Barker v. United States

3 F. Supp. 545, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1655
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedMay 30, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 F. Supp. 545 (Barker v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. United States, 3 F. Supp. 545, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1655 (S.D. Ala. 1933).

Opinion

ERVIN, District Judge.

The facts of this ease are that one Lewis Walters, legally married Maggie Tubb on March 29, 1914, in Perry county, Ala. That on July 21,1918, he illegally married Arkansas Hogan at Corning, N. Y., without having been divorced from his wife, Maggie Walters. That he entered the military service of the United States on August 30,1918, where he applied for and was granted a war risk yearly renewable insurance policy in the sum of $10,000, instructing that it should be payable to Arkansas Walters, his wife. That he died on March 28,1919, when the policy was still in force.

After his death Arkansas Hogan or Walters, as the widow, claimed and was allowed the monthly payments by the government until April 30,1924, amounting to $3,513.06, at which time the government had ascertained for the first time that Walters had previously married and never been divorced from Maggie Walters.

On the 16th day of March, 1929, D. K. Barker was appointed administrator of Lewis Walters by the probate court of Perry county, Ala., and this suit was instituted.

Upon learning that Walters had been married to Maggie Tubb and had not been divorced before he married Arkansas Hogan, a hearing was had before the Central Committee on Recovery of the Veterans’ Bureau, and on July 18, 1925 this Committee held:

“It appears that soldier had a living, undivorced, legal wife at the time of the marriage to said Arkansas Walters. It has been held by the legal advisors of the bureau that Arkansas Walters was not the lawful wife of deceased soldier and is not, therefore, entitled to benefits.”

Decision.

“It is the opinion of this committee that as Arkansas Walters is not entitled to receive benefits from the bureau, she is not a ‘beneficiary’ as that term is intended and used in section 28 of the World War Veteran’s Act, 1921.”

Subsequent to the above decision by the Veterans’ Bureau and the appointment of the plaintiff as administrator of Lewis Walters there was an award by the Veterans’ Bureau of $5,759.08 to D. K. Barker, administrator de bonis non of estate of Lewis Walters, which sum was paid to him. The only question in dispute is the right of the plaintiff to recover from the government the sum paid by it to Arkansas Hogan. As to this the government claims that the administrator of Lewis Walters is estopped by the action of Lewis Walters himself in declaring that Arkansas Hogan was his wife and so inducing the government to pay to her the sums it did pay before it learned that Walters had previously married Maggie Tubb.

The administrator and the government are the only parties in this suit, and the only question in the case seems to be one of estoppel.

There have been several cases in the reports where the dead soldier has wrongfully married a second time; in Florida where these facts were presented in U. S. v. Garrison (D. C.) 39 F.(2d) 225, the case involved a con[546]*546verted policy and not a yearly renewable policy. In Louisiana tbe ease was presented in Robinson v. U. S. (D. C.) 33 F.(2d) 545. The case went off on a Louisiana statute.

In Cummings v. U. S. (D. C.) 34 F.(2d) 284, tbe facts were that there was only one wife wbo was married to the soldier after a divorce had been granted to her, but before the year bad expired. Under tbe laws of that state she bad no right to remarry, and tbe court held that this marriage was void, and, though the soldier declared her to be bis wife, she was denied recovery because her marriage was held to be void.

In Schiefer v. U. S. (D. C.) 52 F.(2d) 527, tbe facts are almost identical with tbe present ease, and, in addition to that, tbe ease went off on tbe same plea of estoppel as is presented in this case; tbe court bolding that because in marrying a second woman wbo was ignorant of tbe fact that be bad been married before, and, declaring her to be tbe beneficiary as bis wife, be induced tbe government to make payments to her, tbe administrator was estopped from recovering from tbe government. Tbe court in that case seemed to have been very much impressed in reaching tbe conclusion it did by the intent of the dead soldier in declaring tbe woman be bad married tbe second time to be bis wife and beneficiary, and says on page 529 of 52 F.(2d): “I am therefore of the opinion that a woman free to marry and who, in good faith, married a soldier without notice or knowledge of any legal incapacity on Ms part to enter into marriage with her, is, within the meaning and intendment of tbe congressional acts governing war-risk insurance, bis wife when as beneficiary she is named as such in Ms application for insurance. Until higher authority constrains me to a different conclusion, I shall not assume that Congress intended to heap injury upon insult and to further penalize an innocent woman wbo bad been defrauded into a void marriage.”

It would be observed from tbe last sentence in that paragraph that tbe court must have bad some serious doubt of tbe conclusion he reached because of- bis sympathy for tbe second woman wbo was married by tMs soldier.

■ In Alabama we have no such statute as Louisiana bad, and whatever might be tbe bearing of tbe Florida ease along the same line, if tMs was a similar pohey to tbe one construed there, that was a converted policy, and not controlled by tbe same statute as tbe present one is.

In Alabama tbe second marriage by a man wbo has a -living wife from whom be bad never been divorced is void, and it occurs to me that tbe Veterans’ Bureau reached tbe correct conclusion when it terminated tbe rights of Arkansas Hogan upon discovering that Lewis Walters bad a living wife when be married her. She therefore has no rights to be considered in this case.

An estoppel such as this is an equitable defense, though asserted in tbe law court.

It is undoubtedly true that, if Lewis Walters estopped himself, then undoubtedly bis administrator would also be estopped from suing tbe government, but that would be on tbe idea that tbe administrator was only seeking to enforce such rights as tbe deceased, Lewis Walters, himself bad. In tMs case no such rights are involved.

It is true that Walters declared Arkansas Hogan to be bis wife, but, under tbe terms of tbe federal law under- which tbe pohey was taken out, be was limited to certain beneficiaries and not left to declare whomsoever be would. In no event after bis death was tbe money to be administered as a general estate in that tbe administrator came into possession of it as tbe property of Lewis Walters.

Why should Maggie Walters be estopped because Lewis Walters misled tbe government? The law shows little consideration for tbe woman wbo was married to Walters while be bad a living wife, and I cannot see that by so bolding tbe court adds any insult or injury to her by declaring what tbe law is. We may have a great deal of sympathy for her because of tbe wrong Lewis Walters committed on her, but that cannot affect tbe decision in tbe case as it seems to have done in tbe Schiefer Case. Certainly it would not be doing eqMty to tbe first wife to declare the administrator estopped to recover tbe money for her when she bad done nothing to induce tbe government to pay tbe money to Arkansas Hogan.

If then tbe doctrine óf estoppel is an equitable one, as to which there can be no dispute, what equity would debar Maggie Walters wbo has done nothing to induce tbe government to pay to Arkansas Hogan tMs money?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brown v. United States
72 F. Supp. 153 (D. New Jersey, 1947)
United States v. Barker
70 F.2d 1002 (Fifth Circuit, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F. Supp. 545, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-united-states-alsd-1933.