Thursday, July 2, 2020

From TSHA: SPANISH LAW

Despite adopting the common law in 1840, Spanish law was retained in a few areas in Texas' legal code. This is useful for 2306's look at criminal justice.

- Click here for the article

As an outpost of the kingdom of New Spain, the province of Texas shared with Mexico the basic law of the parent sovereign, that of Castile. This law went essentially unchanged during the tumultuous fifteen years of Mexican Texas (1821–36), but after the Texas Revolution, the Republic of Texas adopted the law of England in preference to that of Spain. Three areas of law were excepted from the wholesale adoption of English law in Texas: certain procedural rules affecting trials, the law affecting land titles and certain water rights, and a large body of rules affecting family relationships.

. . . The Castilian principle of venue of lawsuits was also favored. Whereas the English rule was that a person was sued in the court of the locality where the facts giving rise to the dispute occurred, the Spanish rule required that a person be sued where he lived, for the convenience of the defendant.

. . . The Castilian tradition also provided a model for a system of probate administration that is much simpler than the English system. The Texas institution of an independent executor, seemingly modeled on the Castilian albacea universal, provides for great flexibility and reduced cost in probate practice.

. . . It is a basic rule of international law that when sovereignty changes, general law does not change until specifically altered by the new sovereign, and titles to land already acquired will not be interfered with. Hence, land-title law was not varied by the change from Mexican to Texan sovereignty except insofar as the previous holders of land who had espoused the Mexican cause had their lands declared forfeited. An anomalous result of continued application of the Spanish doctrine to land grants made before the act of January 20, 1840, and those made thereafter is that different rules may apply to adjacent tracts depending on the origin of the grant.

. . . The most significant residuum of Spanish law is in the area of family relationships. Adoption was unknown in English common law. Its comparatively early institution by statute in Texas (1850) is generally attributed to the Spanish legal tradition. The law of matrimonial property is also heavily influenced by the Spanish tradition. The Anglo-American frontiersman found the idea of common ownership of the gains of marriage between husband and wife much more agreeable to his society than common-law principles. Protection of certain land and tools of husbandry and trade from creditors' claims was also appealing to him, as opposed to the creditor-oriented rule of common law. This adoption of Hispano-Mexican principle has spread from Texas with varying degrees of liberality to other states. Texas law also followed the Hispanic model of allowing the husband to protect the home by giving him the right to kill his wife's paramour without punishment.