Johnson v. Johnson

41 Tenn. 626
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 Tenn. 626 (Johnson v. Johnson) 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
Johnson v. Johnson, 41 Tenn. 626 (Tenn. 1860).

Opinion

McKinney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is rather a novel case, in all its features. The original bill was filed in the names of the complainant, Mary T. Johnson (as wife of the defendant, John Johnson.) and her three children, the issue of a former marriage. It is in the nature of a bill quia timet, to restrain the defendant from removing or disposing of certain slaves, named therein; and also to have the construction and legal effect of a written instrument, executed by said Mary T., before her marriage with the defendant, purporting to dispose of said slaves, declared by the Court.

The bill alleges that the complainant, Mary T., is the toife of the defendant, and that they were married in March, 1835: that prior to said marriage, she was the owner of six slaves, and that in pursuance of an anti-nuptial contract with said Johnson, she made what is called in the bill, “a deed of gift, or bill of sale,”, of said slaves to her co-complainants, — the three children of the former marriage, — reserving a right to their services during her lifetime, if she should call for, or need their services; and that said instrument was executed, and the possession delivered to her children, before her marriage with the defendant. It is charged that the defendant was wrongfully claiming to be the absolute owner of some of said slaves; and that he was threatening to dispose of the same.

The instrument referred to, is, in form, a testamentary [628]*628paper, and not a “deed of gift or bill of sale,” as described in the bill; though it was understood, and such, was the intention of the parties, that it should operate as a conveyance- of a present interest in the slaves, subject only to the right of the donor to reclaim the services of the slaves during her life, in the event she should think fit to do so; but which she seems never to have done, prior to the filing of the present bill.

The defendant, in his answer, claims to be the absolute owner of said slaves. He alleges, that, shortly after the marriage, he, at the repeated and urgent solicitations of his wife, purchased certain of said slaves from the children, to whom they had been given by said instrument, on the ground, that the slaves refused to live with the children; that he paid a valuable consideration for the slaves to the respective owners, all of whom were then of full age.

After the original bill had been answered, namely, on the 23d of August, 1858, the complainant, Mary T., filed what is called an amended bill, in her own name, in which she states, that since the filing of the original bill, she had made the startling discovery, that she was not the toife of the defendant, and that the supposed marriage was a nullity; and that, immediately on making this discovery, she had withdrawn from his bed and board. She charges, that the fact, upon which the invalidity of the marriage depends, was fraudulently concealed from her by the defendant; and only came to her knowledge on taking the deposition of the minister by whom the pretended marriage ceremony was performed. And asks to have the marriage declared void, and to have her slaves restored to her, and an account of hire, &c.; and denies the [629]*629right of her children to sell said slaves, inasmuch as the testamentary paper referred to, was inoperative to divest her, during her life, of her title to the property.

It appears, from the admission of the defendant in his answer, and from the proof in the cause, that on Sunday, the 29th of March, 1835, the marriage ceremony was pronounced by a minister of the Methodist denomination, according to the formula prescribed by that Church. But the clergyman states, in his deposition, that he performed the ceremony without any license: that he was ignorant of the law, and acted upon the representation of the defendant, that it would answer as well to get the license after-wards; that the defendant, at the time of the marriage, gave him the money to obtain a license, and in a few days after the performance of the ceremony, he procured license from the Clerk of the County Court, in regular form, and endorsed thereon the fact and time of the marriage, and returned the same to the Clerk, as directed by the Statute.

The defendant states, in his answer, that he had been a Justice of the Peace for a number of years, and had several times married persons in this manner, fully believing it to be legal. And there is evidence in the record tending to show, that a notion prevailed in the neighborhood, that such a marriage was lawful and valid.

That the marriage in question was believed to be a valid, lawful marriage, both by the complainant and defendant, the clergyman, and all concerned, can admit of no 'reasonable doubt, from all the proof in this record. There is no just ground for the charge of fraud, or concealment of the fact of want of license. The complainant cannot be hoard to allege ignorance of the law; and [630]*630it may fairly be presumed, from the proof, that she was fully informed of the fact, that the ceremony was performed without a license.

Upon the foregoing facts, it is insisted for the complainant, that she is entitled to have the marriage declared void, and to have said slaves restored to her, on the ground that the paper, by which they were disposed of, being testamentary in its nature, her title was not divested. And the Chancellor so decreed.

We think the decree is erroneous. It seems to us, that, whether the complainant shall be held estopped to deny the validity of the marriage, or otherwise, the result must be the same, as respects the present bill. In neither view can it be maintained.

It seems to be supposed, that the cases of Bashaw vs. State, 1 Yerger’s Rep., 177, and Grisham vs. State, 2 Yerger’s Rep., 589, establish the general and unqualified proposition, that the common law mode of solemnizing the matrimonial union, is abrogated absolutely by our statutory provisions; and that a marriage in that form is of no validity in any case whatever. Whether this conclusion can be sustained, either upon sound principle, or weight of authority, we need not now stop to consider. For the purpose of the present determination, it might be conceded, (though we express no opinion upon the point,) that the marriage was illegal, for want of compliance with the formalities prescribed by the Statute. But, if this were admitted, still, the question arises, can the complainant, in a proceeding of this nature', be permitted to deny, or impeach its validity?

For nearly a quarter of a century before the filing of this bill, the parties had cohabited as husband and wife, [631]*631believing all that time, that they had been lawfully married, as did all others with whom they had intercourse. And the question, whether, after so great a lapse of time, such a marriage can be declared void from the beginning, is one in which not only the parties, but the public also, have a deep interest, in view of the consequences, as affecting the status of children born of the marriage: the relations of affinity and consanguinity which may have sprung from it; the rights of property, which may have been acquired on the faith of it; and all the consequential rights, obligations, and duties growing out of it.

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Related

Bass v. Bass
774 S.W.2d 170 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
41 Tenn. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-johnson-tenn-1860.