Rhodes v. McAfee

457 S.W.2d 522, 224 Tenn. 495, 1970 Tenn. LEXIS 348
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 457 S.W.2d 522 (Rhodes v. McAfee) 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
Rhodes v. McAfee, 457 S.W.2d 522, 224 Tenn. 495, 1970 Tenn. LEXIS 348 (Tenn. 1970).

Opinion

*496 MR. Chief Justice Dyeb

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case presents the issue of the rights of a widow to homestead and dower in land situated in Tennessee under the following facts, which were stipulated:

B. E. Plunk married Tula Boone Griggs and to this marriage five children were born. At the time of this marriage, Tula Boone Griggs had one daughter by a previous marriage, Gladys Griggs, who, after this marriage, lived in the home with her mother and stepfather, B. E. Plunk. In 1943 this marriage ended in divorce. In November, 1944, B. E. Plunk married Gladys Griggs in Hernando, Mississippi, and to this marriage three children were born. On April 30, 1958, B. E. Plunk died, intestate, survived by his widow, Gladys Griggs Plunk, and the eight children by these two marriages. Gladys Griggs Plunk has since remarried and is now Gladys Plunk McAfee.

The sole issue presented is whether Gladys Plunk McAfee is entitled to homestead and dower in the land *497 of B. E. Plunk, deceased. The chancellor found she was so entitled.

We pretermit the question of whether the laws of Tennessee or the laws of Mississippi should govern in the case, since under the laws of either state we reach the same conclusion.

Volume 1A, Mississippi Code 1942, sec. 458, provides as follows:

See. 458. Unlawful Marriages — What Marriages are Incestuous.
The father shall not marry his son’s widow; a man shall not marry his wife’s daughter, or his wife’s daughter’s daughter, or his wife’s son’s daughter, or the daughter of his brother or sister; and the like prohibition shall extend to females in the same degrees; and all marriages prohibited by this and the preceding section are incestuous and void. (Emphasis supplied).

The marriage of B. E. Plunk to his stepdaughter, Gladys Griggs, under the laws of Mississippi is void by the express words of the statute.

In Tennessee, on this issue, there are two statutes as follows:

Marriage cannot be contracted with a lineal ancestor or descendant, nor the lineal ancestor or descendant of either parent, nor the child of a grandparent, nor the lineal descendants of husband or wife, as the case may be, nor the husband or wife of a parent, or linean descendant. T.C.A. sec. 36-401.
*498 No man shall marry or have carnal knowledge of Ms mother, his father’s sister, his mother’s sister, his sister, his daughter, the daughter of Ms brother or sister, the daughter of his son or daughter, Ms father’s wife, his son’s- wife, Ms wife’s daughter, the daughter of Ms wife’s son or daughter. No woman shall marry or have sexual intercourse with her father, her father’s brother, her mother’s brother, her brother, her son, the son of her brother or sister, the son of her son or daughter, her mother’s husband, her daughter’s husband, her husband’s son, the son of her husband’s son or daughter.. Whoever shall commit any offense mentioned in this section shall be deemed guilty of incest, and shall undergo confinement in the penitentiary for a period not less- than five (5) years nor more than twenty-one (21) years. T.C.A. sec. 39-705.

Under the Tennessee statutes the marriage of B. E. Plunk to his stepdaughter is both proMbited and also made a penal violation. The Tennessee statute is silent on the fate of such marriage; that is, whether such be void or not.

The issue- here is one of first impression in this State-, but the other decisions analogous to tMs issue directs our decision in this case-.

In Pennegar and Haney v. State, 87 Tenn. 244, 10 S.W. 305 (1889), Mrs. Haney was divorced by her husband on the grounds of adultery with Pennegar, and under the statute now carried as T.C.A. sec. 36-831, she was prohibited from marrying Pennegar during the lifetime of her former husband. After the divorce, Haney and Pen-negar were married in Alabama, where their marriage was valid. Upon their return to Tennessee, living opeMy *499 as man and wife, they were indicted for lewdness. They defended on the ground their marriage, valid in Alabama where solemnized, was valid in Tennessee under the universal rule that a marriage valid where solemnized is valid everywhere. In Pennegar this Court accepted this universal rule, but noted there were exceptions. The exception applicable to Pennegar was that such marriages as are prohibited by statute are not valid. This exception is in effect divided into two sections. First, where the statute prohibiting the marriage relates to form, ceremony, or qualification; a marriage solemnized in State B and valid in State B wifi be valid in State A even though the marriage was not in accord with the statutes of State A relating to form, ceremony or qualification ; second, where the statute in State A prohibiting the marriage is expressive of settled public policy, a marriage solemnized in State B and valid in State B will not be valid in State A on the ground such marriage is in conflict with the public policy of the State regarding public morals or good order of society. In Pennegar the Court dealt with the second section regarding statutes prohibiting marriages and notes that since the statute (see. 36-831) did not expressly state the fate of such marriage, it becomes the duty of the court to determine whether the marriage was valid in Tennessee; that is, whether the statute (sec. 36-831) is expressive of settled public policy in Tennessee regarding public morals or good order of society. In Pennegar the Court found this statute expressive of such settled public policy and affirmed the conviction for lewdness.

The case of State v. Bell, 66 Tenn. 9 (1872), is referred to by the Court" in Pennegar v. State, supra. The Bell case involved the marriage of a white person to a Negro *500 solemnized in Mississippi, where such marriages were valid. In Bell this Court found the marriage void in Tennessee. In the Pennegar opinion this Court distinguished Bell from Pennegar on the ground that in Bell there was also a penal statute on the same subject which was not true of the statute involved in Pennegar. The point applicable to the case at bar is that where the same facts which statutorily prohibit the marriage are also made a penal violation, such is indicative of the pronounced conviction of the people of this State regarding such marriages.

The case of Owen v. Brackett, 75 Tenn. 448 (1881), involved a woman divorced by her husband on the ground of adultery with another man. After the divorce she married her paramour. The opinion is short and we presume both divorce and re-marriage took place in Tennessee. She was denied homestead in the estate of her paramour.

The case of Newman v. Kimbrough (Tenn.Ch.App.) 59 S.W. 1061, 52 L.R.A.

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Bluebook (online)
457 S.W.2d 522, 224 Tenn. 495, 1970 Tenn. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-mcafee-tenn-1970.