Brewer v. Griggs

10 Tenn. App. 378, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 18, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 378 (Brewer v. Griggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Griggs, 10 Tenn. App. 378, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 46 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This suit was begun by an original bill filed in the chancery court of Wayne county on September 28, 1925, by James H. Brewer, a resident citizen of Wayne county, Tennessee, who sued “as guardian for John Walker Brewer” . . . “a citizen of said County of Wayne, but now in the State of Indiana.”

The said John Walker Brewer also appeared as a complainant on the face of the bill, but, after the bill w'as filed, he, through counsel, filed a petition in the cause, verified by his own signature and corporal oath, in which petition he alleged that the original bill was filed without his knowledge or consent, and he denied that said James H. Brewer had any right or authority to join him (John Walker Brewer) as a co-complainant in the bill. The said John Walker Brewer also prayed in his petition that he be permitted to intervene as a defendant in the cause, and that his petition be filed and treated as his answer to the bill of James H. Brewer. The prayer of the petition was granted by .the chancery *380 court and said petition was filed as the answer of John Walker Brewer to the bill.

The sole defendant named in the bill is described in the caption thereof as “Gladys Griggs, who now calls herself Gladys Brewer, a resident of said County of Wayne.”

The purpose of the bill was, and is, to procure a decree of the court declaring void, or annulling, a marriage between said John Walker Brewer and the defendant, Gladys, which was solemnized on September 24, 1925. Such decree was sought on allegations that said John Walker Brewer was, at the time of said marriage ceremony, “demented,” and mentally incapable of entering into a marriage contract, and that “said marriage was .fraudulently procured and consummated” by the defendant and her mother. Jt is further alleged in the bill that, on August 22, 1922, complainant James TI. Brewer was appointed the regular guardian of the said John Walker Brewer by the county court of the County of Wayne, since which time complainant’s said ward had been continuously in a demented condition.

The prayer of the bill (after the usual prayer for process and waiver of answer under oath) is that, upon the hearing, said marriage between the said John Walker Brewer and the said Gladys Griggs be declared' void, ab initio, by reason of the fraud in its procurement; but if complainant should be mistaken in the relief thus prayed for, then that said marriage be set aside and annulled by reason- of the mental incapacity of said ward to enter into such contract; that, on final hearing, defendant be enjoined from in any way interfering with said John Walker Brewer or his property or effects in any manner whatever. There is also a-prayer for general relief.

The defendant, Gladys, answered the bill and admitted her marriage to John Walker Brewer on the date named, but she denied that she or her mother had been guilty of any fraudulent or improper conduct in the premises, and she denied that the said John Walker Brewer was “demented,” or non compos mentis, or mentally incapable of entering into a valid marriage.

John Walker Brewer, in his petition (which was treated as his answer to the bill), made the same denials as those made by the defendant Gladys as just stated, and, in addition, he denied that complainant James H. Brewer was, When the bill in this case was filed, or had ever been, his lawful guardian. It is averred in said answer of John Walker Brewer (in response to complainant’s allegation that he was appointed by the county court of Wayne county, Tennessee, as the guardian of said John Walker Brewer), that no proceedings whatever were ever had in said county court to establish the insanity of said John Walker Brewer; *381 that no service of any process was ever had upon said John 'Walker. Brewer; that none of the requirements leading to the establishment of insanity upon the part of said John Walker Brewer were taken in saiid county court.; that all that ever happened was an entry of an order on the minutes appointing the said James H. Brewer as guardian of John Walker Brewer and reciting that it was because John Walker Brewer was insane, and, it is alleged by John Walker Brewer that said order is an absolute nullity.

A large imlume of proof was taken on behalf of the parties, respectively, and the cause was heard by the Chancellor, who, after holding the case under advisement for a time, rendered an opinion which is brought up in the record and is as follows:

11 COURT’S OPINION AND FINDING OF FACTS.
“Gentlemen, it is understood that we have met for the purpose lof disposing of the case of Brewer v. Griggs. I am glad the time has come because the case has given me a very great deal of trouble — about as much as any case I have heard.
“I feel that I should in the outset thank counsel in the case for the assistance they have rendered, not only in the preparation of the case for trial and in the trial, but for the fine briefs and everything they have done to help the court in arriving at the right thing. I felt from the beginning that this suit means soi much to some of these parties — that their interests are so stupendous — that no mistake must be made:
“Quite a number of legal questions have been presented which have been difficult to determine, some of which I had not considered well at the time of the trial because I had not had sufficient' time; and these never had proper consideration until after the briefs were handed in.
“One of these questions was as to the effect of the opinion and order of the Court of Appeals after a remand of the case. Of course, whatever that courd actually decided became the law of this case. I find, however, after going into the matter, that the only thing before that court, and the only thing, therefore, actually decided by it was whether this court erred in allowing petitioner, John Brewer, expense money out of the funds in the hands of his guardian with which to develop his case, and ordering same paid over to the Clerk and Master of this court to be paid out :on order of John Brewer’s counsel. The decree in that court on this question is the only thing in that decision which can affect this case now.
“Another one of these questions was as to the validity of a decree in the county court of Wayne comity declaring John W. Brewer a person of unsound mind. It was my opinion at the time of the trial that the county court, in lunacy mat *382 ters, is a court of general jurisdiction, and this appeared to be the opinion of the Court of Appeals, but after a more careful consideration of the question, I find that this is not true, but .that it is a court of special — purely statutory — jurisdiction in lunacy matters not proceeding at all according to the course of the comjnon law. This being true, sufficient must affirmatively appear on the face of the record to show the case to be within the reach or jurisdiction, of the county court of Wayne county, when it undertook to adjudge John Walker Brewer a person of unsound mind,- and undertook to appoint for-him a guardian, otherwise the lunacy decree and appointment of the guardian can be collaterally attacked.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 378, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-griggs-tennctapp-1929.