Ex Parte Henry Castro

273 S.W. 795, 115 Tex. 77, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 133
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1925
DocketNo. 4211.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 273 S.W. 795 (Ex Parte Henry Castro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Henry Castro, 273 S.W. 795, 115 Tex. 77, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 133 (Tex. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice CURETON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a habeas corpus proceeding, in which Henry Castro applies for discharge from a judgment of the Ninety-fourth District Court punishing him for contempt.

The record shows that relator’s confinement is based upon a judgment in contempt for having remarried within a year after a decree of divorce granted him on the 17th of August, 1923, on the ground of cruel treatment. The trial judge placed a clause in the decree, reading as follows:

*79 “It is further ordered that neither party be permitted to marry within a year from this date, except to each other.”

Henry Castro did marry within a year from the date of this judgment, and his former wife, Maria Castro, filed a motion in contempt and to dissolve the second marriage. This was heard on the 26th of June, 1924. The court declined to dissolve the second marriage, for reasons unnecessary to be stated, but did hold that relator was in contempt of court because he had violated the order quoted above from the divorce judgment, and entered a decree punishing him therefor.

Revised Statutes, Article 4632, as amended by Chapter 82, General Laws of the Thirty-seventh Legislature, contains this provision:

“And provided further that neither party to a divorce suit wherein a divorce is granted upon the ground of cruel treatment shall marry any other person for a period of twelve months next after such divorce is granted, but the parties so divorced may marry each other at any time.”

The statute simply forbids the second marriage within a year’s time under certain circumstances, without declaring it void or providing any other form of punishment, and without authorizing the District 'Court to insert any prohibitive or injunctive order relative to the same. Concerning this character of statute Mr. Schouler in his late work, 6th edition, on Marriage and Divorce, Volume 2, Section 1924, says:

“Where one marries again although not permitted to do so, the second marriage may be void, or merely voidable.

“Marriages by divorced persons are commonly held void if entered into within the period after the decree when marriage is prohibited where this period is the time for appeal, or where the statute expressly declares such a marriage void, but where the statute simply forbids such a marriage without declaring it void it will not be so held, as the law favors the validity of marriages wherever possible.

“The great majority of the statutes prohibiting marriage within a certain time after divorce do not expressly declare whether such marriages within such time are void or voidable, and such statutes fall within three clases: those which merely prohibit marriage within a certain time, those which declare the act of marriage criminal and provide a penalty, and those which declare the parties ‘incapable’ of remarrying within such period. The prohibited marriage of the first class is usually declared voidable only, and the other two classes are usually held void.”

*80 It is thus seen that statutes of the character before us do not make a second marriage void, but merely voidable. The text of Mr. Schouler is supported by the great weight of authority. Wallace v. McDaniel, 59 Ore., 378, L. R. A. 1916C, p. 744, and elaborate notes at the end of this case; Woodward v. Blake, 38 N. D., 38, L. R. A. 1918A, p. 88.

Since the language of the statute is sufficient only to make a marriage in violation of it voidable, it is obvious that the statute had no purpose to authorize the court to secure obedience thereto by the insertion of an injunctive order such as is before us. The penalty is that the second marriage may be annulled in a proper case at the suit of one having a justifiable interest therein, and not punishment for contempt. However, aside from the proposition just stated, which is a reason only for the conclusion that the district judge was without authority to insert in the order any such prohibitory language, it is well settled that statutes' of this character do not authorize the trial judge to insert such an injunctive order in the decree, and that the violation of such an order improperly placed in the judgment does not render the party liable for contempt. Mr. Bishop in his work on Marriage and Divorce, Volume 2, Section 1521, discusses what should be in the divorce decree. In part he says:

“Both in natural propriety and in juridical reason, the sentence should be an embodiment, in direct words, of the determination of the court upon the combined pleadings and the admitted and proven facts, when all have been duly produced by the parties, passed upon by the jury if necessary, and considered by the judge. What will flow from the sentence as of law ought not to be inserted in it; for the court has no control over such a matter, and an attempted determination thereof would be simply an extra-jurisdictional impertinence.”

In the paragraph quoted from Mr. Bishop’s work it is stated in substance that it is not proper to put in the decree that which would flow from the judgment; that the effect of the judgment is a matter of law, and not of decree.

Again, in Section 1523 he says:

“If the statute forbids the party for whose fault a divorce is declared to remarry, plainly the court cannot with effect introduce into the decree a clause permitting him. But Chancellor Walworth used always to insert the prohibiting clause, as being, to quote his own words, ‘necessary in order to prevent him from imposing upon others, who might suppose he was capable of contracting matrimony if the decree was general.’ This care *81 for foolish spinsters, to whom it was presumed the man would 'be showing the judicial record of his own adulteries as the inducement to marry him, is admirable in philanthropy. But it is 'quite aside from the function of a legal judgment to notify third persons of what all are presumed to know, the contents of the statute-book of the State. There is no pretense that the clause is of any legal validity, or in any way essential to the complete efficacy of the divorce sentence. And it is not believed to be common.”

It is quite elementary that a court of equity has no authority to issue an injunction, unless some property right is involved, or some other right which would bring it within the usual rules of equity jurisdiction, or unless it is provided for by statute.

It is plain in this case that there was no statute authorizing the injunctive order. It is equally clear, we think, that there is no principle of equity jurisprudence which would authorize a court trying a divorce case to prohibit the parties from marrying again for any period of time.

In the case of People v. Prouty, 262 Ill., 218, 51 L. R. A. (N. S.), p. 1140, the Supreme Court of Illinois, in discussing a statute of this character, says:

“The only effect of the prohibition against marriage contained in this decree is to enjoin the parties from violating this statute. A court of equity exercising its general powers has no jurisdiction over matters merely criminal or immoral, where no property rights are involved. ‘It is elementary law that the subject-matter of the jurisdiction of the court of chancery is civil property.

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 795, 115 Tex. 77, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-henry-castro-tex-1925.