Porter v. Watson

181 S.E. 680, 51 Ga. App. 848, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 485
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 16, 1935
Docket24549, 24577
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 S.E. 680 (Porter v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Watson, 181 S.E. 680, 51 Ga. App. 848, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 485 (Ga. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MacIntyre, J.

Zilpban Allen "Watson filed ber petition in the court of ordinary of Oconee County against J. Frank Porter, administrator of the estate of Tom Allen, deceased, alleging that she was the next of kin and mother of Tom Allen, that said administrator was in possession of certain moneys belonging to said estate, and that she was entitled to the same. A settlement on accounting was prayed for. Service was acknowledged by the attorney for the administrator, and the twelve months exemption was waived. The defendant answered, that he was in the possession of a certain sum of money, the proceeds of a certain war-risk insurance policy on the life of Tom Allen, and that after payments of debts and costs such sum would be due to be paid to Mamie Allen, the lawful wife of Tom Allen, deceased, she being the sole heir at law of said estate. A trial of this matter before the ordinary resulted in a judgment against the plaintiff, directing that Mamie Allen be paid the proceeds in the hands of the administrator, less the costs and that counsel fees be fixed at a later date. An appeal from this judgment was taken to the superior court. In that court the plaintiff filed an amendment alleging as follows: Tom Allen was inducted into the military service, was sent overseas, and died in France on October 1, 1918. Before his death there were issued to him two policies of war-risk insurance aggregating ten thousand dollars, in which Ed. Creamer was named .as beneficiary. (Tom Allen was the illegitimate child of Z. A. Allen, and Ed. Creamer was the putative father.) Monthly payments were made thereunder to Ed. Creamer until the time of his death on March 31, [850]*8501932. The value of the policies at that time and the amount collected by the administrator of the estate was $4025. At the time of the death of Tom Allen his mother and his widow were the only persons within the permitted class of beneficiaries. Mamie Allen, the widow of Tom Allen, from October 1, 1922, until April 25, 1923, lived in a state of open and notorious illicit cohabitation with a man named Eddie Roland, in Tennessee. By reason of said conduct Mamie Allen forfeited her right to any and all insurance hereinbefore described, if any she had, after October 1, 1922. Mamie Allen married Eddie Roland on April 25, 1923. The insurance policies provided that in the event of the death of Ed. Creamer prior to the payment of the last of the 240 installments due thereon, “the remaining payments of insurance will be paid to those persons within the permitted class of spouse, child, and grandchild, parent, brother, sister of the deceased soldier, as would, under the laws of the State of his residence, be entitled to his personal property in case of intestacy; provided, however, that if the insured designate an alternate beneficiary, the remaining payments will be paid to such person or persons.” The mother became vested with the right to receive the remaining unpaid installments after the death of Ed. Creamer, she being the only person within the permitted class as would, under the law of Georgia, be entitled to the personal property of the deceased in case of intestacy, Mamie Allen having forfeited her right, if any she had, to such fund by reason of her conduct above set out. Certain sections of the Code of State of Tennessee were pleaded in reference to requirements for marriage in that State, the plea setting up that such requirements as to a formal marriage were mandatory and precluded recognition of a common-law marriage. This issue was submitted to a jury, and resulted in a verdict for Z. A. Watson. The administrator’s motion for new trial was overruled, and he excepted.

The evidence disclosed that Tom Allen was the illegitimate son of Zilphan Allen. She afterwards married Mose Watson. Tom Allen married Mamie Allen in 1909. They had no children. Ed. Creamer was the father of Tom Allen. Mamie Allen drew compensation from the government at the rate of $25 per month until April 1, 1923. Mamie Allen and Eddie Roland lived together as man and wife in Chattanooga, Tennessee, from October 1, 1922, to April 25, 1923, at which time they were formally married. The [851]*851court charged the jury as follows: “The only issue of fact for you to determine in this ease is whether or not the widow of the deceased soldier, Mamie Allen Eoland, did in fact live in open and notorious illicit cohabitation with another man. Now I charge you that it is not disputed in this case that she was the wife of the deceased soldier, and under the law of Georgia she would be entitled to receive all of his estate, except for a Federal law, and that Federal law says this: The open and notorious illicit cohabitation of a widow who is a claimant shall operate to terminate her right to compensation or insurance from the commencement of such cohabitation. I say if you believe from the evidence in this case that this Mamie Allen Eoland did live in open and notorious illicit cohabitation with another man after the death of the soldier, then from the time that she started her illicit cohabitation, her illicit, open, and notorious cohabitation with this other person, from that moment she would not be entitled to recover the estate.” The complaint is that this charge was an incorrect statement of the law as applied to the facts of this case; that the right of the widow to share in the fund collected by the administrator is governed by the law of Georgia, and she being the widow, and there being no children, she was the sole person entitled to the fund; that in a suit for accounting and distribution the rights of the heirs are to be determined as of the time of the death of the deceased, and subsequent conduct has no force or effect with reference to the distribution, but the rights are vested as of that date; that the fund belonging to the deceased soldier, derived from the proceeds of the war-risk insurance policy having been paid over by the government to the administrator of the deceased soldier, it became his general estate and was to be administered in accordance with the laws of Georgia; and that the conduct of the wife after the death of her husband did not change the legal status of her inheritable rights.

The court gave other charges which were a reiteration of this same principle, and gave in charge the law of the State of Tennessee which does not recognize common-law marriages as in Georgia, for the purpose of negativing any contention of Mamie Allen that her living with Eddie Eoland in Tennessee and holding herself out as his wife made her his common-law wife. The court's charge on this point was evidently predicated upon the act of Congress of September 1914, as amended by the act of 1918, and em[852]*852bodied in Fed. Stat. Ann. Snpp. 1918, § 22(5), as follows: “By the testimony of two or more witnesses who know that the parties lived as husband and wife, and were recognized as such, and who state how long, within their knowledge, such relation continued; provided, that marriages except such as mentioned in section 4705 of the Bevised Statutes, shall be proved in compensation or insurance cases to be legal marriages according to the law of the place where the parties resided at the time of the marriage or at the time when the right of compensation or insurance accrued; and the open and notorious illicit cohabitation of a widow who is a claimant

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.E. 680, 51 Ga. App. 848, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-watson-gactapp-1935.