Estate of Bir

188 P.2d 499, 83 Cal. App. 2d 256, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1073
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1948
DocketCiv. 7454
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 P.2d 499 (Estate of Bir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Bir, 188 P.2d 499, 83 Cal. App. 2d 256, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1073 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

Dalip Singh Bir, a native of India, died intestate in San Joaquin County on April 18, 1945, and respondent Florence Boyes was appointed and qualified as administratrix of his estate. On April 4,1947, two women named Harnam Kaur and Jiwi, both residents of India, joined in a petition to determine heirship, alleging in their petition:

“That your petitioners were, at the time of the death of the deceased herein, the legally wedded wives of said deceased, having lawfully married said deceased in the Punjab over 50 years ago whilst all parties were domiciled in Punjab Province, British India, according to the law and manner of the Jat community, in which province and community said marriages are lawful and valid. As said widows of deceased, petitioners are entitled to distribution of his estate.”

*257 Their petition further alleged that the residue of the estate consists of approximately $1,450 in cash and that in India petitioners would be entitled to share equally in the estate.

The record before us contains the following stipulation signed by counsel for the respective parties:

“It Is Hereby Stipulated between counsel for the petitioners and the Administratrix herein, that the Petition for Determination of Heirship of Harnam Kaur and Jiwi was presented to the court as a joint petition requesting solely a judgment of an undivided one-half interest to each petitioner as the legal widows of Dalip Singh Bir, and that the judgment rendered was based upon said petition as so amended in open court, and the findings of fact and conclusions of law heretofore rendered may be deemed the final judgment herein denying said petition. ’ ’

The trial court found that decedent, while domiciled in the Punjab Province of India, there married and was possessed of two wives, the petitioners above named, and that petitioners were legal spouses of decedent under the laws of the Punjab Province of India; that thereafter decedent emigrated to the United States and established residence in California, and that the money belonging to his estate was community property; that neither of said marriages had been dissolved prior to decedent’s death but that no satisfactory proof was introduced as to which of the marriages was first performed.

Upon these findings of fact the trial court concluded that under the laws of California and the public policy thereof, only the first wife of decedent can be recognized- as his legal widow. It therefore entered an order continuing the matter awaiting proof as to which of the marriages was first performed and which of the two petitioners was the initial wife of decedent. Prom that order the two wives have appealed.

Appellants rely on the provisions of section 63 of the Civil Code which reads:

“All marriages contracted without this state, which would be valid by the laws of the country in which the same were contracted are valid in this state.”

In The Conflict of Laws, by Beale (1935), volume 2, page 666, the text reads:

“The American courts both those of the United States and those of Canada, have been much more liberal than those of England in recognizing and giving effect to a polygamous marriage or to a marriage which permits free divorce. Thus *258 they have recognized a marriage of native tribes, and have given widows of polygamous marriages the legal rights of a widow. . . . Thus in a case decided in British Columbia it appeared that a Chinaman, domiciled in China, and legally having two wives under the law of China, died while temporarily in British Columbia, leaving property there. By his will he left the property to his two wives. The question was whether the succession duty should be that due on a gift to a wife. Held, that it should be: that, he being validly married by the law of his domicil, the validity of the marriage should be recognized in matters of succession. ’ ’

The Canadian case above referred to is Yew v. Attorney General for British Columbia, 1 Dominion Law Reports 1166, British Columbia Court of Appeal (1923); and in that ease many cases on the subject are cited. The conclusion there reached was that the law of China controlled, and since that law permitted the decedent to have more than one wife, the wives had the civil status of wives in China and must be so recognized in Canada in all matters of succession to property in respect to movables.

In 48 Law Quarterly Review 341 (Oxford, 1932), will be found an exhaustive treatise on the subject in which both English and United States decisions are cited. There at page 348 it is said:

“It does not appear, therefore, that the reported decisions of the English Courts really afford any support for the view that polygamous marriages must in all eases be regarded as void in contemplation of English law and the issue as illegitimate. Such inferences as can be drawn from them are rather in the contrary sense. As, however, there is a singular absence of direct authority on the question in the English cases, the decisions of American Courts or of Courts in other parts of the British Empire would presumably in a matter of this kind have a considerable persuasive authority in so far as they are decisions of Courts applying a law which is either based on English law or which, like English law, does not allow of polygamy. ’ ’

Also at pages 350-358 :

“There are a number of decisions of the United States Courts. In an early case in the Courts of North Carolina (Williams v. Oates, 27 North Carolina Rep. 375; 5 Iredale 535) Ruffin C. J. states:. . . (b) that if a Turk with two wives were to come to the United States ‘we would not refuse to adminis *259 ter to them the justice due to the relations contracted by them. ’ The view expressed upon point (b) by Ruffin C. -J. is confirmed by the judgment in Polydore v. Prince (Beale’s Cases on the Conflict of Laws, Vol. Ill, p. 2) where the following dictum occurs: ‘If a Turkish or Hindue husband were travel-ling in this country with his wife, or temporarily resident here, we should, without hesitation, acknowledge the relation of husband and wife between them. . . .’ These statements are, indeed, ‘obiter dicta,’ but there are also two decisions in which the wives of potentially polygamous Red Indian marriages have been recognized as acquiring the status of a wife, and as therefore being incapable (as married women) of instituting an action while the marriage subsisted (Wall v. Williamson, 8 Alabama 48, confirmed on appeal, 11 Alabama 826, and Morgan v. McGhee (1844) reported in 24 Tennessee Rep. 12 and in 5 Humphrey Rep.), and in each of these cases disapproval was expressed of the view that polygamous marriages could not he recognized at all, while in a third case of 1860 (Johnson v. Johnson’s Administrator, 30 Missouri Rep. 72 [77 Am.Dec. 598]) the issue of a potentially polygamous Indian marriage were held to be legitimate for the purpose of succession.

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188 P.2d 499, 83 Cal. App. 2d 256, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bir-calctapp-1948.