Lightsey v. Lightsey

407 S.W.2d 684, 56 Tenn. App. 394, 1966 Tenn. App. LEXIS 230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 25, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 407 S.W.2d 684 (Lightsey v. Lightsey) 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
Lightsey v. Lightsey, 407 S.W.2d 684, 56 Tenn. App. 394, 1966 Tenn. App. LEXIS 230 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

HÜMPHBE YS, J.

Appellant, Buby Lee Keen Lightsey, filed her bill for an absolute divorce from appellee, Malcolm McCune Lightsey, on grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment, and sought other relief with respect to jointly deposited funds which is not before us on this appeal.

Appellee answered, denying any misconduct, and filed a cross-bill, alleging that appellant had been married to another man at the time the parties entered into their ceremonial marriage; and prayed for an absolute divorce on the ground appellant knowingly entered into a second marriage in violation of a previous marriage still subsisting.

Appellant answered the cross-bill, denying the charges, and alleging her belief that she was divorced prior to entering into the marriage ceremony with appellee, and alleging that they continued living together as man and wife for sixteen years after her divorce from her first [396]*396husband. She subsequently amended her pleadings, alleging a common law marriage in the State of Georgia after the removal of the disability of her prior marriage, and praying a decree sustaining’ the validity of this common law marriage.

The proof introduced by the parties consisted of their own testimony and certain exhibits.

The trial judge found the parties entered into a ceremonial marriage on September 14, 1942, while residents of the State of Georgia; that appellee was a member of the Armed Forces and was stationed in various states including Georgia; that appellant was previously married to Myron J. Griffin in 1933, and obtained a final divorce from Griffin on September 9, 1948; that the parties continued to reside together in the State of Georgia from that date until 1950, after which appellee was stationed in England for three years; that they returned to Georgia and lived together there for one month; and have lived together continuously from the date of the marriage ceremony in September, 1942 until their separation in September, 1964, in the same manner after the divorce in 1948 as they had prior thereto. The trial court found further that appellee did not know of appellant’s disability of previous marriage prior to the divorce proceedings in 1948. He dismissed appellant’s bill and sustained appellee’s cross-bill, granting him an absolute divorce on the ground of the prior subsisting marriage.

The trial judge seemed to accept the proposition that a valid common-law marriage subsisting between the parties subsequent to the divorce would be recognized by a Tennessee court, but was of opinion under the law of the State of Georgia and the facts of the case that no such valid subsisting common-law marriage was con[397]*397Tracted between the parties after appellant gained a divorce decree from her first husband in 1948. * .

Mrs. Lightsey has appealed and assigned four errors:

“1. The Judge erred in holding that the parties were not lawfully married and in granting a divorce to the defendant, instead of holding that the parties entered into a valid common-law marriage while residents of the State of Georgia. (R., p. 45)
Under Georgia law, where a ceremonial marriage is invalid because of an existing prior marriage of one of the parties, if, after the disability is removed, they continue to live together as man and wife, there is a valid common-law marriage entered into after the removal of the disability.
2. The Judge erred in holding that the burden was upon complainant to prove the existence of an agreement between the parties to cohabit as husband and wife after the disability of her prior marriage was removed. (R., p. 44)
Under Georgia Law, there is a presumption that where parties enter a ceremonial marriage while one is under the disability of a previous marriage, unknown to the other, and the disability is removed, the intent to be husband and wife expressed in the ceremonial marriage continues when the parties continue cohabitation, the presumption being that there is an intent of lawful rather than unlawful cohabitation. ’ ’

Assignments 3 and 4 are not copied as the first two raise the cardinal points at issue.

This appeal presents the questions whether a valid common-law marriage existed between the parties, and [398]*398whether Tennessee, which does not recognize common-law marriages as contractable between its residents, will recognize such a valid, subsisting common-law marriage as a defense against a suit for divorce under the facts and circumstances existing in this case.

Before entering upon a consideration of the legal questions presented by this appeal, we think it is important that certain propositions of fact which appear without much contradiction in the record be stated. These are: First, the relationship between the parties was not meretricious. This is evidenced by their first entering into a ceremonial marriage, and the fact appellee knew nothing of the prior marriage. Second, the evidence preponderates in favor of the proposition the appellant thought she had divorced her first husband, and did not discover to the contrary until she made a job application in 1944, which resulted in an investigation during the course of which it was learned that she was not divorced as she had thought. Her positive testimony is that she consulted a legal aid agency in Atlanta with respect to divorcing hex-first husband, and appeared at a place and went through at least some form of proceeding which she states undex-oath she took to amount to a divorce proceeding and that the attorney assisting her told her she was divorced. She is corroborated in her testimony that this was her state of mind and understanding, by the fact that her undivorced state was brought to light as a result of making a job application, when the ensuing investigation disclosed she was not divorced from her first husband. Evidently Mrs. Lightsey honestly believed she had gained a divorce from Mr. Griffin, for if this had not been the case, it is quite unlikely she would have made any reference to him in her job application or that she had a divorce decree [399]*399dissolving their marriage. However, she evidently did so state, for as a result of the job investigation, which was with respect to an aircraft manufacturing company, the fact she had no divorce decree was discovered.

The next inescapable conclusion of fact is that Mr. Lightsey became aware in 1948, that Mrs. Lightsey had gotten a divorce from her first husband. She so testified,' and that is the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn from Mr. Lightsey’s testimony. Mr. Lightsey testified as follows:

“Q. When did it come to your attention that she was legally married to someone else, not married to yon?
A. 1947- or 48.1 was called into the CO’s office.
Q. Where?
A. In Germany.
Q. Was that the first time?
A. That’s the first time, — now, I kneiv about her being married before then, I didn’t know it until by accident I came home, and that’s when I met the child.”

While this last answer is somewhat muddled, it appears Mr. Lightsey is saying that he knew about her prior marriage when he was called into the CO’s office in 1948 in Germany with respect to some other development in regard to it.

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Bluebook (online)
407 S.W.2d 684, 56 Tenn. App. 394, 1966 Tenn. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lightsey-v-lightsey-tennctapp-1966.