Graham v. Stull

21 L.R.A. 241, 92 Tenn. 673
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 L.R.A. 241 (Graham v. Stull) 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
Graham v. Stull, 21 L.R.A. 241, 92 Tenn. 673 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Probate Court -of Shelby County, allowing a year’s support to the defendant in error, Mrs. Addie B. Stull,-as the widow of Dr. G. T. Stull.

Dr. Stull, at the' time of his death, • was a resident of Crittenden County, Arkansas, and had been residing there for a number of years, though frequently in Tennessee, where both he and his wife resided before their marriage. He left an informal will, which was probated in Crittenden County, Arkansas, by W. S. Graham, the executor named therein, and a transcript of its probate- was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Probate Court of Shelby County, and Graham was, by that Court, also appointed executor of the will in Tennessee.

Mrs. Addie B. Stull, the widow, dissented from the will, aiid filed her petition .in the said Probate Court of Shelby County, asking for a year’s allowance out of the estate of her deceased husband in Tennessee, according to the statutes of Tennessee. The assets consist of cash collected from W. N. Brown & Co., and in the hands of Graham, the executor, amounting to something over $3,000, and one. second-hand piano.

The Probate Court appointed Commissioners to set apart the year’s support. A few days thereafter, W. S. Graham and wife filed a paper in that Court, asking that the petition be not allowed, but dismissed. Mrs. Graham, the wife of Executor Graham, is the only child and heir of Dr. Stull.

[675]*675The matter proceeded somewhat irregularly to trial. The Commissioners made report March 14, 1893, setting apart to Mrs. Stull $2,500 for her year’s support. To this report Giraham and wife excepted. An agreed statement of facts was filed in the cause, and considered on the healing. The Court below confirmed the report of the Commissioners, and directed that the allowance be paid by the executor, Graham, to Mrs. Stull, the widow, out of the ’cash in his hands belonging to the Tennessee estate.

Erom this judgment Graham, as executor, and Graham and wife appealed, and have assigned various errors, only one of which it is necessary to mention, as it is decisive of the entire controversy. It is, in substance, that the statute of Tennessee providing a year’s support for a widow was intended to apply, and does apply, exclusively to a widow residing in Tennessee, and not to a widow of any person residing in an alien State %t the time of his death.

From the agreed statement of facts it appears that certain proceedings were had in Arkansas, in the Courts of Crittenden County, under which the widow made an election to be endowed out of her husband’s estate in Arkansas, and executed a quitclaim to the heir of all her rights under the will of her deceased husband, and set up her claim to a child’s part — in this instance being one-half of the entire estate, real and personal. Under decrees in that Court, about $1,246.37 has been paid to [676]*676the widow pending further proceedings, and the settlement of a controversy between the widow and Graham and ■ wife in regard to the rents of the Arkansas lauds.

Mrs. Stull, the widow, insists that she is en- " titled to all thé benefits secured to widows in Tennessee under the statutes, without reference to any thing that may be done in Ai’kansas under the statutes of that State.

"Whether Mrs. Stull is entitled to a year’s support out of the assets in Tennessee depends on the construction of the statutes of this State. By the Code, § 2285 (M. & V. compilation, § 3125), it is, in substance, provided that upon the application of the widow of an intestate, or of a widow who dissents from her husband’s will, the County Court, through commissioners, shall set apart to her, for the use of herself and family, a year’s support out of any estate left by the deceased. This ^allowance is made irrespective of the condition of the estate as to solvency or insolvency, and the amount dejoends upon the number of the family and their previous mode of life during the life-time of the deceased, and the property thus set apart does not enter into the administration of the estate, and does not go into the hands of the administrator, and, if it comes into his hands, may be recovered therefrom by the widow, and it is in nowise subject to the debts of the deceased.

The law is, in a certain sense, a statute of exemption, and is a provision made with reference [677]*677to the affliction, helplessness, and necessities of widows immediately after thé death of their husbands. Its nature and character are fully explained and applied in many cases in our State decisions. Curd v. Curd, 9 Hum., 171; Sanderlin v. Sanderlin, 1 Swan, 441; Bayless v. Bayless, 4 Cold., 359; Vincent v. Vincent, 1 Heis., 333; Turner v. Fisher, 4 Sneed, 209; Pride v. Watson, 7 Heis., 232; Rice v. Hunt, 7 Lea, 33; Rhea v. Greer, 2 Pickle, 59; Railway Co. v. Kennedy, 6 Pickle, 185.

The statute, as well as all other statutes of exemption, should he liberally ' construed. Rhea v. Greer, 2 Pickle, 59.

But the important question remains, Is it a provision intended to apply alone to cases where residents of the State may die leaving widows and families residing in the State, or does it embrace also widows of deceased persons who were nonresidents when they died but owned property in Tennessee ?

This is a new question in Tennessee, and seems to have been rarely considered in other States.

It has been held that the widow of a non-resident intestate may sue for her year’s allowance for support in Georgia, there being property there, and especially if there are no debts in the State of domicile, hut the amount to be recovered must be regulated by the law of the State. Mitchell v. Word, 64 Georgia, 208; 3 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, page 651.

The case of Kapp v. The Public Administrator, [678]*678reported in 2 Bradford’s Surrogate Reports (N. Y.), in the matter of the estate of Peter Eilces, deceased, is one resting on peculiar circumstances. In that case, the intestate died at sea, while on his way from Germany to the United States, having left his wife and children in Germany. Certain assets, on board the vessel, came into the hands of the Public Administrator at New York, and creditors having appeared to claim satisfaction of their demands, the question was raised whether the widow was entitled to a year’s support. There was no contest between the widow and heir or distributee. The Court held that she was so entitled. It is evident, in that case, that, while the intestate had not, in fact, acquired a domicile in New York, yet he ' had left his former home in Germany for that purpose, and was engaged in the execution of that purpose when he died. He was virtually a resident of New York, under the circumstances, and entitled to the protection of its laws in favor of residents.

In Shannon v. White, 109 Mass., 146, it was held that, under the statutes of Massachusetts, the widow of a non-resident was not entitled to the allowance provided by the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 L.R.A. 241, 92 Tenn. 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-stull-tenn-1893.