Whitman v. Whitman

41 So. 2d 22, 206 Miss. 838, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 305
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 41 So. 2d 22 (Whitman v. Whitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitman v. Whitman, 41 So. 2d 22, 206 Miss. 838, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 305 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

Hall, J.

Dorothy Whitman and Ethel Gaines Whitman filed a hill of complaint on October 9, 1947, against Mary Ward Whitman seeking to have Dorothy Whitman adjudged to he the sole heir at law of John H. Whitman, who died intestate on November 30, 1940. The suit is based upon a charge that John H. Whitman and Ethel Gaines Whitman contracted a valid common law marriage in Meridian, Mississippi, about the year 1910 or 1911 and lived and cohabited as husband and wife until after Dorothy was born on June 17, 1914, subsequent to which it is alleged that John contracted a ceremonial marriage with Mary on June 4,1918, without having been divorced from Ethel. Ethel having herself remarried without a divorce, and being thereby precluded from claiming anything for herself as an heir of John, generously waived all her claim in favor of her daughter Dorothy. Mary Whitman filed an answer denying that there had ever been a common law marriage between John and Ethel and denying that Dorothy was an heir of John, and also filed a cross- *840 bill alleging that at the time of his death John was indebted to Meridian Building & Loan Association in the amount of $1,349 principal and interest secured by a deed of trust on the real estate described in the bill, which amount was subsequently paid by Mary, and she claimed a lien upon the said real estate for this amount in the event Dorothy should be adjudged to be an heir of John.

Evidence was offered by both parties, at the conclusion of which the Chancellor entered a decree adjudging the alleged common law marriage to be valid and the ceremonial marriage invalid and declaring Dorothy to be the sole heir of John and the owner of the land in controversy subject to a lien in favor of Mary for the amount aforesaid, from which decree Mary appeals.

John and Mary lived together from the time of their ceremonial marriage on June 4, 1918, to the time of his death in 1940. They had no children, but during this period of time they adopted two children, and appellant contends that these two children were necessary parties to this suit. Appellant’s position would be correct if the decree of adoption had made these children lawful heirs of John and Mary, but the decree did not so adjudicate and consequently they have no interest in John’s estate and are not necessary parties. Leonard v. H. Weston Lumber Co., 107 Miss. 345, 65 So. 459; Fisher v. Browning, 107 Miss. 729, 66 So. 132, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 466; Beaver v. Crump, 76 Miss. 34, 23 So. 432.

Appellant also contends that the trial court erred in adjudicating the alleged common law marriage to be valid, in holding the ceremonial marriage to be invalid, and in decreeing Dorothy to be the sole heir of John Whitman. We are of the opinion that this contention is well taken and that the decree is so completely contrary to the overwhelming weight of the credible evidence and is so manifestly erroneous that it should not be permitted to stand.

Et'hel Gaines testified to support her alleged common law marriage to John, and said that somewhere about *841 1910 or 1911 John “just said we will say we are married and I will call yon Miss Ethel Whitman and you will be my wife, and he came out there and stayed with me”. She claimed that they set up housekeeping and that John lived with her continuously from 1911 to 1917, and that the child, Dorothy, was born June 17, 1914, and yet she admitted that John “had a room down town”. Putting' aside the question whether Ethel was a competent witness to establish this alleged marriage after the death of John, she was able to produce only one other witness to substantiate her claim, and this was a Negro woman who moved away to St. Louis about 1915 and remained there for seventeen years; this woman did not claim to have been a witness to the alleged marriage agreement but merely testified that she went to Ethel’s house frequently before Dorothy was born, and that Ethel and John were living together and holding themselves out as husband and wife. In the whole City of Meridian, with a poulation of some 35,000 people, Ethel was not able to find one other living soul who would say that she and John had lived together.

On the contrary, Mary, who was married to John on June 4, 1918, by a ceremonial wedding duly solemnized under authority of a marriage license in compliance with the laws of this state, produced witness after witness who testified positively that John and Ethel did not live together under the same roof and did not hold themselves out as husband and wife. It was established beyond any sort of question that from 1911 to March 5, 1918, John Whitman maintained a room and resided therein with another Negro man named Jimmie Cramer in a place called “bachelor’s quarters” upstairs over a cafe in the City of Meridian, on which last named date Jimmie went to the army and John continued to live there for about three months longer until he married Mary.

Ethel Gaines’ mother had died prior thereto and in 1910 her father married the second time, and Ethel’s step-mother testified that she never heard of Ethel and *842 John claiming" to be married; sbe lived there in the same community and after Dorothy was born in 1914 she kept Dorothy most of the time until Ethel moved to Texas.

Ethel testified that when John married Mary in 1918 she, herself, moved away to Texas and stayed there for a while and came back to Meridian for a while, and finally went back to Texas permanently in 1924. She further testified that when she learned that John was courting Mary “to keep from keeping up a row I decided to let him and this woman go ’ ’. She also testified that she told John to let Mary alone and he didn’t do it, and "Q. Then what did you do ? A. Let him go. I went to San Antonio in 1918, stayed a while, came back here and stayed around until 1924 and then moved out there.”

In 1925 Ethel married a man named Harbert in San Antonio and lived with him until his death in 1939. In our opinion Ethel’s admitted acts in letting her alleged husband John go through a ceremonial marriage with Mary in 1918, in making no complaint thereat, in moving off to Texas and abandoning her claim to her so-called husband, John, and in contracting a ceremonial marriage in Texas without obtaining a divorce from John, show almost conclusively that there was never any valid common law marriage between John and Ethel. Certain it is that she did not so recognize it when she raised no objection to John’s ceremonial marriage to Mary, and when she herself contracted a ceremonial marriage to another man and lived with him until his death.

Dorothy testified in her own behalf and manifested a most remarkable memory. She claimed that she could remember John and Ethel living together, and John calling Ethel his wife and Ethel calling John her husband. She said that she was four or five years of age when she began to remember these things, and yet it is shown by the record that she was born in June 1914 and that in 1917, when Dorothy was only about three years of age, John was courting Mary and was no longer devoting any attention to Ethel, and Ethel “decided to let him and *843 this woman go. ’ ’ Then Ethel moved off to Texas in 1918 about the time John married Mary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 So. 2d 22, 206 Miss. 838, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitman-v-whitman-miss-1949.