Estate of Hines

10 Pa. Super. 124, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 250
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Pa. Super. 124 (Estate of Hines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Hines, 10 Pa. Super. 124, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 250 (Pa. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

This is an appeal from a decree allowing the petition of Laura Hines for the “ widow’s exemption.” The question raised by the exceptions, all of which were overruled,, is, whether the petitioner and the decedent were married. The learned judge [126]*126of the court below has concisely stated the circumstances under which these parties came together, and their ostensible relations thereafter up to the time of the death of Louis B. Hines, as follows. He says: “ The petitioner, at the age of sixteen, made the acquaintance of the decedent while working along with him in his father’s factory. He visited her at the houses where she successively boarded, and during a period of about a year took her at intervals to places of amusement. At the end of that time, in April, 1892, he rented a house and opened a cigar store, and two weeks afterwards his relations with the petitioner as her ostensible husband began, and continued uninterruptedly to the day of.his death, in December, 1896. The petitioner was the only witness who swore to a contract of marriage. She said that after repeated requests from him to marry, which she had declined, she consented to keep house for him, upon his statement that his mother would reside with them. Upon going to the house, he asked her if she would stay and become his wife, and she refused because the mother was not there.” He then said (we now quote the testimony of the witness verbatim) : “I will take you for my wife ; and asked me if I was satisfied, and I said, ‘yes,’ and he said he would have a ceremony performed, but he did not have any money at the time; he was in bad circumstances at that time, and said he would have money later on. Q. Did he give any explanation that that would be all right? He asked me if it would suit me for the present time, and I said, ‘yes.’ Q. What did he say in reference to it ? A. He said no minister could make us any happier than what we would be by what he said to me. Q. Did you finally consent? A. Yes, sir.” She continued to live with him from that time. The opinion, which we take as the findings of the court below upon the questions of fact, proceeds: “ In the course of a year a child was born, and was reared by the decedent as his own. He introduced the petitioner as his wife to friends and neighbors, and the neighborhood recognized the relation. His mother brought presents to the child, and when, shortly before his death, he removed to another part of the city, she came to live with him. When very ill and within a few days of his end, he spoke to his mother of his marriage to the petitioner. At his funeral the petitioner rode in the leading carnage with his brother, and when a subsequent visit was made [127]*127to the cemetery, she was accompanied by his mother. At the nqother’s instance, she formally renounced her right to administer the decedent’s estate.” From these facts the court found that there was a marriage. As the assignments of error are to this general conclusion and not to the specific findings of fact upon which it was based, our discussion will be directed to the points made on the oral argument and in the printed brief of counsel.

1. It is argued that if the words of this contract were sufficient in law, because followed by cohabitation, yet illicit intercourse having preceded, they did noi ■ aablish a valid marriage. We need not review the cases upon this subject, because taking any statement of the rule that can be deduced from them, there is no sufficient evidence to warrant its application here. There is evidence, but not uncontradicted, that the decedent took, and the petitioner permitted him to take, indecent liberties with her. This is as far as the competent evidence goes. It should be observed also that at this time the parties lived entirely apart and that the acts testified to were in the presence of many other persons. Thé evidence, if true, does not raise a prima facie presumption even, much less establish the fact, that the cohabitation after the alleged contract of marriage was the mere continuation of an illicit relation that had existed before. The latter fact must first be proved by clear and satisfactory testimony before the principle of Hunt’s Appeal and kindred cases can have any application: Drinkhouse’s Estate, 151 Pa. 294.

2. The fact, even if it were conclusively shown, that during their cohabitation at Fourth and Catherine streets, the parties kept an unlicensed place for the sale of liquor where men were permitted to resort for card playing, or even gambling, would throw little if any light upon the question of marriage. The fact that they kept an assignation house or that the petitioner had immoral relations with others, either with or without the knowledge of the decedent, might have some significance. It is urged that “ the alleged marriage contract is founded upon the story of a prostitute, without a line of direct substantia] proof to support it, and in the face of continued prostitution during the whole period of the marriage.” We suppose that the testimony as to the reputatibn of the house and of the petitioner was introduced with a view to sustain this allegation. [128]*128VVe shall not attempt to recite it, nor comment on the sources from which it came. W e have examined it all, and our conclusion is, that the allegations that the house was an assignation house and that the petitioner was a prostitute before the alleged marriage, and lived the life of a prostitute afterwards are not sustained. We do not believe that any jury taking a fair view of all the legitimate evidence pro and con, and having proper regard for the presumption in favor of innocence, would find that they were established. It may be said, that, although the evidence fails to establish these facts fully, it does show a course of conduct which is quite as consistent with the exceptant’s allegation that the relation between these parties was a meretricious one, as with the petitioner’s allegation that it was the lawful and honorable one of marriage. We have considered it in that view and have given it proper weight, but cannot agree, that, take it by itself or in connection with the other testimony introduced by the exceptant, it is sufficient to overthrow the petitioner’s positive testimony as to the marriage contract and the presumptions arising from cohabitation and reputation, and the repeated admissions and declarations of the parties.

3. Four of the witnesses who testified as to the character of the house and of the petitioner were also called to testify as to the repute of marriage. One of them testified that some thought they were married and others not; that the general feeling through the neighborhood was that they were not married; and that this impression was created to some extent by the conflicting statements the decedent made as to the place where the marriage had taken place. (It would seem, therefore, that, at all events, the decedent claimed that there was a marriage.) This witness admitted, moreover, that the petitioner was addressed by the majority of people, both in and out of the decedent’s presence, as Mrs. Hines; that the witness so addressed her; that the child called the decedent “pop;” and that the latter spoke to and of the . child as his own. Another witness testified that many of the neighbors doubted whether they were married; “ others did not speak their mind on it, as it was not material; ” that many of the neighbors thought she was simply his housekeeper. This witness gave the singular reason amongst others for his belief that she was not his wife that he had “ seen many men treat their housekeepers better than he treated her.” [129]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. Super. 124, 1899 Pa. Super. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hines-pasuperct-1899.