Clarkson v. Washington

1913 OK 241, 131 P. 935, 38 Okla. 4, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 15, 1913
Docket2578
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1913 OK 241 (Clarkson v. Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarkson v. Washington, 1913 OK 241, 131 P. 935, 38 Okla. 4, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 288 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On October 16, 1908, George Washington, as guardian of Emma Alexander, a minor, and Mary Brooks, defendants in error, citizens of the 'Creek Nation, in the district court of Okfuskee county, sued Cynthia E. De Armond; in ejectment for what is conceded to be the allotment of Isaac Hawkins, a deceased Creek freedman. After answer filed defendant died,' whereupon it was ordered by the court that the cause stand revived in the name of her administrator, Joseph De Armond, who for answer, adopted the answer of the defendant and alleged that, before the suit, by warranty deed, George Clarkson and wife had conveyed the land to said Cynthia for $3,200; that pending this suit, she had notified them to coime in and defend their warranty; and prayed, in the event judgment went in favor of plaintiff for title and possession, that, for breach of their warranty, defendant have judgment against said Clarksons for said sum with interest, etc.- After R. J. Dixon had made known to the court that he had sold and by warranty deed conveyed the land to the Clarksons, and by leave had intervened and filed answer, there was trial to the court and judgment for plaintiff; the court finding, in effect, that Emma Alexander was 'the minor child and sole heir at law of Tsaac Alexander, enrolled and commonly known as *6 Isaac Hawkins, and, as such, was entitled to the land; that Mary Brooks was his widow and said Emma their child born in lawful wedlock; that said Mary is the wife of Alexander Brooks and was, under the law in force in that jurisdiction, at the time of descent cast, and still is entitled as dower to a one-third interest in said land for and during her natural life.

The court further found that title was derived by Cynthia E. De Armond as stated; that after service of summons on her, and more than twenty days before trial, notice had been served on the Clarksons to defend their warranty as stated; that the covenant for title thereby conveyed had been broken; and that Joseph De Armond, as administrator, was entitled to recover of George Clarkson said sum of $1,200, with interest from the date of his deed, and judgment was rendered and entered accordingly. After their respective motions for a -new trial were filed and overruled, Clarkson and Dixon bring the case here. It is assigned that there is no evidence reasonably tending to support the finding of the court that Mary Brooks was the widow of Isaac Hawkins. On this point the evidence discloses that in 1898 Mary Brooks was a single woman of the name of Jefferson, living with her parents in the Creek Nation near Muskogee, and that Isaac Alexander, or Hawkins, was a single man living thereabouts; that at her father’s house in that year Isaac told her “he wanted me to be his wife, and I told him it would be all right with me, ask my father”; that they immediately went into the presence of her father and mother and told.the father they were going to get married, whereupon the father said “it was all right with him”; that they immediately left and went to live with Isaac’s mother at Still-water, then territory of Oklahoma, and lived there a while as man and wife, and then went to live at Bristow; that after living together two years as man and wife Isaac was arrested, convicted of a felony, and sent to the penitentiary for five years; that while he was in the penitentiary the plaintiff, Emma Alexander, was born to them, after which Mary was mar *7 ried to one Brooks, with whom she still lives; that after Isaac got out he came to her house to see the child, and, after receiving his allotment, died.

As there is neither allegation nor proof that these facts would, according to the laws or customs and usages of the Creeks, constitute a valid marriage, the question is whether this was such at common law, the same having at that time been extended to and put in force in the Indian Territory by chapter SO of Mansfield’s Digest of the Laws of Arkansas (Ind. T. Ann. St. 1899, sec. 465q). The trial court held that such it was, and, as a result of holding her dowable in the lands, in effect, held further that her marriage to Brooks was bigamous; which, if true, will bastardize that issue.

As the evidence reasonably tends to support the finding of the court that there existed from the inception such an agreement between these parties as was necessary to constitute a marriage per verba de praesenti, the judgment of the court holding that a common-law marriage existed between them will not be disturbed, notwithstanding chapter 103 off Mansfield’s Digest, entitled “Marriage” was in force in that jurisdiction at that time; as common-law marriages have been recognized in Arkansas from an early day.

In Jones v. Jones, 28 Ark. 19, appellant filed a bill in the circuit court as the widow of Elbert Jones to compel W. C. Jones, among other things, to set apart her dower as widow of the deceased. ' The court held against her presumably on the ground that she was not the widow. She claimed under a common-law marriage. In sustaining the judgment the court said:

“It is generally considered, in the absence of any positive statute declaring that all marriages, not celebrated in the prescribed manner, shall be absolutely void, or that none but certain magistrates or ministers shall solemnize a marriage, any marriage regularly made according to the common law, without observing the statute regulations, would still be a valid marriage. 2 Greenleaf, Ev. 417; 2 Kent, Com. 90, 91; *8 Reeve’s Dom. Rel. 196, 200, 290; Parton v. Harvey, 1 Gray, 119; Londonderry v. Chester, 2 N. H. 268 [9 Am. Dec. 61]; Cheseldine v. Brewer, 1 Har. & McH. [Md.] 152; Hantz v. Sealy, 6 Bin. [Pa.] 405. * * * In a suit for dower, it is clear that an actual marriage, either under the forms and solemnities prescribed by the statute, or as prescribed by the common law, is necessary.”

Rogers on Dom. Rel. sec. 89, says:

“In this country, at least it is the general rule that, in the absence of some positive statute or special law to the contrary, any marriage regularly entered into according to the course of the common law by the mutual consent of the parties, and recognition of each other as man and wife, is valid for all purposes.”

In Reaves v. Reaves, 15 Okla. 240, 82 Pac. 490, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 353, the objection to the sufficiency o-f the evidence to prove a common-law marri-age was raised, as here. There the court found as to the present' agreement that:

“On the 25th day of June, 1890, II. II. Reaves and Prances A. Reaves were each competent to contract marriage, and did,' at the said time, in the city of Guthrie, agree with each other th-at they would be husband and wife to each other, and did immediately begin living together and cohabiting together as married persons. That said marriage relations were entered into with the mutual consent of both parties, and that they immediately assumed all of the marital rights and obligations; and uninterruptedly exercised the same until the death of II. H. Reaves.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 241, 131 P. 935, 38 Okla. 4, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarkson-v-washington-okla-1913.