Goodner v. Goodner

147 Tenn. 517
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 Tenn. 517 (Goodner v. Goodner) 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
Goodner v. Goodner, 147 Tenn. 517 (Tenn. 1922).

Opinion

Mr. T. H. Malone, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mrs. Sarah E. Goodner sued her former husband, George W. Goodner, for breach of promise of marriage, and was given a verdict of $1,000 by the jury.

Defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, he took an appeal in the nature of a writ of error to the court of civil appeals, which affirmed the judgment in an opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Faw ; and the case comes here on petition for the writ of certiorari.

The case is a most unusual one on its facts.

The parties (who will be styled as they were below) were married in 1893, and lived together, except for brief intervals, until 1917.

Prior to marriage with the defendant, the plaintiff became the mother of an illegitimate child, of which the defendant was not the father. It seems to be undisputed that the defendant was aware of this when he married her.

Some five years after their marriage the plaintiff became the mother of another child, which bore her husband’s name, and was acknowledged by him as his child.

Plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that she was cruelly treated by the defendant during their married life; that he was tyrannical and abusive; that she lived almost the [520]*520life of a slave, not only doing all household work, but the heaviest field work, such as plowing and harvesting, and actually handling one end of a crosscut saw; that by her efforts she contributed largely to the value of the defendant’s estate.

From time to time the defendant’s conduct would cause the plaintiff to leave home for short periods, but she always returned. Finally, in 1917, she left and refused to return.

In May, 1918', a written agreement was made between them whereby the plaintiff accepted property worth about $>2,000 as a settlement from her husband, and relinquished all claim to any other property which he might have.

In July, 1919, she filed a divorce bill against her husband, charging him with cruel and inhuman treatrhent. She testifies that this bill was filed at his request, and that he paid her lawyer’s fee. He admits paying the fee.

An order pro oonfesso was taken against the husband, and upon the hearing, a decree a vinculo was granted to the wife. This was in October, 1919.

Plaintiff further testifies that in November, 1919, the defendant came to her and importuned her to return to him, promising to take her to Georgia and marry her “over again;” that she finally consented and returned to his home, and remained there about five months; that she on various occasions asked the defendant to carry out his promise and marry her; that he made excuses and put her off, but finally told her that he was not going to marry her; that she thereupon left and never returned.

At the time of the promise to marry the plaintiff was forty-nine years old, and the defendant sixty-six.

[521]*521The present suit, for breach of this promise, was brought by plaintiff on September 13, 1920.

The defendant pleaded non assumpsit, and filed a second plea, in which he ayers:

“That at the time of the alleged agreement to marry the plaintiff he was, and still is, naturally impotent and incapable of procreation, and was and still is incapable of consummating a valid marriage, and this fact was well known to the plaintiff at the time.”

This plea was, on motion of plaintiff, stricken from the file for insufficiency, and an additional plea to the same effect was also stricken.

This action of the trial judge is assigned as error.

I. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the defendant cannot raise this question, because the pleas, after being stricken from the record, were not made part of the bill of exceptions.

We find, however, from an inspection of the record, that these pleas were incorporated in haee verba in defendant’s motion for a new trial, which motion, in turn, was copied in full in the minute entry. • This was sufficient to preserve the pleas.

II. Did the pleas present a sufficient defense?

This question will he considered in connection with certain instructions given by the trial judge to the jury, and his refusal to charge certain requests seasonably offered by the defendant.

1. We think this case is to be distinguished at the outset from those in which some incurable congenital malformation of one spouse, existing at the time of the marriage, has been made the ground of a divorce or of an annulment, [522]*522at the suit of the other spouse. See, for example, Deane v. Averling, 1 Robertson, 279; Payne v. Payne (1891), 46 Minn., 467, 49 N. W., 230, 24 Am. St. Rep., 240; W. v. H. (1861), 2 Swabey & Tristram, 240.

S'uch a right is, indeed, secured to the other spouse in this State by subsection 1 of section 2448 of the Code of 1858 (Shannon’s Compilation, section 4201), which specifies as one of the causes of divorce from the bonds of matrimony:

“That either party, at the time of the contract, was and still is naturally impotent and incapable of procreation. (1799, ch. 19, sec. 1; 1835-36, ch. 26, sec. 1.)”

2. Granting that the incapacity of the defendant would have entitled the plaintiff to a divorce, if she had seen fit to seek it, on the grounds set forth in his plea, does this confer upon the plaintiff the right to set up his OAvn condition as a defense to an action for breach of promise?

(a) On this question there has been a great division of opinion from an. early day. The view which a particular judge entertains of the essential nature of such a contract is likely to incline his mind in the one direction or in the other.

This is noAvhere better illustrated than in the leading case of Hall v. Wright (1858), Ellis, Blackburn & Ellis, 746, reversed in the Exchequer Chamber (1859), Ellis, Blackburn & Ellis, 765.

This was an action by Isabella Hall against George Wright for breach of promise of marriage, the defendant’s third plea being as follows:

“That after the agreement and before any breach thereof,- defendant became and was, and thenceforth hitherto has been, and still is, affected with dangerous bodily dis[523]*523ease, which has occasioned frequent and severe bleeding from his lungs, and by reason of which disease defendant then became and was, and from thenceforth hitherto has been, and still is, incapable of marriage without great danger of his life, and therefore unfit for the marriage state, whereof the plaintiff had notice before the commencement of this action.”

The jury found for the plaintiff, and assessed her damages at ¿100, Erle, J., directed verdict to be entered for the defendant on the third plea, with leave to move to enter verdict for the plaintiff with ¿100 damages.

On the argument of this motion the judges differed in opinion, and delivered their judgments seriatim. Cromp-ton, J., thought the plea bad. Erle, J., thought the defendant entitled to succeed in his defense. Wightman, J., thought judgment should go for the defendant. Lord Campbell, C. J., thought the plea bad, and the plaintiff entitled to damages.

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147 Tenn. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodner-v-goodner-tenn-1922.