Loftis v. Dearing

201 S.W.2d 655, 184 Tenn. 474, 20 Beeler 474, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 400
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 655 (Loftis v. Dearing) 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
Loftis v. Dearing, 201 S.W.2d 655, 184 Tenn. 474, 20 Beeler 474, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 400 (Tenn. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Special Justice Norman Farrell

delivered the opinion of the Court. *

The original bill in this cause was filed December 12, 1944, in the Chancery Court of Putnam County by Allie Mai Loftis, as administratrix of her deceased son, Frank Allen Harris, and also in her own right, against Ruby Nell Harris Dearing, a resident of Tompkinsville, Kentucky, but who was alleged to be temporarily in Putnam County, Tennessee.

The bill, after alleging the complainant’s qualification as administratrix of her deceased son; his death at Taft, California, on ISeptember 13, 1944, while a member of the United States Army; that no funds had come into her hands as admnistratrix; that some $800' of claims had been filed against her son’s estate; then proceeded to *476 state that on May 17,1941, the defendant had filed a suit for divorce against her son in Monroe County, Kentucky, and had later secured a divorce. A copy of the record in said divorce suit was attached as an exhibit to the bill.

She further alleged in her bill that said divorce decree was void upon a number of stated grounds and prayed that it be so declared.

It was further alleged that the said Frank Allen Harris left a National Service Life Insurance policy in the sum of $10,000, and the complainant averred that, if the aforesaid decree of divorce was set aside, the complainant, named as beneficiary therein at the time of said divorce decree, would be entitled to its proceeds for the reason, as was averred, that “anything the deceased may have done thereafter with regard to a change of the beneficiary would be a nullity and for nothing held.” What her deceased son had done thereafter was not stated. In conclusion the bill prayed that the divorce decree in Kentucky be held void and that complainant either as ad-ministratrix, or in her own right, be held entitled to recover on the policy.

On May 5, 1945-, Mrs. Marian Elizabeth Harris, a resident of California, was allowed to intervene in the cause, and in her intervening petition she averred herself to be the lawful widow of Frank Allen Harris and that a posthumous child had been born to the parties on December 27,1944.

The original complainant answered this intervening petition and denied that the intervening petitioner was th§ lawful widow of her son, and further stated that since filing her original bill the sum of $146 had come into her hands as administratrix.

A few days later the intervening petitioner filed an amended petition in which she averred that Frank Allen *477 Harris, after the Kentucky divorce, married one Callie Mai McKamay and was divorced from said Callie Mai McKamay on December 19, 1942. A copy of the $10,000 insurance policy was attached to her amended petition showing that on May 6, 1943, the assured “cancelled all previous designations of beneficiaries under the above policy” and named the intervening petitioner as principal beneficiary and the complainant, his mother, as contingent beneficiary.

The original defendant, Ruby Nell Harris Dearing, filed an answer to the bill denying that the divorce she secured in Kentucky was void for any of the reasons stated. Thereafter, Marian Elizabeth Harris demurred to the original bill, as amended, on several grounds. The sixth ground of her demurrer was as follows: ‘ ‘ That on the pleadings, together with the amended complaint, shows upon its face that this Court has no jurisdiction to determine whether or not the complainant, Allie Mai Loftis, is the true, legal and lawful beneficiary to the government insurance policy, that being a matter between the government and those claiming under its benefits, and the government not being made a party to this cause the Court certainly would be without jurisdiction to decree upon the same in any wise.”

And on the same day the intervening petitioner, Marian Elizabeth Harris, without waiving her demurrer, filed an answer asserting that Frank Allen Harris was estopped by his subsequent marriages to question the validity of the Kentucky divorce and that complainant was equally estopped. O'n August 17, 1945, the cause was heard before the Chancellor upon the pleadings, stipulation and oral proof. He held the determinative question was whether the Kentucky divorce was void for want of ju: risdiction. He was of the opinion that it was, since the *478 Kentucky statute, Civ. Code Prac. sec. 423, required the complainant in a divorce suit “to allege and prove a residence in Kentucky for one year next before the commencement of the suit ’ ’, and that this had not been shown by the record in that case.

The Chancellor further found that, in addition to his marriage to Ruby Nell Harris, the said Frank Allen Harris had subsequently married Callie Mai McKamay, from whom he was later divorced: and had then married Marian Elizabeth Harris, from whom he was never finally divorced. That while still, married to Marian Elizabeth Harris he had married one Mildred Chapman on May 2, 1944, and that a child had been born of this marriage. Also, that his first wife, Ruby Nell Harris, after securing a divorce in Kentucky, had herself married one Dearing and that a child had been born of this last marriage. He further found there was no fraud in the procurement of the Kentucky divorce, but it was only void for the reasons heretofore stated.

The Chancellor sustained the sixth ground of the demurrer to the bill in the following language: “The United States is not a party to this case and I do not think it proper to decree who is entitled to the proceeds of the insurance policy. The demurrer should be sustained so far as that question is raised, and a decree will be drafted accordingly sustaining the bill insofar as it seeks to have the Kentucky divorce declared void for lack of jurisdiction.”

A decree was drawn in conformity with this opinion. From the adverse portion of said decree Marian Elizabeth-Harris alone appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Chancellor, holding it was only necessary for them to pass upon one of the assignments of error— *479 namely, that the Kentucky divorce was void for the reason given hy the Chancellor.

This Court granted certiorari.

In view of the facts stated, and especially the circumstances that no one appealed from the Chancellor’s action with respect to the sixth ground of the demurrer, we think no one was left with sufficient legal interest to attack the 'validity of the Kentucky divorce decree, as will be hereinafter discussed.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 655, 184 Tenn. 474, 20 Beeler 474, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loftis-v-dearing-tenn-1947.