Duggan v. Ogle

159 S.W.2d 834, 25 Tenn. App. 467, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 5, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 159 S.W.2d 834 (Duggan v. Ogle) 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
Duggan v. Ogle, 159 S.W.2d 834, 25 Tenn. App. 467, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This bill was filed as an interpleader by the administrator of the estate of Hugh Myers, deceased, to determine the ownership of a fund of $4,000 recovered in an action by the administrator against a third person for the wrongful death of the said Hugh Myers, in an automobile accident, which fund, under an agreement, is in the hands of the clerk of the court awaiting the deter- *469 initiation of tbe ownership. The deceased left a reputed wife and two infant children who claimed the fund as next of kin; the father and mother of Hugh Myers assert that he was never legally married and that they are entitled to the fund as his next of kin because of the survival statute. The issue presented is the legal right growing out of the marriage be it valid or void.

There are three factual solutions to this issue; first, there was a legal marriage; second, Hugh Myers practiced a fraud upon his acknowledged wife, Blanche Ogle Myers, and had a moot ceremony performed in her ignorance; third, or Blanche Ogle Myers has sworn falsely, and there was no ceremony performed.

At the outset we will dispose of the third solution. We believe that Blanche Ogle Myers swore truthfully, in fact we were impressed with her testimony. It is free of equivocations or evasions, and this statement cannot be made in reference to the testimony of those who try to discredit her. All proven facts and circumstances are consistent with her testimony, while the opposing witnesses must explain and disclaim these facts and circumstances. This conclusion will be reflected in the following discussion of the evidence. She details her story as follows:

In January, 1937, she was a young girl in her seventeenth year, and she met Hugh Myers at some place where the young people gather, attending picture shows and other places of amusement with him, and having dates with him from time to time at these places. Both lived in the country and he did not go to her home to see her, and her father was ignorant of the association. This courtship continued until the 22nd day of December, 1937, when by prearrangement he came to her home or near her home and met her, taking her in a car back with him to near his home where his brother, Ray Myers, got in the car with them, and they drove to Maryville and parked the car upon the street, the brother Ray Myers going one way and they another. She states that Hugh took her to the courthouse and to the office of a justice of the peace there, and that they were married there by a justice of the peace. They then returned to the ear, having been away from it about one hour, and found Ray Myers and the three drove to Knoxville, arriving there about noon and attending the afternoon picture show. After the picture show they returned to Sevier County and Hugh drove her to her home, but left it to her to tell her father of the marriage. Hugh returned to his home.

She told her father of the marriage and that her husband, since he was engaged in driving a truck, would spend Wednesday nights with her and would spend Saturday nights and Sundays with her. The husband lived with his parents and did not immediately tell them of his marriage, and continued to drive his truck, but he visited his wife on the designated occasions, and soon after the marriage he told his wife’s father of the marriage.

*470 Tbe mother of Hugh Myers first learned of the marriage, as she admits, in March, 1938, but the other members of the family, especially the father and Ray Myers, the principal witness, state that they did not learn of the marriage until July. (They think it is important to avoid an estoppel to establish that they were ignorant of the marriage for a long time.) It is strange that the mother learning of the marriage in March said nothing of it to her husband and son Ray, who were in the home with her, and they did not learn of it until July, especially in view of her subsequent activities which demonstrate that she is a woman of curiosity and one who would not remain silent possessing intelligence of this character.

On April 28, 1938, a child, Mildred Myers, was born to this union, and the attending physician made out the required birth certificate in the name of the father and mother and answering “yes” to the question ‘ ‘ Legitimate ? ’ ’ The child was born within five months of the wedding, and the birth certificate shows it was born at full term. Hugh’s marriage to Blanche relieved him of any anxiety as to a criminal prosecution for a violation of the age of consent, since such offense is made a felony by statute. After the birth of this child, the young couple wanted to go to housekeeping and enter business, and they did so by opening up a restaurant in the suburbs of Sevier-ville and began housekeeping, having obtained a house in which to live.

By this time the marriage had become generally known, and Hugh Myers’ parents furnished certain articles to furnish their home, and two bride showers were held for the wife, one by a neighbor and another by Hugh’s grandmother; many presents were donated to the young couple by relatives, neighbors, and friends. They lived at this home and carried on this restaurant business for some time, and were visited by each of Hugh’s parents who spent the night with him. (The parents will not admit this; they say they spent only a part of a night, the later part.) The grandmother taught the infant child, Mildred, to call her grandma and her husband grandpa, yet the family, in their testimony, insist that they never recognized this marriage, and the grandfather disclaimed any sentiment or affection for the child, Mildred, then or now, and reflect upon her parentage by expressing a doubt as to her fatherhood.

Finally, the couple broke up housekeeping and moved into the home of the parent, Bruce and Ida Myers, and while there the domestic relationship became disrupted, the wife not being able to get along with her in-laws. Her temper and demeanor were described as “throwing a fit,” and she would take her baby and go to her home. It is apparent that her husband’s mother formed a decided dislike for her, but the dislike was not shared by her husband who would go and get her. Hugh’s father had a small house upon his land within a hundred yards of his home, and Hugh, assisted by his mother, fixed up this house and he and his wife moved into it. While living *471 there another child was horn on the 24th day of July, 1939, and his birth certificate is in the record.

On August 10, 1938, Hugh Myers, the husband, took out a life insurance policy in the sum of $1,000 payable to Blanche Ogle Myers, his designated wife, as beneficiary. And prior thereto, on July 26, 1938, he had taken out an insurance policy in the sum of $1,000 payable to his infant daughter, Mildred Myers. He resumed his occupation of driving a truck, and provided to the best of his ability for his wife and children.

While he lived in the home of his parents with his wife and the wife was occasionally “throwing fits” as described by the father, his mother undertook to determine if her son was legally married. They state that Hugh told her that he was married in Maryville, so she wrote to the county court clerk in Maryville to determine if a marriage license had been issued, and receiving a reply that there was no record, she then proceeded to write the clerks of the surrounding counties.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W.2d 834, 25 Tenn. App. 467, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duggan-v-ogle-tennctapp-1941.