Cannon v. Cannon

7 Tenn. App. 19, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 19 (Cannon v. Cannon) 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
Cannon v. Cannon, 7 Tenn. App. 19, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The complainant has appealed from a decree dismissing his bill in the chancery court of Gibson county. Said bill was filed on the first day of August, 1927, and he alleged, that he had been forced by threats and duress into entering into a marriage contract with the defendant on April 18, 1926 in Gibson county, Tennessee; that he married, the defendant, the ceremony being performed by a Justice of the Peace; that he and the defendant went after the marriage ceremony to the home of a relative of complainants where the defendant and complainant resided for about two weeks; that they did not sustain the relation of husband and wife during that time; *20 that the defendant went back to her father. The complainant alleged that on Thursday before the marriage ceremony was performed on Sunday the defendant’s father came into the field where complainant was at work with a loaded shotgun; that he cursed the complainant and drew the gun on complainant and that lie (complainant) ran behind a team of horses and that complainant’s father who was working’ in the field at the time grabbed the gun and took it away from Mr. Frazier, the defendant’s father. That the father of defendant then and there told complainant if he did not come to his (Frazier’s) house on Sunday and get the defendant and marry her that he would kill him (complainant) on Monday. Defendant’s father insisted that complainant had wronged his daughter, the defendant, but complainant denied the charge and he insisted that his marriage to the defendant was the result of duress, force and threats and not his own desire and consent, and that the same was voidable; that it was never ratified and never rendered valid. He prayed that on the hearing the marriage be declared fraudulent and void and set aside and he be restored to the rights and privileges of an unmarried person.

Process was served upon the defendant. No answer was filed. Pro confesso was taken. Chancellor V. II. Holmes was of opinion that the complainant was not under duress at the time the marriage ceremony was performed.

There was a petition for an additional finding of facts in which it was sought to have the court find that at the time of the marriage the complainant acted under duress; that the complainant went to the defendant’s father’s house because he was afraid not to gO'. The Chancellor declined to find any additional facts.

Upon the bill being dismissed the complainant excepted and prayed and was granted an appeal to this court; perfected the same and has assigned five errors, which five errors raise only one proposition, which proposition is set forth in the fifth assignment, said assignment being “the Chancellor committed error in refusing to find and decree that the complainant married defendant under duress and that the marriage was void, and not dismissing complainant’s bill.”

The bill of exceptions sets forth the evidence in narrative form, and we will set it out. in this opinion in full:

“The first witness, the complainant, Johnnie Cannon, after being duly sworn testified.
“That he was twenty-two years old August 8, 1927, and has lived in the country all of his life and is the son of R. D. Cannon, and a farmer; that before his marriage to the defendant, who was a Miss Virginia Frazier, he was never with her but one time, having had only one engagement with her; that he is afflicted with an extreme nervous trouble that causes him to jerk as he does; that on April 15, 1926, he was working in the field and Mr. Frazier, father of the de *21 fendant came to tbe field where lie and bis father were and had a loaded shotgun with him and said ‘You God damn son of a bitch yon have ruined my daughter and I am going to kill you if you don’t marry her, ’ and' that he told Mr. Frazier then and there that he was never with the girl but one time and never ruined her or had any improper relations with her, and that he ran behind the team to prevent being shot, and that his father took the gun away from him, and he threatened to kill his father also, if complainant didn’t marry the girl; that he denied the charge then and there and maintained his innocence, and that complainant’s father stated to Mr. Frazier .to give the boy until Sunday, and thereupon Mr. Frazier said ‘I will give you until Sunday to marry her and if you don’t do it by then and come and get her yourself, I will kill you Monday.’ That he was frightened and afraid that he Would kill him;' that he talked with his father and uncle, T. D. Bennett, neither of whom would advise him what to do, and that being young and inexperienced he did not know what to do, so on April 18, 1926 and before Monday following the threats, he went to the girl’s home and g’ot her and took her to a Justice of the Peace and married her in Gibson county, Tennessee.and in the jurisdiction of this court; that he asked T. T). Bennett to purchase the license which he did; that he did not have sufficient funds with which to purchase the license. He saw Mr. Frazier about the place when he went for the girl but did not speak to him; that immediately upon marrying he went to the home of T. D. Bennett, and never slept with the defendant nor did he have sexual relations with her at any time before or after the marriage. He slept with T. D. Bennett each and every night and the defendant slept with T. D. Bennett’s mother, each and every night.
“That after the marriage he talked’ to defendant about it and she said to him that he was not guilty and that she tried to prevent her father from doing what he did. In six days after the marriage complainant learned from the woman in the house where they were staying that defendant’s menstruation period came and therefore she was not pregnant, and that in two weeks from the date of the marriage defendant left and returned to her father’s home where she has since been and is now, and that he had not tallced to her nor her father since, and that she was not pregnant, nor did' she give birth to a child, and that at no time did he ever have sexual intercourse with her.
“He married her only because he was afraid Mr. Frazier would kill him as he had threatened, and had it not been for that he would not have married her. All of these facts and miarriage occurred in Gibson county, Tennessee, and within the jurisdiction of this court. He married her because he A?as afraid not to on account of the threats to kill him.
*22 “The next witness R. D. Cannon, after being duly sworn testified that he is the father of complainant., a renter and poor man; that he was present in the field on April 15, 1926, when Mr. Frazier, father of the defendant, came to the field where he and complainant were at work and drew his gun on complainant and said ‘you God damn son of a bitch you have ruined my daughter and I am going to kill you if you don’t marry her!’ and that he also cursed this witness, and that the complainant dodged behind the team and that he grabbed the gun which was loaded, and took it away from Mr. Frazier. His son the complainant then and there stated to Mr. Frazier that he had only been in the girl’s company one time and had never had sexual relations with her and was not guilty of ruining her, but Mr. Frazier repeated that he had to marry her or he expected to kill him. Thereupon this witness stated to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 19, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-cannon-tennctapp-1928.