138 Tenn. 249 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The questions for solution are of law, hut they arise on facts that are most unusual. Indeed, we do not find their counterpart in any reported case.
On October 28,1913, a deed was executed by one Par-row, reciting that he conveyed “unto B. B. Bevins and wife, Elizabeth Bevins, the following real estate [describing it].”
Complainant, Henrietta McKee, is the. daughter and sole heir of Elizabeth, one of the grantees; she having been horn prior to her mother’s meeting or having any aquaintance with B. B. Bevins. The bill is filed by her to recover a one-half undivided interest in the land so conveyed, on the theory that complainant’s mother took thereunder as tenant in common with B. B. Bevins.
One of the defendants is Mary A. Bevins, who intermarried with B. B. Bevins in this State in 1860; and this defendant claims that Elizabeth was, as such grantee, a tenant by entireties. The nature of the estate so vested in the two grantees is the main question to be decided.
It appears that Bevins abandoned his wife, Mary, and went from Tennessee to Georgia, where in 1887 he went through the form of marriage with Elizabeth. In
On learning of the divorce proceedings in Georgia and of the fraud practiced, Mary, in August, 1914, filed- a bill and procured a decree in the chancery court of this State declaring the Georgia decree null because of the vitiating fraud. She later filed a bill for divorce on the ground of desertion and was granted an absolute divorce from Bevins, being awarded as alimony in the proceeding all the right, title, and interest of Bevins in the lands described in the deed. This interest she now insists is the title absolute because of the facts that the grantees, Bevins and Elizabeth, were tenants by entireties and that Elizabeth predeceased Bevins.
Husband and wife, when truly such, are the only persons capable of being tenants by entireties. That estate is not created by a conveyance to a man and a woman who are not under the marital bond, even though
What was the effect of the annulment of the Georgia divorce decree upon the status of Elizabeth to take with Bevins an estate by entireties'? That estate, as seen, could only arise if wifehood on the part of Elizabeth existed. Was' that status Elizabeth’s or Mary’s at the date the deed was executed?. If the latter’s it cannot be that.Elizabeth took as tenant by entireties.
As a result of the setting aside of the decree of divorce, Bevins and Mary stood .in precisely the same matrimonial relation to each other as though no decree of divorce had ever been entered. State v. Whitcomb, 52 Iowa, 85, 2 N. W., 970, 35 Am. Rep., 258; Comstock v. Adams, 23 Kan., 513, 33 Am. Rep., 191; State v. Watson, 20 R. I., 354, 39 Atl., 193, 78 Am. St. Rep., 871; 9 R. C. L., p. 456; 1 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, section 281.
In Vorhees v. Vorhees, 46 N J. Eq., 411, 19 Atl., 172, 19 Am. St. Rep., 404, a case involving fraud in the procurement of the decree of divorce, which decree was abrogated- at the instance of the true wife, it was said touching the relation of that wife and husband:
“The matrimonial bond . . . was just as perfect as it would have been had no attempt ever been made to*253 break it. The marriage, .therefore, which Abraham attempted to contract in September, 1867, was a nullity, and his subsequent cohabitation with the other woman was just as meretricious, as a matter of law, as it would have been, had they consorted together without going, through the form of marriage. ’ ’
When at Mary’s instance the annulment was procured, her status was that of wife ab initio and continuously. Had the deed been executed on its date to Bevins and Mary by name, or “to B. B. Bevins and his wife,” it seems clear that these two would have been tenants by entireties. How, then, could another woman, Elizabeth, in the same period of time, take an estate that inheres in wifehood? And by reason thereof take the entire property, in event she had survived Bevins, as against his lawful'wife? There could not be in existence at the same time two women as potential tenants by the en-tireties along with Bevins. Such tenant was the lawful wife, Mary. Elizabeth, therefore, became a tenant in common, entitled to one-half' undivided interest in the land, and that estate descended to complainant.
But it is urged in behalf of Mary that complainant, standing as heir and in the right of her mother, Elizabeth, cannot be heard to question the validity of the marriage of her mother to Bevins. Complainant is not denying the validity of any existing relation of her mother. The latter is dead. Nor is she making an effort to have annulled her mother’s marriage, nor is she seeking affirmatively to defeat rights which have
This case is clearly to be differentiated from Johnson v. Johnson, 1 Cold. (41 Tenn.), 630, and Smith v. Bank, 115 Tenn., 12.
In our opinion the court of civil appeals in'awarding the entire realty to Mary erred. A decree of reversal in accord with the above rulings will pass.