French v. State Industrial Accident Commission

68 P.2d 466, 156 Or. 443, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 73
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 68 P.2d 466 (French v. State Industrial Accident Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. State Industrial Accident Commission, 68 P.2d 466, 156 Or. 443, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 73 (Or. 1937).

Opinions

*445 BOSSMAN, J.

Two issues only are argued in the plaintiff’s (appellant’s) brief: (a) The trial judge erred in failing to instruct the jury that a man and a woman deporting themselves as husband and wife are presumed to have been legally married; and (b) the •plaintiff’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto should have been sustained. The plaintiff claims that she and one George French contracted a common-law marriage in Idaho. The defendants do not deny that common-law marriages may be lawfully contracted in that state, but both parties agree that such marriages cannot be legally contracted in either California or Oregon, the other two states in which the plaintiff and French resided at the times material to this controversy.

December 17, 1935, the plaintiff filed with the defendant commission a claim for compensation in which, besides averring the death of French on November 6, 1935, under circumstances for which compensation was payable, stated that he and she were married in San Francisco, California, April 12, 1925. Compensation was denied. January 25,1936, through an attorney, she filed with the commission a petition for a rehearing in which she stated:

“Claimant, in the year 1925 was an unmarried woman and in all respects competent to marry, and one George French was likewise an unmarried man and *446 competent to marry; thereupon the said parties entered into a marriage and ever since that time lived together until the death of said George French * #

This petition was accompanied with a letter from the attorney in which he stated: ‘ ‘ This claim rests upon a common-law marriage contracted in the state of California in the year 1925.”

Upon the rehearing the plaintiff swore that she first met French in San Francisco in 1921, that later the two began living together, and that still later they moved to the state of Idaho. Her attorney then asked her: “You say it was in 1929 that you and Mr. French got into this marriage in Idaho ? ’ ’ She answered, “Yes, sir.” The attorney then asked permission to amend the petition for a rehearing by substituting 1929 for 1925 as the date of the alleged marriage. The plaintiff swore that French was a Canadian citizen who had served with the Canadian forces for four years during the course of the World war. She produced a letter dated February Í4, 1930, addressed to him from the Department of Pensions and National Health of Canada, from which we quote: “It is noted from Life Certificate completed by you on December 14th, 1929, that you were married on July 8th, 1926.” No reply was made to this letter and the plaintiff, as a witness, offered no explanation of this date.

Concerning her conception of the relationship between herself and French as they proceeded to Idaho, she testified:

“Yes, sir, we often talked it over. He said there wasn’t any use getting married as we were already married. We stayed there for three months and then we went with the intention of going back; he was going to work in the smelter in Kellogg.”

*447 The following is the explanation she gave before the commission for their omission to have a ceremonial marriage:

“Well, we talked it over and jnst another of those puddles, that was all. Intended to right along, getting married, until we went to Idaho; then after we went up there he was kind of proud and he just hated to have people know he was not married.”

Although she testified that she and French lived together, that he treated her as his wife, and that all of their acquaintances deemed the two husband and wife, she did not mention any agreement that contemplated they should assume that relationship. The commission held that the plaintiff was not a dependent of the deceased, and awarded no compensation.

Next, the plaintiff filed the complaint which brought this matter before the circuit court. In it, after averring that French died November 6,1935, she alleged:

“For many years past plaintiff was a single woman over the age of 18 years and in all respects competent to marry, and said George French was likewise a single man, over the age of 21 years and in all respects competent to marry, and thereafter the said parties, in the State of Idaho, did enter into an agreement by the terms whereof plaintiff and said George French did agree to become husband and wife, and did become husband and wife, and entered upon the marriage relation, and ever since said time, which was more than ten years prior to the death of said George French, plaintiff and said George French lived and cohabited together as husband and wife. ’ ’

The defendants filed an answer in which they averred that the plaintiff’s application to the commission alleged that her marriage to French occurred April 12,1925, in San Francisco, California. The reply denied this averment.

*448 In the circuit court the plaintiff, as a witness, produced two applications for pensions which French had filed with the Canadian Pension Commission. Both bore the signature not only of French but also of the plaintiff. From the one dated December 15, 1929, we quote: “I was married on July 8, 1926.’,’ At that time the two were living in Oregon. The other is dated November 14,1930, and from it we quote: “I was married on-yes.” It gives no date.

As a witness in the circuit court, the plaintiff swore that she first met French in 1921 in San Francisco when be became a boarder in a place she was operating. Both were then 47 or 49 years of age. She testified that three months after they met ‘ ‘we got an apartment and went to live as man and wife.” In 1925 they went to Idaho to visit the plaintiff’s brother, and there took place the incidents which effected the common-law marriage — if such a marriage ever occurred. Her brother’s wife, so the plaintiff declared, told her that in Idaho" common-law marriages could be lawfully contracted.

If vows to become husband and wife were ever exchanged between the two the evidence concerning them must be found in the following, quoted from the plaintiff’s testimony. It is not all of her testimony concerning what occurred in Idaho, but is, we believe, the principal parts:

“Well, we thought we lived together as long as we had, we wasn’t going to take any more chances among us and live together as husband and wife and thought it was legal in Idaho, we would make our home there and Mr. French got sick and we had to go back. * * *

“Q. When you got there did you have any understanding with Mr. French about your affairs? A. No, sir.

*449 “Q. What was that? A. Well, we talked it over and talked it over with my sister-in-law and thought we would reside there because it was a common-law marriage where it wasn’t in Oregon, in Idaho.

“Q.. You understood what a common-law marriage was did you? A. Yes.

“Q. Understood it was legal in Idaho, did you? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. How long did you live in Idaho, after that? A. We were there six months, as I remember. * * *

“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
68 P.2d 466, 156 Or. 443, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-state-industrial-accident-commission-or-1937.