Savage v. Savage

4 Tenn. App. 277, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 277 (Savage v. Savage) 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
Savage v. Savage, 4 Tenn. App. 277, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 189 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CROWNOYER, J.

The hill in this cause was filed by the complainants against Lucinda Coen Savage and Anc'e Savage, to set *279 up a resulting trust and beneficial ownership in a bouse and lot in the City of Nashville.

The bill alleged that C. B. Savage died intestate in Davidson county on March 29, 1924 and left the complainants and the defendants, except Lucinda, as his children and only heirs at law, and that he was the owner of a house and lot, subject to a resulting trust in favor of the complainants, in that complainant Andrew Savage had purchased this house and lot for the consideration of $1250, of which he had paid $200 in cash, and had executed his several notes for the remainder of the consideration, and that thereafter Andrew Savage had conveyed this property, without consideration, to the defendants C. B. Savage, with the understanding that the same was to be held in trust for the benefit of the complainants as a home; that Andrew Savage had paid $200 of the consideration, and had agreed that he would go up north and work where he could get better wages, and would help C. B. Savage pay for said property; that under this agreement he had conveyed the property to C. B. Savage, and thereafter furnished him $700 with which to pay for the same; that after complainant Andrew Savage had left his home and had gone off to work, said C. B. Savage took the defendant Lucinda Coen into his home ostensibly as a housekeeper, but in fact had lived with her as husband and wife up until his death; and that, thereafter, she claimed to have married C. B. Savage about ten days before his death; that after his death she took possession of said property claiming to be his widow and had ousted the complainants and refused to let them remain in the home. The bill alleged that she was never legally married' to C. B. Savage and was not his lawful widow, because C. B. Savage had previously been married to one Willie Daniel, from whom he had attempted to secure a divorce, but in fact, said divorce was not legal, as nonresident publication had not been made, and that the defendant Lucinda Coen had previously been married to one Nick Dalton, and had lived with him twelve or fifteen years and separated, and from whom she had never secured a divorce.

The bill also alleged that the defendant Lucinda had procured the services of some other negro who impersonated C. B. Savage, and that she had gone to the town of Franklin, where a marriage license was procured and a marriage ceremony performed, from which it was pretended that she was married to C. B. Savage, but in fact the party who went through the pretended marriage was not C. B. Savage, and that she was now fraudulently claiming to be the widow of C. B. Savage; and for all of these reasons the defendant Lucinda was not entitled to any interest in dr to the possesion of said property.

*280 The bill further alleged that complainant Andrew Savage having paid $900 of the purchase money for said property, and having conveyed the property to his father with an express understanding that the same would be held for him and the other complainants as a home, it was therefore alleged that the complainants were entitled to set up a resulting trust in the property to this extent, and prayed that the rights of the parties be decreed by the court, and for a sale of the same.

The bill was amended by leave of court so as to make the defendant Willie Daniel a party defendant, and it was alleged that she was the real widow of the deceased C. B. Savage.

Willie Daniel filed an answer in which she admitted that she was legally married to C. B'. Savage, and admitted that the divorce proceeding was void because of want of publication of nonresident notice, and because the order for a nonresident publication had not been entered of record on the rule docket; and further alleged that she had agreed to a sale of the property, but only claimed dower therein.

The defendant Lucinda Coen Savage filed an answer, in which she denied that she was ever legally married to Nick Dalton, but alleged that she had gone through a marriage ceremony with him several years ago by which she thought at the time that she had actually married him, and that she had lived with him twelve or fifteen years, but later ascertained that he had not obtained a divorce from his former wife, that he had filed a bill for a divorce at Franklin, Tennessee, but it had been dismissed' for want of prosecution, and upon ascertaining these facts,, although she had five children by him, she left him and they separated, and therefore she was an unmarried woman up until the time she married C. B. 'Savage.

She denied that C. B. Savage was not legally divorced from Willie Daniel, and she denied that she was not the lawful widow ■of C. B. Savage; but alleged that she and C. B. Savage were lawfully married in Franklin on March 18, 1924, and denied that •she had previously thereto lived with C. B. Savage as husband and wife, but alleged that she had lived in his home, as a housekeeper, from the year 1921 up to the date of their marriage.

A large volume of testimony was taken on all the issues, and the Chancellor referred the cause to a special commissioner to take proof and report (1) Whether C. B. Savage and Lucinda ■Coen were legally married, and (2) Whether Andrew Savage had paid any of the purchase money for said property. The special ■commissioner reported, first, that C. B. Savage and Lucinda Coen were legally married on March 18, 1924, and that she was his law *281 ful widow, and second, that Andrew Savage bad paid $500 of the purchase money consideration for said property.

At the hearing the Chancellor confirmed the report of the special commissioner, and decreed that complainant Ahdrew Savage had an equitable lien on said property for the $500 paid by him, and decreed that the property be sold, and out of the proceeds, the Master should pay all costs, then the $500, with interest to Andrew Savage,' and that Lucinda Coen Savage was entitled to homestead and dower out of the balance, for and during her natural life, and that the children of C. B. Savage owned the remainder interest, subject to her homestead and dower rights. The defendant Lucinda Coen Savage prayed and obtained an appeal, and has assigned two errors, which are in substance as follows:

(1) The court erred in overruling defendants’ exceptions to the oral testimony, by which it was sought to prove the eon-versations with the deceased C. B. Savage as to the payment of a part of the purchase money by Andrew Savage, and facts setting up a resulting trust.
(2) The court err.ed in holding that Andrew Savage was entitled to an equitable lien upon said house and lot for the $500 paid by him on the purchase money, and in ordering a sale of the property, as no such question was raised in the pleading and proof. •

As defendant Lucinda has appealed, it is therefore necessary for us to determine whether she is the widow of C. B. Savage.

After an examination of the whole record, we are of the opinion that Lucinda Coen Savage had legally married C. B. Savage on March 18, 1924, and is his lawful widow. The proof shows that Nick Dalton married one Kittie Monner and that they separated.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 277, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savage-v-savage-tennctapp-1927.