Brooks v. Sanders

2008 OK CIV APP 66, 190 P.3d 357
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 2008
Docket105,075. Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2008 OK CIV APP 66 (Brooks v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Sanders, 2008 OK CIV APP 66, 190 P.3d 357 (Okla. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

KEITH RAPP, Chief Judge.

T1 The claimant, Bonnie Brooks (Claimant), appeals a decision of the Three Judge Panel of the Workers' Compensation Court in favor of Osage Drilling Company/Seismic Drilling (Employer) and its insurer, American Home Assurance, finding that she was not a surviving spouse of Roy Sanders, deceased. 1

BACKGROUND

2 The parties have not materially disputed the facts pertinent to this appeal. Roy Sanders sustained a work related injury which resulted in his death. - Claimant sought benefits as surviving spouse.

13 Roy Sanders and Debbie Sanders married in a ceremony in 1991. They separated sometime prior to the year 2000. In 2000, Claimant and Roy Sanders established a relationship. Claimant, at least, believed that Roy Sanders had previously been divorced from Debbie Sanders. This relationship continued until Roy Sanders' death and evidenced the attributes of a common-law marriage. 2

€ 4 However, Roy and Debbie Sanders did not divorce until a decree was entered on February 14, 2006. On that date, the District Court of LeFlore County entered an Agreed Decree of Dissolution of Marriage between Roy and Debbie Sanders 3 In part, this Decree recited:

8. The Court further finds, orders, and adjudges that the 90-day waiting period is waived for the reason that both parties have contemplated a peaceful divorcee for over eight (8) years and have reached an agreement and signed approval regarding all issues of this divorce.

T5 Roy Sanders was injured on May 3, 2006. He died from his injury on May 13, *359 2006. The trial judge ruled that Roy Sanders and Bonnie Brooks had established a common-law marriage as of the date of his death and that she was his sole surviving spouse. Employer appealed and the Three-Judge Panel reversed that ruling with a finding that Roy Sanders was a single person at the time of his death and no common-law marriage existed between him and Claimant. Claimant appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

96 Claimant, in order to obtain benefits, must be the widow of Roy Sanders by virtue of a common-law marriage. The issue here is whether there was an impediment to that marriage relationship by application of 48 0.S8.2001, § 123 4 Whether Claimant is the widow and entitled to maintain her claim, is a jurisdictional question upon which the finding of the Three-Judge Panel is not conclusive on this Court. D.P. Greenwood Trucking Co., 1954 OK 165 at ¶ 4, 271 P.2d at 340-41. The appellate court has the plenary, independent, and nondeferential authority to reexamine a trial court's legal rulings. Neil Acquisition, L.L.C. v. Wingrod Investment Corp., 1996 OK 125, 932 P.2d 1100 n. 1. Also, matters involving legislative intent present questions of law which are examined independently and without deference to the trial court's ruling. Keizor v. Sand Springs Ry. Co., 1998 OK CIV APP 98, ¶ 5, 861 P.2d 326, 328.

ANALYSIS AND REVIEW

T7 Until Roy Sanders obtained his divoree, his marriage to Debbie Sanders constituted a legal impediment to a marriage with Claimant. Whitney v. Whitney, 1942 OK 268, 134 P.2d 357 (Syl.1). However, the removal of a legal impediment to marriage, where parties continue to live together, recognizing each other as husband and wife, ripens into a common-law marriage as of the time of the removal of the impediment. Burdine v. Burdine, 1952 OK 103, 242 P.2d 148 (Syl.1, 2).

T8 It is undisputed that the six-month period specified in Section 123 had not passed from the date of the Sanders' divorce decree in February 2006, to the date of Roy Sander's death in May 2006. Moreover, the facts clearly show that the elements necessary to establish a common-law marriage existed during this period. Thus, the question is whether Roy Sanders and Claimant became married after the impediment of Roy Sanders' prior marriage was lifted by the divorcee, or whether Section 123 established a new, or continuing impediment preventing their relationship from evolving into a common-law marriage until the expiration of six months from the date of the divorce.

T9 Case histories reveal that people become embroiled in the six-month controversy in three ways following a divorcee. The first two involve ceremonial rites, either in or out of state. 5 The third case involves the common-law relationship.

110 In Plummer v. Davis, 1934 OK 499, 36 P.2d 938, the Court was presented with the case where the parties had a ceremony less than six months after the divorcee and then one of the parties died before the six- *360 months period expired. 6 The surviving spouse sought to establish a right to inherit as surviving spouse, which was contested on the basis that the marriage was unlawful under Section 128.

T11 The Court reviewed the history and derivation of Section 128. The Court found that Section 123 came from Kansas where the court there construed the original Kansas statute to make a marriage that violated the six-month rule voidable and not. void. The Kansas Legislature amended the statute to make such marriages void and the Kansas court subsequently altered its construction of the statute accordingly.

T12 Oklahoma's original statute, together with court construction of the statute, made such marriages void. However, in 1925, the Legislature amended Section 123 to remove the language making the marriage void. Thus, the Court, in Plummer, ruled that Davis was the surviving spouse, even though his marriage to his deceased wife was entered into less than six months after the date of her divorcee from her former husband. The Court held that a remarriage within six months after a divorcee is voidable, but not void. Plummer, (Syl.1).

T13 The Court also recited the rule that when parties enter into a second marriage in good faith and continue to cohabit as married persons during and beyond the six month period, then the "relationship ripens into a common-law marriage. 7 Plummer, 1934 OK 499 at ¶¶ 18-19, 36 P.2d at 942. However, in Plummer the parties had proceeded with a ceremony and had not been together for six months before the death of one of them.

{14 In a pre-Copeland decision involving an out-of-state remarriage before the six months had passed, the Court in Wasson v. Carden, 1979 OK 69, 594 P.2d 1223, noted that the remarriage was only 8 However, the Court held that such remarriages can ripen into a valid common-law marriage after the expiration of six months, which was the case there.

1 15 The cases of Farley v. State Industrial Comm'n, 1954 OK 122, 269 P.2d 977, and Burdine v. Burdine, 1952 OK 103, 242 P.2d 148, involved common-law relationships after a divorcee, rather than ceremonial marriages. In each case the Court ruled that the removal of a legal impediment to marriage while parties continue to live together as husband and wife gives rise to marriage by common-law as of the time of removal of impediment.

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

Related

Hargrave v. Duval-Couetil
2010 SD 2 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)
In Re Estate of Duval
2010 SD 2 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)
Seirafi-Pour v. Bagherinassab
2008 OK CIV APP 98 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 OK CIV APP 66, 190 P.3d 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-sanders-oklacivapp-2008.