Fisher v. Sweet & McClain

35 A.2d 756, 154 Pa. Super. 216
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 10, 1943
DocketAppeal, 75
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 756 (Fisher v. Sweet & McClain) 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
Fisher v. Sweet & McClain, 35 A.2d 756, 154 Pa. Super. 216 (Pa. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

In this workmen’s compensation case, the appellant sought to establish before the referee and the board, respectively, a common-law marriage between herself and the deceased employee, but failed to do so to their satisfaction. On appeal from the order of the board disallowing compensation for herself and her child, born six months after the employee’s death, the court below affirmed the board and entered judgment in favor of the defendant employer. She then appealed to this court. The judgment will be affirmed.

The claimant, Betty Fisher, was fifteen years and nine months old — lacking three months of the ‘age of consent’— when the alleged common-law marriage took place.

John McClain, a young man twenty-one years old, was employed by the defendant firm or company in its coal mine. He lived with his grandmother. Betty Fisher, the claimant, testified that he had been “going with” her for about a year, and they had planned to go to Virginia on May 20, 1941 to get married by a preacher. She said that on January 1, 1941, at about 11:00 or 11:30 o’clock in the evening, “he was at our home and we decided that we would marry ourselves, and he asked me if I would be his wife and cherish and to love him unto death, and I said I did; then I asked him if he would take me to be his wife and he said he would, and we married ourselves.” She had never been *218 at a wedding nor heard a marriage ceremony performed, she said. No one else was present at the time and they told no one of the alleged marriage, at least until January 11, when McClain spoke about it to H. A. Dilling, Betty’s brother-in-law. They continued to live as before, he with his grandmother, she with her parents. She gave as their reasons for not being married until May 20,1941, that she wasn’t old enough to get married in January (she would not be 16 until April 8, 1941 1 ) and that young McClain was then going to a defense school and would not be through until May. At a later session before the referee, when asked by her attorney if there was anything else in addition to his going to the defense school that caused them to marry themselves in January and agree to be married by a preacher later on, she answered: “Well, he wanted to have an intercourse and I said, No, not until after we were married.” Under her attorney’s questioning, she said that they had retained their plans to be married by a preacher on May 20,1941 because “we wanted to satisfy our parents, his parents and mine.” They had not told his parents or hers of their alleged ‘marrying themselves’, because they felt they would not be satisfied with ‘this marriage’ of January 1st, and so they were going to be married by a preacher, as they had planned, in order to satisfy them. The girl first knew that she was pregnant in April, and she testified that when she told John of this he said they would be married on May 20th. He was killed by a fall of coal on May 7th.

The girl also testified that she had spent four or five nights with McClain at the home of her sister, Mrs. Dilling, where they had intercourse together; and that pretty nearly every night after January 1, John came *219 to her home and they stayed downstairs in the living room all night, and two or three nights a week they slept together on the studio couch there.

It was shown by Harry Heaton, who worked in the mine with McClain and also attended the defense school with him, that the defense school did pot start until February 24,1941, nearly two months after January 1, and lasted until May 5, 1941; that he and McClain roomed together at the latter’s grandmother’s from the time the defense school started until McClain was killed; that their workday at the mine started at 6:00 a.m. and lasted until 2:30 p.m.; that the defense school started at 4:15 p.m. and lasted until 12:15 a.m. for five days a week, that is every day but Saturday and Sunday; and that McClain went home with him every night after defense school.

The referee filed his report disallowing compensation, stating that he was unable to find from the evidence that the claimant and the decedent had entered into a valid common-law marriage, and therefore found that the relation between them was illicit and meretricious.

While the referee did not explicitly state that he did not believe the claimant’s story, we think it is implied from his discussion in the eighth finding, and from his finding as a fact that “a marriage was intended in the future.” See Baker v. Mitchell, 143 Pa. Superior Ct. 50, 17 A. 2d 738.

The claimant appealed to the board, which was unwilling to decide the question of fact as to whether there had been a common-law marriage without hearing the testimony of the claimant’s sister and brother-in-law, the Hillings, at whose home she said she and McClain had spent some nights together. The board, accordingly, set aside the referee’s findings of fact and remanded the case to him for the purpose of taking any additional competent testimony that either party might care te offer bearing op the question of the actual ye-. *220 lationship between the claimant and decedent. It is clear from the board’s opinion that it viewed the referee’s findings in the same light as we do, for it said: “The referee, however, not being impressed with the testimony of the claimant (a minor 16 years of age at the time of the hearing) and having no corroborative testimony relative to cohabitation or reputation produced before him has determined that there was merely a meretricious relationship here and not a common-law marriage.” (Italics supplied) The board’s action was evidently inspired by the feeling that as the legitimacy of a young child was involved every opportunity should be given the claimant to prove her case.

At the rehearing before the referee Dilling testified, as claimant’s witness. His wife, the claimant’s sister, although present was not called by her and did not testify. Dilling’s testimony did not impress the referee favorably. He said: “The testimony of the claimant’s brother-in-law, Howard A. Dilling, is such as to make more convincing a meretricious relationship than that of a common-law marriage. We can find nothing in that testimony to support a finding of a marriage.” Accordingly, he practically reiterated his prior findings that claimant had failed to establish a common-law marriage between them, but showed rather that a marriage was intended in the future, and that following January 1, 1941 they did not live together and did not hold themselves out to their friends and acquaintances as husband and wife; that decedent continued to live with his grandmother until the date of his death and claimant continued to live with her parents, although the decedent did continue to visit the claimant at her home as he had done previously to January 1,1941. He stated finally that he was unable to find from the evidence that the claimant and decedent had entered into a valid common-law marriage, but on the contrary found that the relation between them was illicit and meretricious, *221 and therefore held that she was not entitled to compensation as his common-law wife.

The evidence of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
35 A.2d 756, 154 Pa. Super. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-sweet-mcclain-pasuperct-1943.