Major v. Major

111 Tenn. 193
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 Tenn. 193 (Major v. Major) 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
Major v. Major, 111 Tenn. 193 (Tenn. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainants are minors, and file this hill by their grandfather, as next friend, to have a division of $150, which has been set apart to the defendant, Josephine Major, as a year’s support for herself and her children. In the trial of the case below the chancellor dismissed complainants’ bill, and denied them any relief. The court of chancery appeals sustained the chancellor, and complainants have appealed to this court, and assigned errors.

The facts as found by the court of chancery appeals are that John H. Major, in 1898, married the defendant Josephine Luttrell. He was then a widower, with four children by a former marriage. Two children were born to them. In the latter part of the summer of 1900, John H. Major, realizing that he was about to die from consumption, sent for his father-in-law, Joseph W. Luttrell, and requested him, when he died, to take back his daughter, the defendant Josephine, and one child, then born, and another soon to be born. Mr. Luttrell consented so to do; Major at the same time made arrangements with his near relatives to take the children by the former marriage and care for them. It is conceded by all the parties that it would have been impossible for the widow and children to brake a living upon [195]*195the small and poor farm where they had resided with their father, and it was thought best to separate them in this manner.

Accordingly, after Major’s death, his widow took their two young children to live at her father’s house, and the other children by the former marriage, having-received a division of all the personal property left by their father, went to live with his relatives selected by him. After this the widow applied to the county court to have a year’s support set aside to her, and a note calling for $150, due from Oliver Major, a brother of J. H. Major, was set apart as such year’s support. This note was given for J. H. Major’s interest in the real estate of his father, Eli Major, the next friend in this, case, and was all the property the father had. The widow brought suit on the note, and recovered judgment before a justice of the peace for Knox county. Execution was stayed, and before the stay had expired Eli Major, the grandfather of the minor children by the first marriage, filed this bill in the chancery court to compel the widow to pay over a portion of this year’s • support for the benefit of these minor stepchildren, and to have an equitable division of the said fund, so that they might receive their portion. This was upon the theory that the widow held the fund in trust for herself and all her children, and that each was entitled to his or her ratable share of it.

The complainants assign as error that the chancery court and the court of chancery appeals refused to set [196]*196apart or to pay over any of this fund for the benefit of the children of the first marriage. None of it has, so far, reached the widow, but it has all the while been tied up by this suit. The court of chancery appeals reports that it was attempted to be shown that the widow abandoned these children and the home, and took with her all of the available property; thus, as complainants charge, despoiling the home. That court reports that this is not true; that the separation was a matter of necessity; that it had been advised by the father before he died; that is would have been impossible for the widow to have remained upon the home place and make a living for herself and her own children, without regard to the stepchildren; and that there was an arrangement and understanding that these children by the first marriage should be taken care of and homes secured for •.them by their father’s relatives.

So when the day for breaking up occurred, the three children by the first marriage were taken to the home of George Oliver Major, brother of the deceased father, with the understanding that Frederick, the youngest, should live with him and the grandfather, and that they two should furnish him with a home. Della, the eldest, was to be and was taken to the home of Mr. Trout, another relative of the husband, where she soon after-wards died. Vi via was to be taken and was taken by William Clapp, an uncle on the father’s side, where she was given and now has a good home. That court reports that the two surviving children, Frederick and Vivia, [197]*197Rave good Romes among poor, but respectable people, relatives of tRe fatRer, and Rave been supported and kept by tRem. TRat court furtRer reports tRat tRe widoAV and Rer two cliildren, tRe cRildren being mere infants, one Wo years Old and tRe otRer a baby twelve days old, were taken to tRe Rome of tRe wife’s fatRer immediately after tRe liusband’s death, and Rave since been supported and kept up by them. TRe court fur-tRer reports that there was a fair and amicable division of the exempt property, that the widow did not desert Rer stepchildren, and that there is no element of bad conduct on Rer part, and no abandonment or desertion or oppression involved in tRe case. TRat court was of the opinion that the year’s support vests absolutely in the widow by the statute when it is assigned, and that she holds it for the benefit of herself and the family. They are furtRer of opinion that the statute contemplates that the family shall be kept together, and that the widow shall be the head of it; and that she shall control the fund for the benefit of herself and family; and that in no case, unless one of gross injustice and wrong by the widow to helpless minor children, should there be any interference by the court with this fund in the hands of the widow. It appears that the father of the defendant Josephine is an old man, poor and feeble, and with but scanty means to support himself, the widow, and her minor children.

In the case of Vincent v. Vincent, 1 Heisk., 333, it appeared that Wo children of the widow by her first mar[198]*198riage- left her Rome, and went to live with one John .Hunt; and the court said that it might be fairly inferred that the children were living with the widow at the time of the death of their father, and that they were taken away from the avMoav Avithout her consent. The court held that under such circumstances it was error to direct any part of the year’s alloAvance to be paid, over to the guardian of the two children. The theory of the statute is that the year’s allowance passes to the AvidoAV, and is under her absolute control for the benefit of herself and her children; and it Avould be error to direct that any part of it should be diverted into the hands of a guardian. The policy of the law is to keep the family together, at least for a year, and to make the Avidow the head of the family. The court further held, in effect, that to allow any part of the fund to be taken from her Avould be to annul the express provisions of the statute, and to declare that the money and effects are not the absolute property of the. widow. Id. 341, 342.

We think that unquestionably these minor children by the first marriage had a right to share in this year’s support so long as they Avere members of the mother’s household, and that she, Avas under legal obligation to keep them as members of her household, if practicable; but if they, or either of them, should leave, or be taken rfrom her custody, through choice or necessity, it Avould be contrary to the spirit of the law to require that a -part of the fund should be set apart for them, and taken away from the control of the mother, and placed in the [199]*199hands of any other person.

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111 Tenn. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/major-v-major-tenn-1903.