal character
of the grantee, as administrator."
Hortense Dix
Collins is not a party to the suit, and
while one of the contesting parties may
claim the right to administer, by reason
of the fact that she has renounced her
right as "surviving wife" to administer,
it would be extending the rule further
than the legislature authorized it to
exclude her testimony on that
ground. Not being a party to the
suit, she is not disqualified by reason of
interest in the subject. [Glier vs. city
of Brenham, 67 Texas, 349]
The second
ground of objection - that the witness
could not testify because there was
another suit pending to establish that she
was the surviving wife - is wholly without
merit. The competency of the
testimony must be determined with
reference to this suit, and we have no
concern here with any other case in
which the question may be involved.
2. The second
assignment of error is as follows: "The
court erred in permitting the applications
to go into the character of the witness,
Lydia Hawley, for chastity, for the
reasons set forth in contestants' bill of
exceptions No. 2."
This witness
had already shown, by her testimony, that
she lived intimately with A. R. Collins on
his farm, traveled with him, stopped at
hotels with him, received letters from him
almost daily during his absence, some of
which were of a nature indicating more
than business or friendship. She
also testified that she was in the room
with him some time before his death and
had conversations with him of a
confidential nature concerning his
relations with Hortense and her children,
and told witness that said Hortense was
not his wife. Upon cross-examination
of the Witness Lydia Hawley the apellees
sought to show by question propounded to
said witness that she, the witness, was
not a chaste woman, and the following
questions were propounded to her; whether
she had sustained improper relations with
the deceased A. R. Collins, to which the
witness replied, after appealing to the
court to ascertain whether she must answer
such question, and the court having
required her to answer it, that she had
sustained improper relations with the
deceased A. R. Collins, and that such
intimacy began in 1889, and continued up
to the death of said Collins. She
was also asked whether she had not visited
a house of prostitution in the city of
Denison, kept by one Dora Cheever, to
which the witness replied she had not
except a short time before Dec.25 last,
she went there in order to have some
sewing done; and certain other questions
were propounded to said witness in order
to show that she had been intimate with
other persons. To the propounding of
such questions and the introduction of
such testimony, the contestants, Coleman
and Ingersol objected, because irrelevant
and immaterial, and because if such
testimony was proper at all, it would only
be legitimate to show the general had
character of the witness for chastity in
the neighborhood where she lived.
The question
in regard to the visit to the house of
Dora Cheever were answered, it seems,
without hesitation, and indicated that it
was for a lawful purpose. The
testimony of the witness had already shown
relation toward A. R. Collins which were
more than friendly during the time of the
claimed marriage relation between him and
Hortense Dix Collins. Her testimony
was largely of declarations of Collins,
which it was claimed were communicated to
the witness in the closest confidence in
his own private apartments, and in the
fullest detail, concerning h is domestic
affairs, and especially concerning his
relations toward Hortense Dix Collins,
when there was no one else present.
Under the circumstances the court did not
err in allowing appellees to ask her on
cross-examination "whether she had
sustained improper relations with A. R.
Collins." He own testimony had
already gone almost that far, and under
the liberal rule allowed the cross
examination, it was proper to fully test
her evidence by showing the relation she
bore toward Collins and toward
Hortense. Her motives, her feelings,
her relations toward the parties were not
improper subjects of inquiry, in getting
at the proper weight to be given to her
testimony. [Carroll vs. state, 24S.
W. Rep. 100; Exon's case, 26 S. W. Rep.,
1088, 1 Green1. Ev. 450=460]
None of the
testimony elicited from the witness was
prejudicial to her, except that which
refers to her relations with Collins
- which was competent. The grounds
of the objection as shown by the bill of
exceptions are not that the privilege of
the witness was in any way violated, but
that the testimony was immaterial and
irrelevant. It was both material and
relevant in that is tended to show the
proper weight which the jury should give
to her testimony. Mr. Thompson in
his work on trials, vol. 1 sec. 560, says:
"It is one of the objects of a cross
examination to discover the motives,
inclinations and prejudices of the
witness, for the purpose of reducing the
effect which might otherwise be given to
his evidence. Accordingly, it has
been well said that "it is always
competent to show the relations which
exist between the witness and the part
against, as well as for whom he was
called." The general rule is that
anything tending to show bias or prejudice
on the part of a witness may be brought
out on his cross examination. The
reason for this rule is that such matters
affect the credit of the witness and it
is, therefore, material to indulge in such
an inquiry. For this purpose it is
competent to inquire of the witness
concerning his acts, declarations and
circumstances, showing the existence of
hostile feelings or prejudice; and the
latitude of cross examination is not
restricted by the fact that the witness is
a party testifying in his own
behalf. The state of mind and
feelings of a witness may materially
affect his testimony, and the credit of a
witness upon whose testimony in part, the
issue is to be obtained, is not a
collateral and immaterial matter."
In Exon's
case, referred to above, the wife of the
defendant, who was the mother of the
prosecuting witness, was offered by the
defendant as a witness to impeach her
daughter, and the prosecuting attorney on
cross-examination asked the witness
"whether she had ever lived with the
defendant, as his mistress before
marriage?" Over objection by
defendant's counsel, the trial court
permitted the witness to answer the
question. Judge Simkins, on this
question, says: "We think the court did
not err. The evidence went to the
character and credibility of the
witness." The court makes an
elaborate review of the authorities on
this subject in the Carroll case and holds
such testimony on cross-examination
admissible because "it is of the highest
importance to know how far that intimacy
extended. If she was a pure, good
woman, free herself from any improper
connection with the parties to the
transaction, great weight might be
attached to her testimony. On the
other hand, if she was unchaste and impure
and covering, the period of inquiry was
occupying a relation of concubinage with
the husband her testimony regarding the
wife could not be looked to with so much
respect and confidence. The
testimony was admissible.
3. The
assignments of error in regard to the
marriage are quite numerous, but we deem
it unnecessary to consider them in detail,
as they all raise the question whether
there can be a valid marriage in this
state without compliance with the
statutory provisions in regard to the
issuance of license and solemnization.
It was fully
shown in the case that A. R. Collins,
being a single man, after obtaining the
consent of the mother of Hortense Dix,
said Hortense then being a girl under her
mother's car, sent her to school for the
purpose of educating her as his wife and
after he education did agree with her to
enter the marriage state and that such
marriage was consummated by cohabitation,
each party agreeing and consenting at that
very time to be husband and wife.
There is much
to be said on both sides of the
question. On the one side, of the
holiness and sanctity of the marriage
relation, and that is should be upheld in
its purity and the statute laws in regard
to it strictly enforced. On the
other side, of the marriage statue itself,
dependent upon the mutual covenant of the
parties and the relations assumed by them
not dependent wholly upon a contract, but
upon the status of marriage, which they
have reached, using the contract as the
threshold over which they have reached
that status. Our statutes provide
that certain ministers and officers shall
be authorized to solemnize the rites of
matrimony, that license shall issue, that
such license shall be returned and
recorded, and prohibitions are placed upon
marriages in certain degrees of
relationship and between certain
nationalities. {Rev. Stats., Art. 2838 to
2843}. The statutes also legalize
certain marriages which have heretofore
taken place by other methods. {id. 2844,
1846.} There is no statute declaring
that marriage shall be entered into by any
other method than that named in the
statute shall be null and void. In
order to make a proper legal marriage all
the requisites of the law should be
followed. It is said by a learned
text writer that "a marriage, if legal,
must be valid, but a valid marriage may be
illegal." {Stewart on Mar. and Div., Sec.
5.}
In the case
of Hutchins vs. Kimmel, 31. Mich. Judge
Cooley says: "Whatever be the form of the
ceremony, or if there be no ceremony, if
the parties agree presently to take each
other for husband and wife, and from that
time on live professedly in that relation,
proof of these facts would be sufficient
to constitute proof of a marriage binding
on the parties, which would subject them
to legal penalties for a disregarded of
the obligations . . . This has been the
settled doctrine of the American courts,
and the few case of apparent dissent are
borne down by the great weight of
authority in favor of the rule
states." He cites in support of this
conclusion, a great number of authorities.
In the case
of Meister vs. Moore, 96, U. S. 80-81, the
supreme court of the United States reviews
the authorities in full, refer with
approval to the above opinion of Mr.
Cooley and further says: "We will not
undertake to cite those which hold a
different doctrine, one in accord with the
opinion we have cited from 1 Gray.
Reference is made to them in Bishop on
Marriage and Divorce, section 283 et esq.;
in Reeves' Domestic Relations, 129, 200,
in 1 Kent's Commentaries 90, 91 and in 2
Greenleaf on Evidence. The rule
deduced by all these writers from the
decided cases is thus stated by Mr.
Greenleaf: "Though in most, if not all,
the United States there are statutes
regulating the celebration of marriage
rites, and indicting penalties on all who
disobey the regulations, yet is generally
considered that in the absence of any
positive statute declaring that all
marriages not celebrated in the prescribed
manner shall be void, or that none but
certain magistrates or ministers shall
solemnize a marriage, any marriage
regularly made according to the common
law, without observing the statue
regulations, would still be a valid
marriage."
"As before
remarked, the statues are held merely
directory, because marriage is a thing of
common right, because it is the policy of
the state to encourage it, and because, as
has sometimes been said, any other
construction would compel holding
illegitimate the offspring of many parents
connections of no violation of law."
So much has
been written upon this important subject
that we deem it unnecessary to go further
into the authorities outside of our own
state. A careful examination of our
statutes will show that they are not more
stringent than others in which the above
doctrine has been so clearly annotated by
the most eminent judges and text
writers. Our decisions have usually
been broad and liberal upon the subject,
and are in harmony with the rule that a
marriage may be valid and binding upon the
parties although entered into not in
accordance with the terms of the statute
requiring license and solemnization by a
minister or officer. The question is
ably discussed by Judge Willies in the
case of Cumby vs. Garland, 25 S. W. Re.,
675; also by Judge Simkins in Simon vs.
state 20 S. W. Re., 399, in which they
each reach this conclusion. Also see
Shreck vs. Shreck, 32 Texas, 683; state
vs. Rattick (Mo.), 16 S. W. Re., 32;
Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, vol. 1, p.
283 et seq., Stewart on Marriage and
Divorce, actions 106-108. There is
an able opinion by Judge Stephens in W. U.
Tel. Co. vs. Proctor, 25 S.W. Rep, 819, in
which he takes the position that while the
above is the prevailing American doctrine,
it is not good law in each state.
See also, in support of Judge Stephens'
opinion, the authorities there cited,
especially Dumas vs. state, 14 Texas Apps,
472.
In the case
of Nion vs. W., L. & Co., 54 Texas,
411, Judge Gaines made the following
quotation and comment: "Every intendment
of the law is in favor or matrimony.
When a marriage has been shown in
evidence, whether regular or irregular,
and whatever the form of the proofs, the
law raises a presumption as to its
legality, not only casting the burden of
proof upon the party objecting, but
requiring him throughout and in every
particular plainly to make the fact
appear, against the constant pressure of
this presumption that it is illegal and
void. The strength of the
presumption increases with the lapse of
time through which the parties are
cohabiting as husband and wife. It
being for the highest good of the parties,
of the children and of the community that
all intercourse between the sexes in form
matrimonial should be such in fact, the
law when administered by enlightened
judges seizes upon all probabilities and
presses into its service all things else
which can help it in each particular case
to sustain the marriage and repel the
conclusion of unlawful commerce. 1
Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, 6th
edition, section 459. Such is the
emphatic language of an able and
discriminating commentator. The
decisions of our courts are to the same
effect, and some of the cases are
strikingly in point, {Carroll vs. Carroll,
20 Texas, 722; Lockhart vs. White, 18
Texas, 102; Yates vs. Houston, 3 Texas,
433}.
In the case
of Sapp vs. Newsom, 27 Texas 540, where
there was a marriage by bond, at a time
when the country was under Mexican laws
which required that a marriage to be legal
must be celebrated according to the rites,
usages and ceremonies of the Catholic
church, Judge Bell in sustaining the bond
marriage as valid, said: "We think it the
duty of the couple upon the highest
considerations of public policy to hold
that the marriages contracted in these
contracts, and should be sustained as
valid whenever the consent of the parties
and the intention to enter into the state
of matrimony and to assume its duties and
obligations is clearly shown." See
Smith vs. Smith, 1 Texas 621; Rice vs.
Rice, 31 Texas, 178; Lewis vs. Ames, 41
Texas 342; Carroll vs. Carroll, 20 Texas,
731.
Of course no
such excuse can be shown for a failure to
observe all the rules and regulations
prescribed by law and sanctioned by an
enlightened people and christian
civilization, but the policy of the law in
protecting parties who have innocently bee
led into such a marriage is the
same. From the testimony in this
case we think there can be no doubt that
Hortense Dix, an inexperienced and
confiding girl, just from school, and who
had a right to look to A. R. Collins as a
protector, was induced to enter with him
into the marriage state under the
agreement of present marriage, he giving
some business complications, as an excuse
for not making it public by license and
public ceremony. They lived and
cohabited as husband and wife, and he
introduced her to his friends as his wife,
thereby, admitting the marriage. She
bore him two children as his wife.
While living he did not repudiate the
relation. Since his death we think
that public policy, as well as common
justice and humanity, demand that the
marriage should be sustained and her
rights as survivor protected.
Hortense Dix
Collins being the surviving wife of
decedent, and having renounced her right
to administer to appellees, one a relative
of decedent and the other a creditor, and
both being competent and suitable persons,
we find no reason for disturbing this
judgment of the court below and it is
affirmed.
Lightfoot, C. J.
Delivered
Jan. 23, 1895.
Sunday Gazetteer
April
1, 1894
pg. 4
Public Sale, Personal Property
In this
issue of the Gazetteer will be found an
enumeration of the personal property
belonging to the late A.R. Collins.
By order of the probate court at
Sherman all of this property will be
offered for sale at public outcry , as the
law directs, , on the 24th and 25th days
of April. On April 24th, Tuesday,
the sale will be conducted on Main street,
this city, in front of The National Bank
of Denison, and the chattles to be
disposed of are:
1
fire-proof safe
1 bank
counter
1 standing
double desk
1 low
double desk
1 office
table
1 sofa
3 revolving
mahogany chairs
7 rustic
settees
1 cabinet
letter filer
1 mahogany
blank cabinet
A
miscellaneous lot of law books, pictures,
screens and general office furniture and
fixtures.
On
Wednesday, April 25, the sale of live
stock, vehicles, farming utensils, etc.
will be conducted at the A.R. Collins
north farm, one mile north of the cotton
seed oil mills. The sales are to
being at 10 o'clock sharp and are to
continue until the property is disposed of
to the highest bidder. In this lot
of property are:
Registered
horses, mares and colts
Registered
Jersey, Durham and Holstein cattle - 35
head in all
Registered
angora goats
Turkeys,
ducks and chickens
Wagons,
carriages, sulkies, training carts,
farming implements of every description,
and such things as are to be found on a
thoroughly first-class and well-equipped
farm.
A bountiful
lunch will be served at the north farm on
the day of the sale. Messrs.
LeBeaume and Johnson will cry off the
property, and an urgent request is
extended to the general public to be
present. Mr. R.L. McWillie is
temporary, and N.S. Ernst and Mrs. R.L.
Willie are permanent administrators of the
estate.
The
Sunday Gazetteer
Sunday, September 29, 1895
pg. 4
ADMINISTRATOR"S SALE
Quite a large crowd gathered Wednesday at
the A.R. Collins north farm, 2 miles north
of Denison, the occasion being a p u blic
sale of the remainder of the personal
property of the late A.R. Collins.
The larger portion of the personal
estate was sold last year, but enough was
retained to operate the farms pending the
litigation in which the estate had been
engulfed. Judge W.A. LaBeau me was
auctioneer, while Dr. I. Yeidel
contributed no little to the
pleasure as well a s success of the event
by operating a cold-storage corner, with
an elegant luncheon on the side for good
luck. The sale consisted of 2000
bushels of oats, a large quantity of
hay, 2 farm wagons, a buggy, a span
of mules, 8 head of horses, and a quantity
of household goods and farm
implements. As a rule, good
prices were realized, and the sale was a
pronounced success. Among the
people in attendance were farmers from the
surrounding country and a hundred or more
people from the city.

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