Coleman v. Coleman

369 S.W.2d 557, 212 Tenn. 258, 16 McCanless 258, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 420
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 369 S.W.2d 557 (Coleman v. Coleman) 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
Coleman v. Coleman, 369 S.W.2d 557, 212 Tenn. 258, 16 McCanless 258, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 420 (Tenn. 1963).

Opinion

Mb. Special. Justice Robeet S. Clement

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Gertrude C. Coleman, Complainant below, filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County against Lucille C. Coleman, Defendant, attempting to set aside a divorce decree rendered in 1945 in the Circuit Court of Hamilton County wherein a divorce was granted George 0. Coleman from Gertrude C. Coleman for whom publication was made while Gertrude C. Coleman was on a visit to Milwaukee, "Wisconsin. As may be assumed, George 0. Coleman, the husband of both Complainant and Defendant at different times, is now deceased, having died in 1962. Complainant seeks to set aside the divorce granted in 1945 by her bill filed on September 26, 1962, wherein she alleges fraud. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the lower court.

The original petition avers that in September of 1945 the Complainant, who married George 0. Coleman in 1924, took her daughter, Dorothy, age 13 years, and went at the suggestion of her husband’s sister to Milwaukee [260]*260and remained there for the winter and did nursing in a hospital, after which she returned to Chattanooga. That while Complainant was in Wisconsin, George 0. Coleman filed a petition for divorce in the Circuit Court of Hamilton County alleging desertion and that the Complainant had absented herself without reasonable cause for two years and that publication was made for the Complainant in the “Labor World” which Complainant knew nothing of. Therefore, she alleges that the divorce was obtained by fraud and is void. Complainant further alleges that the said George 0. Coleman left a will in which he stated that the Defendant, Lucille C. Coleman, as his wife, should receive a portion of his estate and nominated her as the Executrix of his will. The petition also prays for certain information from the Defendant as to her relationship with the said George 0. Coleman, where and when she first lived with him, who paid the rent, the date of their marriage and the whereabouts of the court file in the 1945 divorce proceedings.

After motions to strike from the prayer of the bill certain matters which the Defendant insists were not pertinent, the Defendant demurred as follows:

“Comes the Defendant, Lucille C. Coleman, by her Attorney and demurs to the original petition heretofore filed against her insomuch as said petition does not state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted and specifically a divorce decree alleged to have been entered over sixteen (16) years prior to the filing of a bill in Chancery Court to set aside said decree upon the grounds of fraud, said action is prevented by the doctrine of laches as a matter of law.”

The demurrer was sustained by the Court, but the Com[261]*261plainant was granted ten days within which to amend her original bill.

On November 2, 1962, Complainant amended her bill going more into detail and in which she attempts to justify the delay of sixteen years in attacking the Circuit Court decree.

One of the new allegations is that before she left for Milwaukee, the Complainant went to an attorney of the Chattanooga bar and talked with him about her rights, told him of her proposed visit, and paid him Ten ($10.00) Dollars to observe the actions of the said George 0. Coleman while she was gone and especially as to whether or not he took any legal action against her.

She further states in her amended bill that after she had been in Wisconsin about three months, her sister-in-law informed her that her husband had called for her, but on being advised that she, Complainant, was at work, he told his sister to tell Complainant that, ‘ ‘ He was now a free man.” That upon Complainant’s return to Chattanooga, she talked to her attorney and told him what her sister-in-law had reported to Complainant, but her attorney told her that he knew of no action that her husband had taken and that if he had secured a divorce she might be better off.

The amended bill further shows that the Complainant and her then husband, George 0. Coleman, had not lived together since about 1940, but that he had cohabited with the Defendant, Lucille C. Coleman, at different places in Hamilton County since that time.

Complainant’s amended bill further shows “that in the years after 1945, the said George O. Coleman continued

[262]*262to live with, the Defendant as'he had before 1945, visiting Complainant one Christmas, sent money to Complainant, and several times stated that he wonld like to come back and was sorry he had left. ’ ’ In other words, the petition shows on its face that the parties have not lived together since 1940.

The Defendant again demurred to the bill as amended as follows:

“Comes the defendant, Lucille Cook Coleman, both individually and as Executrix of the Estate of George 0. Coleman, deceased, and demurs to the Amended Bill and whole cause heretofore filed against her and against her deceased husband, George 0. Coleman, and his estate, wherein the complainant seeks to set aside and render void a divorce decree awarded to the deceased George 0. Coleman, by the Circuit Court of Hamilton County in the year 1945; whereby, the marriage of the complainant to the deceased was dissolved, and as the grounds for her Demurrer, she says:
“That no relief can be granted to the complainant upon the whole cause as amended, even if proved to be completely true in substance and in fact, because it is alleged in the Amended Bill that ‘ she took no action to set it aside until September 26, 1962, a lapse of a .little less than seventeen years,’-and the doctrine of laches would bar her present action so to do; insomuch, as complainant has failed to allege .in. her Amended Bill a reasonable excuse.for her failure to initiate said action, within a reasonable period of time, after the decree was entered.
“In complainant’s Amended Bill, even taking into consideration all allegations improper thereto, com[263]*263plainant lias averred nothing more than in the year 1945 she became generally aware that the deceased had obtained a divorce from her in that year and that she for various.reasons failed to verify this action by reading a decree which was a matter of public record, and that for these reasons she should be excused from initiating her action to set the decree aside before the expiration of almost seventeen years.
“From all of which defendant avers that the complainant has failed to state a cause of action by aid of the Amended Bill because of the application of the doctrine of laches, and. she, therefore, prays that the Demurrer be sustained and that the whole cause be again, dismissed, at complainant’s cost, without leave ■unto the complainant to further amend.”

The Chancellor again sustained the demurrer. We quote pertinent parts from his memorandum opinion:

“It is not necessary for the Court to act upon the motion to strike, for the obvious reason that, treating the demurrer as admitting all the averments of the bill to be true, it still appears that complainant ever since 1940 knew that her husband, left her for another woman and that he was wanting to obtain a divorce, which she was informed he finally did obtain while she was working in Wisconsin.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kentucky National Insurance Co. v. Gardner
6 S.W.3d 493 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 S.W.2d 557, 212 Tenn. 258, 16 McCanless 258, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-coleman-tenn-1963.