Cole v. Taylor

132 Tenn. 92
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 132 Tenn. 92 (Cole v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Taylor, 132 Tenn. 92 (Tenn. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fancher

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Tom Pollard died intestate while a resident and citizen of Memphis, Shelby county, Tenn., March, 1910, the owner in fee simple of the west one-half of lot 29 of P. W. Smith’s subdivision, on the south side of St. Paul avenue, in said city of Memphis, being property conveyed to him by deed of George W. King of date January 17, 1876.

Tom Pollard left surviving him his widow, Emma Pollard, who died about September 3, 1911. He left no issue.

This is a suit by Alice Cole to recover of defendant, Sir Charles Henry Taylor, the said lot of land.

The defendant claims title under a will of Emma Pollard. The complainant claims title as a sister of' Tom Pollard.

It appears that Tom Pollard and Alice Cole were children of Jordan Pollard and wife, Prances Pollard, all of whom were persons of color, and were slaves prior to the emancipation. Jordan and Prances Pollard were married in accordance with the custom of slave marriages, in the State of Georgia many years before the Civil War. They lived together as husband and wife till the death of Jordan, about ten years ago, and Prances has since died.

Alice Cole is the sole survivor of this family; all her brothers arid sisters having died without issue.

During the Civil War the family removed from Georgia to Alabama, from whence they returned after [95]*95the close of the War to Georgia, but these dates are not fised. Jordan and Prances and some of their children were moved to Mississippi about 1868.

Soon after the war either by constitutional or statutory enactment provisions were made by the States of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and other Southern States establishing the status of negroes under slave marriages.

It is the insistence of the plaintiff that by the laws either of Georgia, Alabama, or Mississippi the slave marriage of Jordan Pollard and Prances Pollard was made valid, and their children legitimated to all intents and purposes; that, said Tom and Alice being legitimate under the laws of one or the other of these States, they are legitimate here, and, being so, the said Alice may inherit from her brother, Tom. The chancellor rendered a decree in accordance with this position, and permitted a recovery by the complainant, from which decree the defendant appealed to this court.

The statute of Tennessee on this subject has been before the court a number of times. This act declared that slaves who within the State had lived together as man and wife should be regarded as lawfully married, and that the children of such slave marriages should be legitimately entitled to an inheritance in any property heretofore acquired or that may be hereafter acquired by such parents to as full an extent as the children of white citizens are entitled by the laws of this State! This statute was properly- construed as not extending any right of inheritance beyond the lin[96]*96eal descendants of parents. Sheperd v. Carlin, 99 Tenn., 64, 41 S. W., 340; Carver v. Maxwell, 110 Tenn., 75, 71 S. W., 752; Jones v. Jones, 234 U. S., 616, 34 Sup. Ct., 937, 58 L. Ed., 1502.

The statute of Georgia upon the same subject was approved March 9, 1866 (Acts 1865-66, p. 240), and is as follows:

“The general assembly of the State of Georgia do •enact, that persons of color, now living together as husband and wife, are hereby declared to sustain that legal relation to each other, unless a man shall have two or more reputed wives, or a woman two or more reputed husbands. In such event, the man, immediately after the passage of this act by the general assembly, shall select one of his reputed wives, with her consent; or the woman one of her reputed husbands, with his consent; and the ceremony of marriage between these two shall be performed.”

Code of Georgia, 1911, section 2180, provides as follows :

“Every colored child born before the 9th day of March, 1866, is hereby declared to be the legitimate •child of his mother; but such child is the legitimate child of his colored father only when born within what was regarded as a State of wedlock, or.when the parents were living together as husband and wife.”

The supreme court of Georgia, in the case of Williams v. State, 67 Ga., 262, held that the object of the act of March 9,1866, was to declare all people who had been slaves, and were then living as man and wife, [97]*97really and to all intents and purposes as fully husband and wife as though they had been formerly married, and that, if they continued to live on the 9th day of March, 1866, being then free, such living together by them at that time should amount to the contract of marriage in the eye of the law, and thus it was made just as effectually the contract of marriage by them as if they had been always free and had been actually married.

A statute of Alabama passed on November 30, 1867, provided as follows:

‘ ‘ Section 1. Be it ordained by the people of the State of Alabama in convention assembled, That all such freedmen and women who shall now be living together as man and wife, shall be regarded in law as man and wife, and that the children of such connection, whether they be black or of mixed color, shall be and are hereby declared to be entitled to all the rights, benefits and immunities of children of any other class under the laws of Alabama.”

Code of Alabama 1907, section 3766, provides as follows :

‘ ‘ Slaves and free persons of color prior to the abolition of slavery in this State, and their descendants, are capable of inheriting or transmitting property, real, personal, or mixed, the same in all respects as white persons, where the ancestors lived together as man and wife under such circumstances as would constitute a valid marriage at common law. This section [98]*98shall also apply to and govern all cases heretofore arising and to which it may be applicable.”

- The constitution of Mississippi (section 22, art.. 12), adopted in 1869, provides as follows:

“All persons who have not been married, bnt are now living together, cohabiting as husband and wife, shall be taken and held, for all purposes in law, as married, and their children, whether born before or after the ratification of this constitution, shall' be legitimate; and the legislature may, by law, punish adultery and concu-binity. ” ■

The learned chancellor was of opinion that Tom and Alice Pollard (now Cole) were born in the State of Georgia prior to March 9, 1866, and had become and were at said time legitimate children of the said Jor-don and Prances Pollard, and that therefore Alice could and did rightfully inherit as the only heir at law of Tom Pollard the lot or parcel of land, subject to the rights of the widow of Tom Pollard to homestead and dower. The position is that, being legitimate children, they have a right of collateral inheritance according to the Tennessee laws of descent. Our Tennessee law upon the subject, now firmly established by judicial construction, limits its own citizens occupying this same relationship born in slavery under slave marriage to direct inheritance from the parents. It was said in the case of Sheperd v. Carlin, supra:

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Bluebook (online)
132 Tenn. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-taylor-tenn-1915.