IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
November 10, 2010 Session
JEFFERSON COUNTY, TENNESSEE v. MARGARET V. SMITH
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Jefferson County
No. 20,720-II Allen W. Wallace, Sr. Judge
No. E2009-02674-COA-R3-CV-FILED-JULY 26, 2011
Jefferson County, Tennessee filed a petition against Margaret Vance Smith, seeking to
recover possession of the unexecuted marriage license issued to David (“Davy”) Crockett
and Margaret Elder by the county’s clerk in 1805. The action was filed pursuant to Tenn.
Code Ann. § 39-16-504, which prohibits the destruction of, tampering with, or fabrication
of government records. The trial court entered a final judgment against Mrs. Smith, ordering
the immediate return of the marriage license to Jefferson County. Mrs. Smith appealed. We
affirm as modified.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
Affirmed; Case Remanded
J OHN W. M CC LARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which C HARLES D. S USANO,
J R., and D. M ICHAEL S WINEY, JJ., joined.
Kelli L. Thompson, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Margaret V. Smith.
S. Douglas Drinnon and Larry Ray Churchwell, Dandridge, Tennessee, for the appellee,
Jefferson County, Tennessee.
OPINION
I. BACKGROUND
This case originates from the possession by Defendant Margaret Vance Smith of the
purportedly authentic marriage license issued to David Crockett and Margaret Elder1
(“Crockett license”) on October 21, 1805, by Joseph Hamilton (“J. Hamilton”), who served
as the county court clerk for Jefferson County in the early 1800s. It is undisputed that the
Crockett license indicates on its face that it is a document that was issued by the State of
Tennessee, Jefferson County. The marriage license at issue, however, was never executed 2
and was returned to the Jefferson County courthouse, where it remained for approximately
125 to 135 years until its removal in the late 1930s or early 1940s.
Prior to this lawsuit, Mrs. Smith, who lives in Florida, started corresponding with Dr.
Estle Muncy, a member of the Jefferson County Historical Society, in the mid to late 1990s
about the Crockett license. In one of Mrs. Smith’s letters to Dr. Muncy, she describes how
the document came to be in her possession through the initial action of her uncle, Harry
Vance, who served as Jefferson County Trustee from 1917-1926 and Chairman of the
Jefferson County Court into the 1940s:
In the late [19]30’s or early [19]40’s—I’m unsure of the exact year—my
mother, father, and I were in Dandridge [Tennessee] for one of our periodic
summer visits, staying as always at great-aunt Nina (Mrs. Hal S.) Harris’
home. My father, Paul Vance, usually spent time down in town visiting old
friends and his brother, Harry. When Dad returned that day he showed me the
marriage document, saying Uncle Harry had given it to him. Uncle Harry told
Dad they were clearing out the courthouse of a lot of papers because of more
room and space needed and he thought Dad “would get a kick out of having
that particular piece of paper.” Just who “they” might have been, I’ve no idea.
I’ve always assumed it to be people who had offices in the building. The
paper was creased and folded. Dad left it that way, tucked it away in his desk
drawer, where it remained until his death. Some years later, my mother
(Margaret Harris, daughter of Clarence E. and Mollie Lillard Harris) gave it
to me.3
1
There is some uncertainty as to the actual surname of the woman to whom David Crockett was
betrothed. The legibility of Margaret’s last name as it appears on the face of the marriage license has
diminished over time due to the age of the document and a well-worn crease that runs through the surname
of Crockett’s fiancé. It is believed that Margaret’s surname is most likely Elder or Eller. While
acknowledging this uncertainty in the record, we refer to Crockett’s wife-to-be in the subject marriage license
as Margaret Elder.
2
The marriage between Crockett and Elder never took place. According to legend, Crockett’s
betrothed eloped with someone else. Crockett married Polly Findley a year later.
3
Regarding the subject marriage license, Mrs. Smith wrote in a letter dated May 12, 1996: “I’ve had
(continued...)
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In responding to Mrs. Smith’s account of how she acquired the Crockett license, Dr.
Muncy wrote in his letter of July 25, 1995, that he was “sorry to hear that this historically
sensitive document was almost destroyed and even more distressed to learn that other papers
of unknown value were apparently discarded.” Dr. Muncy also wrote in the same letter:
“We understand that you do not wish to consider loaning or donating the Crockett document
to our museum at this time. If in the future you change your mind, we would be most pleased
to have it returned to its county of origin.” Mrs. Smith sent a professionally prepared
photograph of the original Crockett license to Dr. Muncy for display in the Jefferson County
Museum.
In the summer of 1999, Mrs. Smith traveled to Dandridge, Tennessee, to meet with
Dr. Muncy, Rick Farrar, and Lura Hinchey. At that time and during the trial proceedings,
Mr. Farrar was County Clerk for Jefferson County, and Ms. Hinchey, a certified archives
manager in the State of Tennessee, was the Director of the Jefferson County Archives. At
this meeting, Mrs. Smith discussed her possession of the Crockett license and expressed
dismay that a copy of the marriage license was not on display at the Jefferson County
courthouse museum. The affidavits of Mr. Farrar and Ms. Hinchey stated that Mrs. Smith
refused to return the document when both Jefferson County officials advised her that the
Crockett license was a historical Jefferson County document and rightfully belonged to the
County.
Mrs. Smith and the Crockett license were featured on an episode of the television
program Antiques Roadshow that aired on January 9, 2006. The broadcast highlights of the
show provided the following synopsis:
The king of the wild frontier’s first adventure—marriage—was over before it
even started when his first love left him at the altar. Even though Davy
Crockett’s wedding ceremony never took place, the marriage license that had
been filled out was saved, and it eventually found its way into the hands of
Margaret from Tampa who brought it to the ROADSHOW. Margaret’s uncle,
a Davy Crockett fan, had grabbed it when the archives of the Dandridge,
Tennessee courthouse were being cleaned out. They were throwing away all
things that were considered “unimportant,” and since the marriage never
happened, they felt the marriage license had no value whatsoever.
3
(...continued)
this document in my possession since the 1930’s, and it has been researched and authenticated.” This letter
suggests that Mrs. Smith has had possession of the Crockett license since its initial taking and contradicts
her previous account of how she came to possess the document.
-3-
On January 26, 2006, County Attorney Jeffrey L. Jones, who was representing
Jefferson County in this matter, sent a letter to Mrs. Smith, demanding the return of the
Crockett license and informing her that her possession of a “protected public document” was
in violation of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504. Mrs. Smith, through the representation of her
Florida attorney, refused to return the license, stating that it had been “abandoned as trash
by the Clerk of Court after determination that retention of the materials was not required.”
Mrs. Smith has consistently refused to return the Crockett license to the County. In her
deposition of October 28, 2009, Mrs. Smith again asserted: “I refuse to return [the Crockett
license]. It’s going to stay in my possession.”
On February 27, 2006, the County initiated this cause of action against Mrs. Smith to
recover possession of the Crockett license, alleging that Mrs. Smith “continues to
intentionally and unlawfully conceal, possess, and impair the availability of the license” in
violation of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504 and the common law of Tennessee. The County’s
lawsuit further averred that the Crockett license is a governmental record and document
legally belonging to and necessarily maintained by the County for information. In response
to the County’s complaint, Mrs. Smith filed a Motion to Dismiss in March 2006, alleging
insufficient minimum contacts with the State of Tennessee for her to be subject to the
personal jurisdiction of the court.4 The trial court denied the motion.
In May 2008, Mrs. Smith filed an Answer, asserting two affirmative defenses. First,
she alleged “that the County abandoned the item here in question and, therefore, has no right
to its possession.” Second, she also contended “that the document herein at issue is not a
public record and, therefore, the County is not entitled to its possession.” In August 2008,
Mrs. Smith filed a Motion to Amend Answer in order to raise two additional affirmative
defenses in response to information revealed during discovery. During the deposition of Mr.
Farrar in August 2008, it was learned that the Jefferson County Clerk was aware of the fact
that Mrs. Smith had possession of the subject marriage license by 1991 5 and had at no time
prior to the Dandridge meeting of 1999 asked her to return the document. In her amended
Answer, Mrs. Smith alleged that Jefferson County’s cause of action is barred by the statute
of limitations pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-105(3) and that the doctrine of laches
prevents the relief sought by the County.
This matter came to trial on November 19, 2009. Five days later, the trial court
4
In her second affidavit, Mrs. Smith stated that at the Dandridge meeting in the summer of 1999,
no one alleged that the document was a “government record.”
5
Parties in this lawsuit stipulated to the admissibility of a letter dated November 11, 1991, from Mrs.
Smith to Mr. Farrar.
-4-
entered a judgment against Mrs. Smith, setting forth its findings of fact and conclusions of
law in a memorandum opinion. The trial court found that the Crockett license constitutes a
“Jefferson County historical document” and that title to the document belongs to Jefferson
County. The trial court noted:
The explanation given as to how this got out of the records down there, that --
that dog just won’t hunt. . . . [I]t just don’t make sense that you can have all
of the other documents immediately preceding that and subsequent to that,
they’re all still official records, they’re still in the clerk’s office of Jefferson
County.
***
This is the whole argument, someone, and the circumstantial evidence is a
member of Mrs. Smith’s family, took that document. I don’t care if there’s a
building named after him or half of the county is named after him, they took
that document out of a depository of the county and a member of the family
has still got it. It’s Jefferson County’s document. The title is in Jefferson
County, period. She’s got to return it.
The court ordered Mrs. Smith to immediately return the Crockett license to Jefferson County.
The memorandum opinion also stated, in part, that the trial court attributed very little
“probative value to [Mrs. Smith’s] deposition” due to her advanced age and the fact that her
son, who is an attorney, “was kind of coaching her along.” 6
Upon the judgment of the trial court, Mrs. Smith filed a timely notice of appeal but
failed to return the license. On January 4, 2010, the County filed a Motion for Order
Enforcing Judgment for Specific Act and for Contempt. On February 1, 2010, the trial court
entered an order requiring Mrs. Smith to return the Crockett license to Jefferson County on
or before February 7, 2010. Otherwise, Mrs. Smith would be fined five hundred dollars
($500.00) per day after that deadline until the marriage license was returned. On February
12, 2010, Mrs. Smith filed a Motion to Stay Order and Set Bond. The trial court entered an
order granting Mrs. Smith’s Motion to Stay but under the following terms and conditions:
(1) that the marriage license at issue be placed with the clerk of the Circuit Court of Jefferson
County, Tennessee; (2) that the clerk transfer the license in accordance with the order of the
court upon conclusion of the appellate process; and (3) that the fine established by the
6
Mrs. Smith was 89 or 90 years old when she was deposed on October 28, 2009. She did not attend
the trial proceedings because of poor health and mobility.
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February 1, 2010 order remain in effect until the subject license is placed with the specified
court officer. Mrs. Smith returned the Crockett license, and an acknowledgment of receipt
of the license was filed on February 19, 2010.
II. ISSUES
Mrs. Smith raises nine issues for appellate review, which we restate as follows:
1. Whether Jefferson County had standing to file an action to recover the
Crockett license pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504.
2. Whether the Crockett license was a governmental or public record.
3. Whether Jefferson County met its burden of proof that the Crockett license
was unlawfully removed from its possession or that Mrs. Smith wrongfully
converted it.
4. Whether the evidence regarding the records maintained by Jefferson County
around the early 1800s demonstrated that the County did not abandon or
discard any records.
5. Whether the trial court erred in making findings regarding David Crockett
and his historical significance which were not based on any evidence admitted
at trial but based purportedly on the trial court’s personal knowledge.
6. Whether the trial court erred in refusing to consider the recorded
recollection of Mrs. Smith given on the television program, Antiques
Roadshow, or from her letters to Jefferson County officials as evidence of the
manner in which Mrs. Smith acquired ownership of the Crockett license.
7. Whether the trial court erred in allowing a criminal statute, specifically
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504, to form the basis of a civil cause of action and
to apply retroactively to take personal property from a private citizen in
violation of the Tennessee Constitution.
8. Whether the trial court properly admitted into evidence the testimony of
Jefferson County archivist Lura Hinchey.
9. Whether the trial court erred in requiring Mrs. Smith to immediately return
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the Crockett license, notwithstanding her appeal, and subjecting her to
penalties in the amount of $6,000.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The matter before us on appeal was adjudicated without a jury. We therefore review
the decision de novo upon the record of the proceedings with a presumption of correctness
as to the factual findings of the trial court. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Union Carbide Corp.
v. Huddleston, 854 S.W.2d 87, 91 (Tenn. 1993). We impute no presumption of correctness
to the trial court’s conclusions of law. Rutherford County v. Wilson, 121 S.W.3d 591, 595
(Tenn. 2003); Campbell v. Florida Steel Corp., 919 S.W.2d 26, 35 (Tenn. 1996). The
judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, absent errors of law, unless the preponderance
of the evidence is against those findings. Bogan v. Bogan, 60 S.W.3d 721, 727 (Tenn. 2001).
In cases where the trial court’s findings of fact depend on a determination of witness
credibility, we will not reevaluate that assessment in the absence of clear and convincing
evidence to the contrary. Jones v. Garrett, 92 S.W.3d 835, 838 (Tenn. 2002); Newman v.
Woodard, 288 S.W.3d 862, 865 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).
IV. DISCUSSION
A.
Mrs. Smith asserts that the trial court incorrectly found that Jefferson County had
standing to initiate a cause of action to recover the subject marriage license pursuant to Tenn.
Code Ann. § 39-16-504. Mrs. Smith orally raised the issue of whether the County constituted
the proper party for the first time at trial. In her brief, Mrs. Smith relies on the plain language
of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504, which states:
(a) It is unlawful for any person to:
(1) Knowingly make a false entry in, or false alteration of, a governmental
record;
(2) Make, present, or use any record, document or thing with knowledge of its
falsity and with intent that it will be taken as a genuine governmental record;
or
(3) Intentionally and unlawfully destroy, conceal, remove or otherwise impair
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the verity, legibility or availability of a governmental record.
(b) A violation of this section is a Class A misdemeanor.
(c)(1) Upon notification from any public official having custody of
government records, including those created by municipal, county or state
government agencies, that records have been unlawfully removed from a
government records office, appropriate legal action may be taken by the city
attorney, county attorney or attorney general, as the case may be, to obtain
a warrant for possession of any public records which have been unlawfully
transferred or removed in violation of this section.
(2) The records shall be returned to the office of origin immediately after
safeguards are established to prevent further recurrence of unlawful transfer
or removal.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504 (2010).
Relying upon the foregoing emphasized statutory language, Mrs. Smith argues that
Jefferson County brought the present action, instead of the county attorney, in contravention
of the “clear language of the statute,” and as a result, the trial court erred in not dismissing
Jefferson County’s complaint. The first issue raised on appeal is therefore a question of
statutory construction. To resolve this issue, our task is to interpret Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-
16-504(c)(1) to determine whether Jefferson County is a proper party to this lawsuit under
the meaning of the statutory provision.
The Supreme Court of Tennessee has recapitulated the primary principles of statutory
construction as follows:
[T]here are a number of principles of statutory construction, among which is
the most basic rule of statutory construction: to ascertain and give effect to the
intention and purpose of the legislature. However, the court must ascertain the
intent without unduly restricting or expanding the statute’s coverage beyond
its intended scope. The legislative intent and purpose are to be ascertained
primarily from the natural and ordinary meaning of the statutory language,
without a forced or subtle interpretation that would limit or extend the statute’s
application.
Mooney v. Sneed, 30 S.W.3d 304, 306 (Tenn. 2000) (citations and internal quotation marks
omitted).
-8-
In articulating the basic principles of statutory interpretation, our Supreme Court also
has stated that the courts are not permitted “to alter or amend a statute.” Gleaves v. Checker
Cab Transit Corp., Inc., 15 S.W.3d 799, 803 (Tenn. 2000). “The reasonableness of a statute
may not be questioned by a court, and a court may not substitute its own policy judgments
for those of the legislature.” Mooney, 30 S.W.3d at 306 (citing Gleaves, 15 S.W.3d at 803).
“It is presumed that the Legislature in enacting [a] statute did not intend an absurdity, and
such a result will be avoided if the terms of the statute admit of it by a reasonable
construction.” Epstein v. State, 366 S.W.2d 914, 918 (Tenn. 1963). Finally, “courts must
‘presume that the legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute what it
says there.’” Gleaves, 15 S.W.3d at 803 (quoting BellSouth Telecomm., Inc. v. Greer, 972
S.W.2d 663, 673 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997)).
In the instant case, Mrs. Smith contends that the plain language of Tenn. Code Ann.
§ 39-16-504(c)(1) unambiguously states that the county attorney—not Jefferson County
itself—is the proper party to the present lawsuit. We reject Mrs. Smith’s argument to limit
the application of § 39-16-504(c)(1). When the aforementioned principles of statutory
construction are applied to the language of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504(c)(1), we conclude
that the more reasonable construction is that the provision merely authorizes the city attorney,
county attorney, or attorney general to pursue legal action in order “to obtain a warrant for
possession of any public records which have been unlawfully transferred or removed . . . .”
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504(c)(1). Clearly, the phrase—“appropriate legal action may be
taken by the city attorney, county attorney or attorney general”—does not mandate that
counsel for a governmental entity be designated the real party in interest under circumstances
where a county or city seeks to recover possession of their own property. We agree with
Jefferson County when it stated in its brief that “[t]o require counsel for [governmental]
entities to become the real party in interest, rather than their clients and owners of the
affected property, would result in [an] absurdity.”
To support her argument, Mrs. Smith relies on Tennessee’s ouster statutes, which
empower “district attorneys general, county attorneys, and city attorneys, within their
respective jurisdictions,” to prosecute any public official guilty of misconduct. Tenn. Code
Ann. § 8-47-103 (2002). Mrs. Smith’s brief specifically cites § 8-47-103, which provides:
It is the duty of the attorney general and reporter, the district attorneys general,
county attorneys, and city attorneys, within their respective jurisdictions, upon
notice being received by them in writing that any officer herein mentioned has
been guilty of any of the acts, omissions, or offenses set out in § 8-47-101,
forthwith to investigate such complaint; and, if upon investigation such person
finds that there is reasonable cause for such complaint, such person shall
forthwith institute proceedings in the circuit, chancery, or criminal court of the
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proper county, to oust such officer from office.
Tenn. Code Ann. § 8-47-103 (2010).
Mrs. Smith’s reliance on the ouster statutes is misguided, because such statutes relate
to instituting ouster proceedings and are not relevant to her contention that county attorneys
are the proper parties in interest in a lawsuit to recover county property. Tennessee’s ouster
statutes also require that a “petition or complaint shall be in the name of the state and may
be filed upon the relation” of the attorney general and reporter, district attorney general,
county attorney, or city attorney. Tenn. Code Ann. § 8-47-110. Section 39-16-504, which
is at issue in the present case, does not have such a requirement. Similarly, we find Jordan
v. State ex rel. Williams, 397 S.W.2d 383, 396 (Tenn. 1965), which Mrs. Smith cites in
support of her argument, to not be on point.
Finally, Mrs. Smith’s assertion that the legislative history of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-
16-504 “makes it clear that the legislature intend[ed] such actions to be brought in the name
of the county attorney” is simply erroneous. The legislative debate over House Bill 1935
indicates that the statute was intended to “allow[] the city attorney or county attorney to
retrieve public records which are now being sold at flea markets, in shopper magazines[;] it
just gives them an avenue to go and retrieve these records and put them in a proper place.”
This is not the same as requiring that county or city attorneys initiate actions to recover
property belonging to a county or city. As Jefferson County points out in its brief, the
following excerpts from the legislative debate on HB 1935 support the legislature’s intention
that “the respective entities are the proper parties to bring suits to recover their documents.”
And I understand what you’re saying is that if it’s a case of the Historical
Commission, a non-profit entity, that owns something, why would they not like
any other person who owns property and has somebody take it have a right to
replevin it.
They have rights to recover possession of the property. I think replevins went
out a few years ago under the new rules or they’re the old rules now, but they
were new rules at the time.
In our opinion, Mrs. Smith’s interpretation of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504
represents a strained and narrow construction that is not justified by the legislative history,
facts, or the law. This issue, accordingly, lacks merit.
B.
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Mrs. Smith further complains that the trial court erred in finding that the Crockett
license was a governmental or public record. Section 39-16-504 of the Tennessee Code
provides, in relevant part, that it is unlawful for a person to “[i]ntentionally and unlawfully
destroy, conceal, remove or otherwise impair the verity, legibility or availability of a
governmental record.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504(a)(3) (2010). In order to resolve the
issue, our task is to determine whether the subject marriage license is a governmental record
within the meaning of § 39-16-504.
The terms “government” and “governmental record” are defined, in relevant part, in
§ 39-11-106:
(14) “Government” means the state or any political subdivision of the state,
and includes any branch or agency of the state, a county, municipality or other
political subdivision;
(15) “Governmental record” means anything:
(A) Belonging to, received or kept by the government for information; or
(B) Required by law to be kept by others for information of the
government[.]
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-106(a)(14)-(15) (2010).
Between 1715 and 1820, statutes and laws established uniform rules to be observed
in solemnizing the rites of matrimony. As the County quoted in its brief, one statute in
particular authorized the county clerk to grant marriage licenses:
And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the clerk of each
county is hereby authorised and empowered to grant marriage licences to any
person applying for the same, first taking bond, . . . which bond aforesaid shall
be taken, and licence granted, by the clerk of the county in which the feme
resides, which licence shall be directed to any authorised minister or justice of
the peace . . . .7
According to the laws in effect in Tennessee in 1815, the proper governmental
procedure was for the clerk of the county court to file endorsed marriage licenses that had
7
Laws of the State of Tennessee, Including Those of North Carolina Now in Force in this State From
the Year 1715 to the Year 1820, Inclusive, Ch. 7, § 3, at 227-28.
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been returned in the office of the specified county official:
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF
TENNESSEE, That where any minister of the Gospel or justice of the peace
in this state, shall solemnize the rites of matrimony, it shall be the duty of said
minister of the Gospel, or justice of the peace to endorse on the back of said
licence, the time of said marriage, and sign his name thereto, and return said
licence to the clerk of the county court, within six months thereafter, whose
duty it shall be to file said licence in his office, which said licence and
certificate shall be considered as competent evidence of the said marriage; any
law, usage or custom to the contrary notwithstanding. Oct. 10, 1815.8
The above-quoted statutes were in effect in Tennessee around the time when the
Crockett license was issued in 1805 and clearly gave the clerk of each Tennessee county the
authority to grant marriage licenses. Furthermore, as early as 1815, the county court clerk
had a duty to retain all endorsed and returned marriage licenses in the clerk’s office. In the
present case, the parties do not dispute that the Crockett license indicates on its face that it
was issued in Jefferson County, Tennessee, by J. Hamilton, the county court clerk at the time.
It is also undisputed that Jefferson County stored and maintained the Crockett license for
approximately 125 years until it was purportedly removed from the courthouse in the 1930s
or 1940s by Harry Vance, uncle of Mrs. Smith. Jefferson County is clearly a government
entity within the meaning of Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-106(a)(14). We also conclude that
pursuant to § 39-11-106, the Crockett license falls within the ambit of the definition of a
governmental record as anything “[b]elonging to, received or kept by the government for
information.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-11-106(a)(15)(A) (2010). We decline to address
whether the 1989 statutory definition of a “governmental record” has retroactive effect and
is therefore applicable in this case, because the issue was not raised on appeal. Even if the
statutory definition does not have retroactive effect, the County clearly maintained the
document for many years, and the marriage license met the common law definition of a
governmental record, because a public official of Jefferson County, by authority of law,
created the Crockett license. Finally, there is no question that, in the words of the trial court,
the Crockett license is a “Jefferson County historical document,” given the reputation of
David Crockett as a 19th-century American folk hero.
Mrs. Smith argues in her brief that Jefferson County did not have a legal duty to issue
marriage licenses at the time the Crockett license was issued. Furthermore, citing Acts
Passed at The First Session of the Twenty-Second General Assembly of the State of
Tennessee 1837-8, she asserts that the County’s obligation to issue marriage licenses and
8
Acts of Tennessee, 11th General Assembly, 1815, Ch. 47, § 1, at 52.
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maintain a record of returned licenses did not exist prior to 1838. However, Mrs. Smith
provides no discussion or evidence of what the relevant state of the law was around the time
the Crockett license was actually issued and concedes that county clerks had a statutory duty
to issue and retain marriage licenses when the subject marriage license was removed from
the Jefferson County courthouse in the 1930s or 1940s.
Ms. Hinchey, director of the Jefferson County archives,9 testified as to the County’s
archival policy regarding both executed and unexecuted marriage licenses on direct
examination.
Q And have you reviewed the various marriage documents
maintained by Jefferson County in the early 1800s?
A Yes.
Q And are you familiar with these records?
A Yes.
Q Now, in the 1800s from the records you’ve been able to review,
if a marriage license was issued, it was endorsed and executed
and then returned to the clerk. What happened?
A It was signed by the – by the person initiating and stored by the
clerk.
Q What was the – was there an entry made in the marriage record
book?
A Yes. Yes. The minister would sign the date and sometimes
where the marriage took place.
Q And have you made a copy of a marriage license just by way of
example of a marriage license that was issued and executed and
returned?
A Yes.
9
Jefferson County archivist is responsible for organizing, indexing, and storing the original county
records.
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Q And is this also one you have the original of?
A I have the original. I don’t know if we brought that one.10
***
Q . . . If a license was issued by the clerk and it was not returned,
do you know what was – what notation was made in the
marriage record book?
A No return.
Q And if a marriage license was actually issued, was not endorsed
or executed by a minister and returned to the county clerk, what
was done?
(Opposing counsel objected at this point. Trial court overruled objection.)
A Still no return.
Q What was done with the license?
A Oh, it was kept if it was returned back to the clerk.
Q Now, have you made copies of some of the marriage licenses in
the early 1800s that were issued by the Jefferson County clerk
that were not endorsed and executed but were returned?
A Yes.
The trial testimony of Ms. Hinchey established that Jefferson County had a policy of
keeping unexecuted marriage licenses that were returned to the county clerk during the
relevant time period. Ms. Hinchey’s testimony was confirmed by Mr. Farrar, Jefferson
County Clerk, who described the current procedure regarding the issuance and return of
unendorsed marriage licenses as being very similar to the protocol followed in the early
10
As an illustration of the type of records kept and maintained by the County during the relevant
period (i.e., the early 1800s), Ms. Hinchey presented the marriage license issued to Richard Graves and
Casandra Riggs on September 17, 1805, by Joseph Hamilton. The trial judge overruled the objections of
opposing counsel as to the relevancy of this testimony, stating that “[i]t just gives me a picture of how they
keep records in the clerk’s office.”
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1800s. Mr. Farrar further testified that unexecuted marriage licenses which are returned to
his office are “county property.” Based on the evidence presented at trial, we do not find
Mrs. Smith’s reference to the statutes passed by Tennessee’s 22nd General Assembly in 1837
to be dispositive that the Crockett license did not constitute a governmental record at the time
of its issuance.
Next, Mrs. Smith contends that even if the Jefferson County clerk had a statutory duty
to issue marriage licenses at the relevant time period, David Crockett “had no legal duty to
return [the license] to the clerk in the event the marriage did not occur.” Mrs. Smith,
therefore, concludes that the Crockett license cannot be a public or governmental record. Her
point is a moot one, however, because the unexecuted Crockett license was, in fact, returned
to the county clerk and maintained by the County for approximately 125 years before it was
removed in the 1930s or 1940s.
Finally, Mrs. Smith raises a Virginia case in support of her contention that the
Crockett license is not the rightful property of the County. In State of Maine v. Adams, 672
S.E.2d 862 (Va. 2009), the State of Maine brought an action on behalf of the Town of
Wiscasset seeking to quiet title to a printed copy of the Declaration of Independence that was
purchased by a Virginia resident. The Adams court upheld the circuit court’s finding that the
printed copy of the Declaration of Independence was not a common law public record.
Adams, 672 S.E.2d at 862. This case, however, is distinguished from the case at bar, and
therefore, Mrs. Smith’s reliance on it is completely misplaced. First and foremost, E.
Russell, a private printer, was commissioned to print copies of the Declaration in July 1776
for widespread distribution as “broadsides.” Id. at 864. As the Virginia Supreme Court
observed, Russell was a private printer, not an authorized public officer who was executing
the duties of public office at the time he printed the broadsides. Id. at 867. Second, Maine
failed to establish that Wiscasset kept the printed copy as a town record. For the foregoing
reasons, the holding in the Adams case is neither binding nor persuasive on our decision in
the present case.
In view of the trial court’s acceptance of Ms. Hinchey’s testimony and the fact that
the Crockett license was issued by an authorized county court clerk for Jefferson County, we
feel compelled to conclude that the trial court did not err in finding the Crockett license to
be a governmental record.
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C.
The third issue raised by Mrs. Smith is that the trial court erred in finding that the
County had met its burden of proof in demonstrating that the Crockett license had been
wrongfully removed or converted. We disagree.
We have reviewed the entire record, and it is our conclusion that the preponderance
of the evidence weighs in favor of the County’s assertion that the Crockett license was
wrongfully removed from the Jefferson County courthouse by a relative of Mrs. Smith’s and
that she has repeatedly and intentionally impaired the availability of the County’s document.
The record indicates that Mrs. Smith has provided inconsistent accounts of how she came to
possess the marriage license at issue. In a letter dated May 15, 1996, to Dr. Muncy, Mrs.
Smith stated that she has “had this document in [her] possession since the 1930s, and it has
been researched and authenticated.” In another account, Mrs. Smith related that her uncle,
Harry Vance, who was a “Davy Crockett enthusiast” and Chairman of the Jefferson County
Court at the time, had removed the Crockett license from the Jefferson County courthouse
when papers were being cleared out to create more space and had given the document to his
brother, Paul Vance, father of Mrs. Smith. It was years later, after Paul Vance had passed
away, that Mrs. Smith acquired the Crockett license. Finally, Mrs. Smith testified at her
deposition that certain documents stored in the Jefferson County courthouse were being
discarded and that her father, Paul Vance, took the marriage license because of his interest
in Davy Crockett. Because of this inconsistency and the fact that the Vance brothers are
deceased, we agree with the trial court in assigning very little probative value to Mrs. Smith’s
account of how she acquired the Crockett license.
What can be said of the evidence is that the County offered proof showing that at
around the time the Crockett license was issued, the County’s procedure was to file returned,
but unexecuted marriage licenses, in the archives. As Mrs. Smith pointed out in her brief,
the County introduced into evidence copies of 39 out of 167 “No Return” licenses, which
were issued by the Jefferson County Clerk before, during, and after the relevant year, 1805,
and then stored by the County, including two documents of considerably less historical
significance than the Crockett license (i.e., a receipt for two fox pelts and a stud horse
license). Furthermore, the County maintained the Crockett license in its archives for
approximately 125 years prior to the document’s removal. Mrs. Smith has offered no
evidence to rebut the County’s evidence and no evidence from which we may infer a
different cause other than wrongful or unlawful conversion as to how the Crockett license
ended up in Mrs. Smith’s possession.
It is also evident from the record that the County clearly established Mrs. Smith’s
intention to impair the availability of the Crockett license, an official Jefferson County
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document. First, in a letter to Mrs. Smith dated July 25, 1995, Dr. Muncy confirmed her
desire not to donate the original Crockett license to the Jefferson County museum. Second,
the affidavits of Mr. Farrar and Ms. Hinchey state that when these County officials told Mrs.
Smith at their 1999 meeting that the Crockett license rightfully belonged to the County and
should be returned, Mrs. Smith flatly refused. Third, when asked at her deposition whether
she refused to return the original Crockett license to the County, Mrs. Smith testified, “Yeah.
I refuse to return it. It’s going to stay in my possession.” Mrs. Smith’s daughter confirmed
her mother’s intention to retain the subject license.
Based on the foregoing analysis of the record, the trial court properly determined that
the County had carried its burden of proof in showing by a preponderance of the evidence
that the Crockett license was more than likely unlawfully removed from the possession of
Jefferson County.
D.
Mrs. Smith further asserts that the trial court erred in finding the records maintained
by Jefferson County around the early 1800s demonstrated that the County did not abandon
or discard any records. In her answer to the complaint, Mrs. Smith raised the affirmative
defense that the County abandoned the Crockett license at issue and therefore, forfeited its
right to possession.
Abandonment of property is “generally defined as the voluntary relinquishment
thereof by its owner or holder, with the intention of terminating his or her ownership,
possession, and control, and without vesting ownership in any other person.” 1 C.J.S.,
Abandonment § 1 (2011); see also Hays v. Montague, 860 S.W.2d 403, 408 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1993). “[T]he burden of proving abandonment is upon the party asserting it. The
abandonment must be established by a clear and unequivocal evidence of decisive and
conclusive acts.” Jacoway v. Palmer, 753 S.W.2d 675, 679 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987). Common
law abandonment has two primary elements: the “intention to abandon,” which is considered
the first and paramount inquiry, and the “external act by which the intention is carried into
effect.” Cottrell v. Daniel, 205 S.W.2d 973, 975 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1947).
In her brief, Mrs. Smith opined at great length about the fact that the County admitted
into evidence only 39 of the 167 licenses marked “no return” in the marriage registry book
for the relevant time period. As she reasoned, “[t]he County’s failure to introduce [the other
‘no return’ licenses] at trial is evidence that the County discarded them.” We disagree. The
County’s admission into evidence of only a subset of “no return” licenses does not constitute
a positive showing by Mrs. Smith of an intention to abandon or discard the Crockett license.
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Mrs. Smith has not carried the burden of proof in affirmatively showing that the County
voluntarily intended to abandon or discard the subject license and acted accordingly. In
general, “a rebuttable presumption of ownership arises from possession of property.” 73
C.J.S. Property § 70 (updated June 2011); see also Induction Technologies, Inc. v. Justus,
295 S.W.3d 264, 266 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008). Our review of the record in this case convinces
us that there is sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption that Mrs. Smith is the
rightful owner of the Crockett license. The County had kept and maintained the Crockett
license for approximately 125 years. Additionally, through trial testimony, the County
established that it was customary in the early 1800s and is still customary for the county clerk
of Jefferson County to keep any returned marriage licenses that have not been endorsed. As
counsel for Jefferson County astutely observed, “[i]t defies logic that Jefferson County would
keep and store a stud horse license (1859) and fox pelt receipt (1860) but not the marriage
license of David Crockett, hero of the Alamo and arguably the greatest frontiersman in
United States history.” We find no evidence that the County intended to abandon or discard
the Crockett license. Mrs. Smith’s argument on this issue is denied as moot.
E.
In the fifth issue on appeal, Mrs. Smith contends that the trial court erred in making
findings regarding David Crockett and his historical significance which were not based on
any evidence admitted at trial but purportedly based on the trial court’s personal knowledge.
Before we can determine whether the trial court erred in taking judicial notice of Crockett’s
historical significance and notoriety, we must first turn to Tenn. R. Evid. 201 for guidance.
For a trial court to take judicial notice of an “adjudicative fact” that “fact must be one
not subject to reasonable dispute, in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial
jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to
sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Tenn. R. Evid. 201(b).
Furthermore, judicial notice is discretionary and may be taken by the trial court whether
requested or not. Tenn. R. Evid. 201(c). As we have stated, judicial notice provides “a
method of dispensing with the necessity for taking proof.” Counts v. Bryan, 182 S.W.3d 288,
291 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005) (quoting State ex rel. Schmittou v. City of Nashville, 345 S.W.2d
874, 883 (Tenn. 1961)). “Judicial notice is generally defined as a judge’s utilization of
knowledge other than that derived from formal evidentiary proof in the pending case.” Id.
(quoting 1 J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Weinstein’s Evidence, note 3, ¶ 200[01] at 200-02
(1991)).
Tenn. R. Evid. 201(a) expressly states that the “rule governs only judicial notice of
adjudicative facts.” Various sources have endeavored to define what is meant by
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“adjudicative facts” as contemplated in Tenn. R. Evid. 201. Generally, judicial notice of
adjudicative facts “refers to the recognition of facts that are relevant to a specific lawsuit.”
Counts, 182 S.W.3d at 292 (citing R. Banks, Jr. and E. Collins, Judicial Notice in Tennessee,
21 Mem. St. U.L.Rev. 431, 434 (1991)). As another source has explained, “[a]djudicative
facts help to ‘explain who did what, when, how, and with what motive and intent.’” Id.
(quoting N. Cohen, S. Sheppeard & D. Paine, Tennessee Law of Evidence § 2.01[3] (4th ed.
2000)). Additionally, trial courts may take notice of adjudicative facts in the form of books
and reports, provided that such “facts” are not subject to reasonable dispute pursuant to Tenn.
R. Evid. 201(b). Id. “Historical facts, such as who, what or when, are more likely to satisfy
this [criterion], as distinguished from narrative explanations or opinions, which are more
likely to be subject to dispute.” Id. at 293 (citing 21 Mem. St. U.L.Rev. 431, 433-34)).
Tennessee courts have taken judicial notice of a variety of historical facts. See, e.g., Wood
v. Cooper, 49 Tenn. 441, 1871 WL 3524, at *4 (Tenn. 1870) (“As part of the history of the
United States, and of the late civil war, we take judicial notice of the fact that Missouri had
representatives in the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States, prior to December,
1861, and was admitted into the Southern Confederacy at the fourth session of the Congress
of the Confederate States of America in December, 1861, and had Senators and
Representatives in the Congress of the Confederate States until the close of the war . . . .”);
Henly v. Franklin, 43 Tenn. 472, 1866 WL 1843, at *2 (Tenn. 1866) (“We have never
recognized the power of the Confederate States to coin money or issue Treasury notes. But,
as a fact it is well known that they did issue Treasury notes, which for a time within the
revolted States, served the purposes of money, and exchanged property from hand to hand.”);
Poole v. First Nat. Bank of Smyrna, 196 S.W.2d 563, 571 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1946) (“The facts
as to the economic depression in the 1930’s are a part of the history of the country of which
the courts take judicial notice.”).
The issue before us pertains to the trial court taking notice of historical facts, as
distinguished from law. In the instant case, the trial court, in its memorandum opinion, made
reference on two occasions to historical facts regarding David Crockett and his historical
significance. First, the trial judge noted seeing “a statue of Davy Crockett in the middle of
the courthouse square” recently in a West Tennessee county. Second, the court concluded
that Paul and Harry Vance “had plenty [of] time to know the status of Davy Crockett in
history” when the Crockett license was removed in the 1930s or 1940s, because Crockett
“had been a congressman for that district,” and after that, he “went to the Alamo and lost his
life.” “So he was already a historical figure 125 years later.” The judicially noticed facts that
David Crockett served as a congressman from the 12th congressional district in West
Tennessee and was killed at the Battle of the Alamo are undisputed and readily verified by
checking reliable, accurate sources of history. Therefore, the requirements for judicial notice
of an “adjudicative fact” under Tenn. R. Evid. 201(b) are met in this instance.
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Questioning the historical prominence of David Crockett around the time the license
was taken, Mrs. Smith argues in her brief that Crockett was “largely forgotten” by the late
19th century but his legend was reborn when Walt Disney made a 1950s television series
about the Tennessean. Assuming arguendo that Mrs. Smith is correct, she has stated in the
record that her uncle, Harry Vance, was an “admirer of David Crockett” and a “David
Crockett enthusiast” and that her father, Paul Vance, had an interest in David Crockett.
Based on her own admission, the two individuals primarily responsible for removing the
subject marriage license from the Jefferson County courthouse in the 1930s or 1940s were
certainly aware of David Crockett and most likely recognized his historical significance.
Accordingly, we reject this issue as lacking merit.
F.
Next, Mrs. Smith argues the trial court erred in refusing to consider the recorded
recollection of Mrs. Smith given on the television program, Antiques Roadshow, or from her
letters to Jefferson County officials as evidence of the manner in which she acquired
ownership of the Crockett license, because they fall within several hearsay exceptions. In
her brief, Mrs. Smith argues that the trial court should have allowed the interview transcript
from the Antiques Roadshow episode of January 9, 2006, to be read into evidence as a
“recorded recollection” of Mrs. Smith’s knowledge of how she acquired the Crockett license.
Testimony based on hearsay is inadmissible in trial proceedings unless it falls within
one of the recognized exceptions to the hearsay rule. Tenn. R. Evid. 802; Mitchell v.
Archibald, 971 S.W.2d 25, 28 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). Mrs. Smith claims that the Antiques
Roadshow transcript was admissible under the recorded recollections exception to hearsay
rule provided in Tenn. R. Evid. 803(5), which states:
A memorandum or record concerning a matter about which a witness once had
knowledge but now has insufficient recollection to enable the witness to testify
fully and accurately, shown to have been made or adopted by the witness when
the matter was fresh in the witness’s memory and to reflect that knowledge
correctly. If admitted, the memorandum or record may be read into evidence
but may not itself be received as an exhibit unless offered by an adverse party.
Tenn. R. Evid. 803(5).
As we have articulated, “[t]o utilize Tenn. R. Evid. 803(5)’s recorded recollection
exception, a party must (1) provide a memorandum or record; (2) about a matter that the
witness once had knowledge of; (3) establish that the witness now has insufficient
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recollection to testify fully and accurately; (4) that the statement was made or adopted by the
witness; (5) while fresh in the witness’s memory; and (6) that the record accurately reflects
the witness’s knowledge.” Mitchell, 971 S.W.2d at 28. However, “[a] trial court is given
considerable latitude in the admission of evidence and will be reversed only for an abuse of
discretion.” Aussenberg v. Kramer, 944 S.W.2d 367, 370 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996) (citing
Steele v. Ft. Sanders Anesthesia Group, P.C., 897 S.W.2d 270, 275 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994)).
Mrs. Smith contends on appeal that the videotape and transcript of the Antiques
Roadshow episode in question demonstrates that the matter of how she acquired the Crockett
license was fresh in her mind. Mrs. Smith further asserts that she could not fully and
adequately recall the circumstances connected with her acquisition of the license when she
was deposed less than four years later because of her advanced age and health. In response,
the County argues that Mrs. Smith failed to satisfy every element required for utilization of
Rule 803(5)’s exception. For instance, Mrs. Smith did not establish that the recorded
recollection was an accurate account of those facts that were still fresh in her memory. She
did not “review and authenticate the interview,” nor did she establish that the interview given
for the Antiques Roadshow correctly reflected her knowledge of how she came to possess
the license. Furthermore, as the County points out, Mrs. Smith’s counsel neither requested
at trial that the recorded interview be read into evidence nor made an offer of proof in
accordance with Tenn. R. Evid. 103(a)(2).
Next, Mrs. Smith argues that the Antiques Roadshow interview qualified as a
statement of personal and family history pursuant to Tenn. R. Evid. 804(b)(4). Prior
statements of personal family history are admissible as evidence if a declarant is unavailable
as a witness within the meaning of Rule 804(a). Due to Mrs. Smith’s advanced age at the
time of this trial and her daughter’s testimony concerning her mother’s physical infirmities,
we do not question that the witness unavailability requirement was met under Rule 804(a)(4)
in the present case.11 That being said, we do not find that Mrs. Smith’s Antiques Roadshow
account of how she acquired the Crockett license constitutes a statement about declarant’s
own birth, adoption, marriage, divorce, legitimacy, relationships, ancestry, or other similar
fact of personal or family history within the meaning of Rule 804(b)(4).
Based on the record as a whole, we cannot conclude that the trial court abused its
discretion in refusing to admit the interview transcript of Mrs. Smith’s appearance on
Antiques Roadshow. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s decision not to consider the
transcript at issue.
11
Rule 804(a)(4) provides that unavailability of a witness includes situations in which the declarant
“[i]s unable to be present or to testify at the hearing because of the declarant’s death or then existing physical
or mental illness or infirmity.” Tenn. R. Evid. 804(a)(4).
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G.
In the seventh issue on appeal, Mrs. Smith challenges the facial constitutionality of
Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-16-504 on grounds that its retroactive application “seeks to take
property from [private citizens] who lawfully possess the property without just
compensation,” despite the fact that she had not questioned the constitutional validity of the
statute in the trial court. The Attorney General was notified of this challenge and filed his
own brief on this issue, concluding that Mrs. Smith has waived the constitutionality issue by
raising it for the first time on appeal and that we need not reach the constitutional issue in
light of the other issues raised on appeal.
“It has long been the general rule that questions not raised in the trial court will not
be entertained on appeal and this rule applies to an attempt to make a constitutional attack
upon the validity of a statute for the first time on appeal unless the statute involved is so
obviously unconstitutional on its face as to obviate the necessity for any discussion.”
Lawrence v. Stanford, 655 S.W.2d 927, 929 (Tenn. 1983). Because the constitutional
validity of a statute was not presented in the trial proceedings, “no opportunity was afforded
for the introduction of evidence which might be material and pertinent in considering the
validity of the statute.” Id.
Careful review of the record indicates that Mrs. Smith failed to challenge the
constitutionality of the statute in question at any time in the trial court proceedings, so the
issue was neither presented nor decided. As Mrs. Smith’s issue of the constitutional validity
of § 39-16-504 was not properly raised in the trial court, it has effectively been waived for
full consideration on appeal.
H.
Mrs. Smith further argues that the trial court improperly permitted the testimony of
Jefferson County archivist, Ms. Hinchey. Specifically, Mrs. Smith complains that Ms.
Hinchey’s testimony on how the Jefferson County clerk prepared and recorded documents
in the early 1800s was inadmissible, because it was not based on her personal knowledge.
The testimony in question was derived from Ms. Hinchey’s review of the different types of
extant documents issued, registered, stored, and carefully preserved by the County since its
inception in 1792.
“It is well settled that, when the resolution of the issues in a case depends upon the
truthfulness of witnesses, the trial judge who has the opportunity to observe the witnesses and
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their manner and demeanor while testifying is in a far better position than this Court to
decide those issues.” Cumberland Properties, LLC v. Ravenwood Club, Inc., No. M2010-
01814-COA-R3-CV, 2011 WL 1303375, at *14 (Tenn. Ct. App. W.S., Apr. 05, 2011); see
also McCaleb v. Saturn Corp., 910 S.W.2d 412, 415 (Tenn. 1995); Whitaker v. Whitaker, 957
S.W.2d 834, 837 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997). “The weight, faith, and credit to be given the
witnesses’ testimony lies in the first instance with the trier of fact, and the credibility
accorded will be given great weight by the appellate court.” Whitaker, 957 S.W.2d at 837.
In the instant case, Ms. Hinchey testified that she had served as Director of the
Jefferson County Archives since 1996 and was certified as an archives manager by the State
of Tennessee. Her responsibilities include organizing, indexing, and storing original county
documents and training staff in these procedures. As Mrs. Smith stated in her brief, “Ms.
Hinchey was certainly qualified to testify as to what the records show, but she was repeatedly
asked, over the objection of [Mrs. Smith’s counsel], and testified as to what the clerk would
or would not do.” Mrs. Smith contends that Ms. Hinchey’s “testimony in this regard was not
based on her own personal knowledge and should have been excluded under Rule 602, Tenn.
R. Evid.”12 However, Rule 703, upon which Rule 602 is subject, provides, in part, that “[t]he
facts or data in the particular case upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may
be those perceived by or made known to the expert at or before the hearing.” Tenn. R. Evid.
703. As Mrs. Smith admits in her brief, Ms. Hinchey was eminently qualified to testify as
to what the collection of Jefferson County records show, and this includes any inference or
professional opinion on the official policy or procedure followed by the County in the early
1800s with regards to the issuance, recordation, storage, and maintenance of unexecuted but
returned marriage licenses. The county clerk’s procedure during the relevant time is
indicated by the types of official documents issued and recorded during that period and still
maintained by the County to this day. Although the trial court did not make a specific
finding as to the weight and credit accorded to Ms. Hinchey’s testimony, we conclude that,
to the extent that the trial court was aided in its judgment by the testimony at issue, no error
or abuse of discretion was committed. The trial court was in the best position to determine
Ms. Hinchey’s credibility and demeanor. We therefore find that the trial court properly
considered Ms. Hinchey’s testimony at trial.
12
Tenn R. Evid. 602 provides: “A witness may not testify to a matter unless evidence is introduced
sufficient to support a finding that the witness has personal knowledge of the matter. Evidence to prove
personal knowledge may, but need not, consist of the witness's own testimony. This rule is subject to the
provisions of Rule 703 relating to opinion testimony by expert witnesses.”
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I.
Lastly, Mrs. Smith asserts that the trial court erred in ordering her to immediately
return the Crockett license, notwithstanding her timely notice of appeal, and additionally
subjecting her to a monetary penalty for civil contempt.
“The power to punish for contempt has long been regarded as essential to the
protection and existence of the courts and the proper administration of justice.” Konvalinka
v. Chattanooga-Hamilton Cty. Hosp. Authority, 249 S.W.3d 346, 354 (Tenn. 2008). This
contempt power vested in Tennessee courts is now purely statutory. See Tenn. Code Ann.
§ 29-9-101 et seq.; see also Konvalinka, 249 S.W.3d at 354. Of particular relevance to the
case at bar, the scope of the courts’ contempt power extends to circumstances involving
“[t]he willful disobedience or resistance of any officer of the such courts, party, juror,
witness, or any other person, to any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command of
such court.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-9-102(3) (2000). The Tennessee Supreme Court has
enumerated four essential elements of civil contempt claims based upon an alleged
disobedience of a court order: (1) “the order alleged to have been violated must be ‘lawful;’”
(2) “the order alleged to have been violated must be clear, specific, and unambiguous;” (3)
“the person alleged to have violated the order must have actually disobeyed or otherwise
resisted the order;” and (4) “the person’s violation of the order must be ‘willful.’”
Konvalinka, 249 S.W.3d at 354-55. In any contempt proceeding, the threshold question is
whether the court order that was allegedly violated is “lawful.” Id. at 355. “A lawful order
is one issued by a court with jurisdiction over both the subject matter of the case and the
parties.” Id.
In the present case, it is undisputed that the Jefferson County Circuit Court had
jurisdiction over both the subject matter and parties of this lawsuit. On November 24, 2009,
the trial court entered a final judgment on this matter, requiring the immediate return of the
Crockett license to the County. Mrs. Smith filed a notice of appeal on December 21, 2009,
but she neither returned the Crockett license nor filed a motion to stay the court’s order. In
accordance with Tenn. R. Civ. P. 62.01,13 the County did not seek to enforce the trial court’s
judgment until January 4, 2010, when it filed its Motion for Order Enforcing Judgment for
Specific Act and for Contempt. On February 1, 2010, the trial court entered an order
granting the County’s motion and requiring Mrs. Smith to surrender the Crockett license on
or before February 7, 2010, or face a fine of $500 per day. Mrs. Smith failed to return the
document by the court-ordered deadline and did not file her Motion to Stay Order and Set
13
Rule 62.01 provides in relevant part: “Except as otherwise provided in this rule, no execution shall
issue upon a judgment, nor shall proceedings be taken for its enforcement until the expiration of 30 days after
its entry.” Tenn. R. Civ. P. 62.01.
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Bond until February 12, 2010. Mrs. Smith finally delivered the marriage license at issue to
the court on February 19, 2010. On March 1, 2010, the trial court granted Mrs. Smith’s
motion to stay but left the fine established by the February 1 order in effect, resulting in a
total penalty amount of $6,000 for the twelve days that she was in contempt. In her brief,
Mrs. Smith argues that the trial court’s sanction was an abuse of its discretion and caused
Mrs. Smith to suffer injustice. We disagree.
The record before us reveals that the trial court’s order entered on February 1, 2010,
was lawful in that the trial court had jurisdiction over both the subject matter of the case and
the parties. Furthermore, we find that the order in question “expressly and precisely spell[ed]
out the details of compliance in a way that [would] enable reasonable persons to know
exactly what actions are required or forbidden.” Konvalinka, 249 S.W.3d at 355. The order
therefore was clear, specific, and unambiguous. We also find that the record clearly indicates
that Mrs. Smith violated the trial court’s order by not returning the Crockett license to the
court until February 19, 2010—twelve days after the trial court’s order requiring her to
surrender the document on or before February 7 or face monetary sanctions. Finally, in her
brief, Mrs. Smith offers no evidence that convinces us that her conduct in violating the court
order was anything other than intentional and voluntary; therefore, we must conclude that she
willfully violated the order.
Because Mrs. Smith willfully violated a lawful and sufficiently clear and precise
order, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in holding her in civil contempt
and in sanctioning her with a daily fine. However, we do find the penalty of $500 per day
to be excessive and in contravention of Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-9-103(b), which limits fines
for the punishment for contempt to fifty dollars ($50). Therefore, punishment for this
contempt is modified to $50 per day for the twelve days that Mrs. Smith was in contempt for
a total of $600, in accordance with Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-9-104.
V. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed, modified only in regard to the fine. The
matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
_________________________________
JOHN W. McCLARTY, JUDGE
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