Smith v. North Memphis Savings Bank

115 Tenn. 12
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 115 Tenn. 12 (Smith v. North Memphis Savings Bank) 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
Smith v. North Memphis Savings Bank, 115 Tenn. 12 (Tenn. 1905).

Opinion

Mu. Justice Shields

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

Complainant sues the defendant, as the administrator of Joseph Smith, deceased, for the estate of the decedent remaining in its hands after payment of indebtedness and costs and expenses of administration, claiming, the same as widow and sole distributee of the intestate.

The defendant, answering, admits that it is the administrator of Joseph Smith, deceased, and that it has in its hands a fund due to his distributees, but denies that the complainant is his widow and distributee and entitled to the fund. It admits that it ,ha.s no knowledge of any next of kin of the decedent, and that complainant is the only claimant of the estate in his hands. It ex-. presses a willingness to pay over the estate to whomsoever the court may hold to be entitled to it.

The record discloses these facts:

Joseph Smith and the complainant, then Lillie Kimes, both being capable to contract marriage, mutually agreed to live together as man and wife, and in 1878, without license or any ceremony, complainant assumed the name of Lillie Smith and all the duties of a lawful wife. They lived and cohabited together, keeping house as married people, from then until the death of Joseph Smith, in 1903, and during that period recognized and treated each other as husband and wife, and were so recognized and accepted by their friends and acquaintances, and the public generally, in the community where they resided, and it was not known by [16]*16any one but themselves that they bad not procured license and entered into a marriage contract before one of the officers, or a minister of the gospel, authorized by statute to solemnize the rites of matrimony, until after the death of Joseph Smith. It does not appear where they were when they agreed to become husband and wife, but from about that time until the death of Joseph Smith they resided in Memphis, where he engaged in business.

Complainant insists that the agreement made by Joseph Smith and herself in 1878 constituted a valid common-law marriage, and from that time until the death of the decedent she was his wife, and since is his widow, and entitled to all the rights in his estate allowed widows of decedents by the laws of Tennessee.

She further insists that, regardless of whether or not a common-law1' marriage is valid in Tennessee, said Joseph Smith, after having lived with her and recognized and held her out to the world as his wife for more than twenty-five years, would, if living, be estopped from asserting to the contrary in any civil action she might institute to enforce marital rights, and that his personal representative, standing in his place, is estop-ped to controvert her claim as widow of its intestate.

Without stating the evidential facts tending to prove it, further than is already done, we find that there is made out in the record a clear case of common-law marriage between Joseph Smith and the complainant, entered into in 1878, and that they lived and cohabited [17]*17together as man and wife until Ms death in 1903, without the validity of their pretended marital relations being called in question by either of them or others.

The question then presented is whether a common-law marriage contracted in Tennessee is valid?

Marriage under the common law was purely a civil contract. No particular form was required to be observed by parties entering into it. A simple agreement made by a man and woman that they would live together as man and wife constituted a valid marriage.

It is said for the complainant that the common law in its entirety was adopted in this State, and is yet in force, except so far as superseded or modified by affirmative statutes; that the provisions upon this subject contained in our Code (Shannon’s Ed., sections 4189-4200), requiring parties proposing to marry to first procure license and make their contract in the pres- ■ ence of certain officers or a minister of the gospel, are not mandatory; and that valid marriages may now be contracted in the State, either in the common-law form or as prescribed by these provisions.

We are of the opinion that this contention is not tenable. The common law in its entirety was never in force in Tennessee. As a distinctive system of laws it was never adopted by our general assembly or other authority, and obtained in Tennessee only as a part of the laws of North Carolina, in so far as it had been adopted and was in force in that State when this territory was ceded by it to the federal government.

[18]*18The general assembly of North Carolina, by a statute enacted in 1789, declared that such parts of the common law and the acts of the late general assemblies, not inconsistent with and repugnant to the freedom and independence of the people or the form of government then established, should continue in force in that State, which then included Tennessee, and the common law and statutes so declared to be in force, save as repealed and amended by subsequent statutes of North Carolina, were the law of this territory so long as it was a part of that State. Porter v. State, Mart. & Y., 227; Tisdale v. Munroe, 3 Yerg., 320; State v. Miller, 11 Lea, 625.

The cession act, enacted by the general assembly of North Carolina in 1789 and accepted by the congress of the United States April 2, 1790, provided that the laws in force and in use in North Carolina at the time of passing that act should be and continue ,in full force in the territory ceded until the same should be repealed or altered by the legislative authority of the territory. Nwrmely v. Doherty, 1 Yerg., 27.

And by our constitutions adopted in 1796 and 1834 it was provided that all laws then in force in the territory previous to 1796, and those in Tennessee previous to 1834, not inconsistent with those instruments, respectively, should, continue in force until they should expire, be altered, or repealed by the general assembly. Egnew v. Cochrane, 2 Head, 320.

This was the status of the common law and the statutes of North Carolina previous to the cession act, [19]*19in Tennessee, save as modified by subsequent legislation, until the adoption of our Code of 1858, which superseded all other statutory law in this State except as therein specially provided. Code, 1858, section 41 (Shannon’s Code, section 58); State v. Miller, 11 Lea, 626.

North Carolina, early in its history, began to legislate upon the subject of the marriage relation, and prescribed the form and manner in which it should be contracted, and the statutes enacted by its legislature previous to the cession act continued in force in Tennessee, with but slight alterations, until the adoption of the Code in 1858, and are substantially carried into' it. Therefore, in order to fully understand our present statutes upon this important subject, and ascertain the intention of the legislature in enacting them, it is necessary that we examine those of North Carolina passed in the period referred to and of this State passed before 1858. Those of North Carolina and of Tennessee previous to 1829 are reviewed in the able and exhaustive opinion of this court, delivered by Judge Whyte, in the case of Bashaw v. State (1829), 1 Yerg., 177, which involved the precise question now under consideration, and, although quite lengthy, we can do' no better than quote from it. It is there said:

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Bluebook (online)
115 Tenn. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-north-memphis-savings-bank-tenn-1905.