Carter v. Montgomery

2 Tenn. Ch. R. 216
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 216 (Carter v. Montgomery) 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
Carter v. Montgomery, 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 216 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

— The facts of this case disclose a curious episode of the civil war, and bring to the surface, stirred up by that mighty commotion, some of the fetid material which usually lies buried at the bottom of the great human ocean.

In the year 1862, Henry Bruner, occupying a lucrative position in the quartermaster’s department of the army of the Cumberland, at Nashville, and with a wife and children at bis northern home, persuaded a young girl named Myra Thomas, then living with her grandmother, to leave her home and cohabit with him as his wife. She was the more easily seduced, perhaps, by reason of the fact that she herself was the illegitimate child of one Elzira Sevier. Her mother had, however, when Myra was only two or three years old, intermarried with one Matherley, by whom she had several children, who are now claiming the land in controversy as the heirs of their half-sister, Myra, their [217]*217mother having died in December, 1863. After Elzira’s marriage Myra was taken and raised by her grandmother, in Nashville, and only visited occasionally her mother and step-father, at their home in Sumner county. The evidence shows that Bruner and Myra passed among her mother’s family and connections as man and wife, and with their neighbors in Nashville, boarding part of the time, and keeping house during the residue of the period of cohabitation. Dinah Carter, the original complainant in this cause, was a free woman of color, and the keeper of an assignation house, and seems to have been, though precisely how nowhere appears, implicated in bringing about the illicit cohabitation of Bruner and Myra. At any rate, on the 12th of August, 1864, the Hendersons conveyed the land in controversy, consisting of about fourteen acres on the north side of Cumberland river, to the said Dinah Carter, for the consideration of $5,000, paid in cash. The money, it is agreed on all hands, was paid by Bruner. On the 15th of November, 1864, Dinah Carter, by deed reciting the like consideration, conveyed the land in fee to Myra Thomas, at the instance of Bruner. Shortly afterwards Bruner and Myra seem to have separated, and, on the 1st of March, 1865, she intermarried, in Sumner county, with the defendant James M. Garrett. Garrett and Myra lived together, in Sumner county, at the residence of Garrett’s mother and grandmother, until the latter part of September, 1865, when they seem to have come, together with a young sister of Myra, to Nashville, and put up at a house on the land in dispute, then occupied by Kitty Garrett, an aunt of James 'M. Garrett, as a renter. In a few days thereafter Myra took her sister and went to the house of Dinah Carter, and, on the 30th of September, 1865, filed a bill against her hus"band for divorce, on the ground of cruel treatment. On the 2d of October, 1865, James M. Garrett followed her, to induce her to return with him, and, on her refusal, he killed her on the spot by shooting her several times with a revolver. He was caught and committed to jail for the murder, [218]*218but was afterwards released upon bond for Ms appearance, and not long subsecpiently left for parts unknown, and bas never returned. Before bis departure, on tbe 4th of April, 1867, he executed a power of attorney to the defendant W. J. Montgomery, authorizing him to sell the land in controversy to any person “ who will purchase the same,” and, on the 29th of August, 1868, Montgomery, under this power, sold and conveyed the land to the defendant Enoch Cunningham, for the consideration of $500, who afterwards sold to the defendant Bate, one of James M. Garrett’s lawyers to defend him in the criminal prosecution, but, under an agreement with Bate, took and retained possession of’the land until this litigation commenced, when he surrendered possession to a receiver appointed by the court. Who was in possession of the land when Cunningham bought, and under what claim of title, nowhere appears in the record.

The litigation in this case was commenced by Dinah Carter, by bill filed on the 14th of September, 1871, against Montgomery, Cunningham, Garrett, Bruner, and the unknown heirs of Myra Garrett, deceased, claiming that the land in controversy was bought from the Hendersons, by the complainant, with her own money, and that, not knowing how to write or read writing, she had been fraudulently deceived by Bruner into executing the deed to Myra Thomas. This bill was answered by Montgomery, “for himself and James M. Garrett,” by Cunningham, by John F. Lewis and wife, Elizabeth, formerly Elizabeth Matherley, and the other Matherley children, as the heirs of Myra Thomas. Publication was made as to Bruner, who had returned to his northern home early in 1865, but no defence was ever put in by him. He died in 1872, and this and the cross-suit of the Matherleys, to be mentioned, were by consent revived against Ms wife and children, who then appeared and answered.

On the 30th of April, 1872, Lewis and wife, and the other Matherley children, filed a cross-bill, and, on the 16th [219]*219of January, 1874, an amended cross-bill, against Dinah.. Carter, Cunningham, Montgomery, Garrett, and Bruner,, claiming the land as the heirs of Myra, and alleging that-the said Myra was a white woman, and the said James M. Garrett was a negro or mulatto, of mixed blood within the third degree, and the marriage between them void under' our statute law. All parties, including Bruner’s wife and children, have filed answers, none of them, however, being' either sworn to or signed by the defendants. The purchaser Bate has, also, been permitted to come in as a-defendant and answer.

On the 30th of September, 1872, Dinah Carter seems to-have filed an affidavit, purporting to be signed by her by making her mark, without any attesting witness, admitting, in substance, that the charge in her bill of fraudulent contrivance to induce her to execute the deed to Myrá Thomas-was a mistake of the draftsman, as well as the claim therein made of a right to the land, and that she had, in fact, no interest in the property. This paper is treated by the other litigants as a disclaimer of record of any interest in the litigation, and this, I presume, is the legal effect of the instrument treated as what it purports to be. She is not now represented by counsel. The affidavit cannot, of course, be looked to for any other purpose, and certainly not as evidence for or against any of the other litigants of any fact therein stated.

The answers of the non-resident adult defendants are put in, as we have stated, without being either sworn to or signed by such defendants. Counsel who accept such answers do so at their peril. The practice has no sanction in positive law, or the usage of courts of chancery. Denison v. Bassford, 7 Paige, 370; Dumond v. Magee, 2 Johns. Ch. 240; Codner v. Hersey, 18 Ves. 469.

Looking to the substance of the litigation, we find three' sets of claimants to the land in controversy. The wife and children of Bruner claim the land upon the ground that, the-purchase money having been paid by him, and the title [220]*220'made to a stranger in blood, tbe latter took only the naked legal title, subject to a resulting trust in favor of Bruner, which descended to his heirs on his death. The claim of 'the Matherleys rests upon the assumption that the conveyance to Myra was made under such circumstances as to vest In her the beneficial interest; that the marriage between Myra and Garrett was void, he being of mixed blood within the prohibited degrees, and that they are, through their mother and by statute, the heirs of their illegitimate half-rsister.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. Ch. R. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-montgomery-tennctapp-1875.