Haile v. Hale

1913 OK 540, 135 P. 1143, 40 Okla. 101, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 9, 1913
Docket3670
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1913 OK 540 (Haile v. Hale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haile v. Hale, 1913 OK 540, 135 P. 1143, 40 Okla. 101, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 25 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

HAYES, C. J.

(after stating the facts as above). The principal controverted issues at the hearing of the district court were: First. Was defendant in error ever legally married to decedent? Second. Was the contract in settlement of property rights alleged in plaintiff in error’s answer, the execution of which is admitted, annulled by the acts and conduct of the parties after the execution thereof? Third. Is defendant in error in need of an allowance, and, if so, the amount thereof?

The evidence establishes the issue of a marriage license by the proper authorities of Sedgwick county, Kan., on the 22d day of December, 1906, authorizing the marriage of decedent and defendant in error; and that decedent and defendant in error were on said date married under formal ceremony. Plaintiff in error attempted to establish the invalidity of this marriage by showing that at that time defendant in error was the wife of one John Shugart. In support of this contention, the evidence establishes that for several years defendant in error and one John Shugart lived together and cohabited in the state of Illinois and held themselves out to the public as man and wife; that defendant in error had by said John Shugart four children; that during the time she lived with him she bore his name; and that all of her children took the surname of Shugart. Defendant in error left Shugart about the year 1866, after the birth of her children, and was gone about two years, when she returned in the neighborhood in which she had formerly resided with Shugart. During that time Shugart had remarried. Defendant in error afterwards married a man by the name of Board, who subsequently died before she married Hale. Upon being introduced as a witness by plaintiff in error, she testified that she had never been married to Shugart. Counsel for plaintiff in error thereupon asked her several questions, the purpose *104 of which was to establish a common-law marriage between her and Shugart. An objection to said testimony was sustained; and the action of the court in rejecting this testimony constitutes one of the assignments of error urged for reversal. But, since we may assume that the evidence establishes a common-law marriage between defendant in error and Shugart, and that fact alone does not require a reversal of the order appealed from, although the-trial court committed error in rejecting the testimony, such error was without prejudice. And we shall, for the purpose of deciding all the questions presented by this proceeding, assume that there was a common-law marriage between the defendant in error and Shugart. The evidence also establishes that, at the time defendant in error married Hale, Shugart, her former husband, was still living; but the facts that defendant in error had been formerly married and that the husband of her first marriage was still living are not sufficient to render her marriage to Hale invalid.

Where a marriage has been consummated in accordance with the forms of the law, the law indulges a strong presumption in favor of its validity. Re Rash, 21 Mont. 170, 53 Pac. 312, 69 Am. St. Rep. 649; Tuttle v. Raish, 116 Iowa, 331, 90 N. W. 66; Wenning et al. v. Teeple et al., 144 Ind. 189, 41 N. E. 600.

One who asserts the invalidity of such a marriage, because one of the parties thereto has been formerly married, and the spouse of the former marriage is still living, has upon him the burden of proving that the first marriage has not been dissolved by divorce or lawful separation. Clarkson et al. v. Washington et al., 38 Okla. 4, 131 Pac. 935; Coachman v. Sims et al., 36 Okla. 536, 129 Pac. 845; Scott v. Scott, 77 S. W. 1122, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1356; Pittinger v. Pittinger, 28 Colo. 308, 64 Pac. 195, 89 Am. St. Rep. 193. Numerous other authorities supporting this doctrine may be found referred to in the note to Smith v. Puller, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 98.

Defendant in error testified that she had never obtained a divorce from John Shugart, her first husband; that she did not think it was necessary. She does not testify as to whether he obtained a divorce from her and by such divorce their marriage *105 relations were dissolved. Plaintiff in error, in an effort to discharge the burden of proof upon him, introduced the depositions of the clerks of the circuit courts of Fulton, Traswell, and Peoria counties of Illinois and of Kaufman county, Tex., which courts were shown to have jurisdiction of all divorce proceedings in their respective counties from the time of the separation of defendant in error from her first husband, John Shugart, until the time of her marriage to Hale. These depositions were to the effect that no divorce had been granted to John Shugart by the courts of which said witnesses were clerks. The evidence establishes that during this time Shugart lived in the counties of Illinois named, and that he lived near a certain town in Texas, located in Kaufman county. The evidence does not establish that he ever lived in Kaufman county; and it appears from the location of the town named in'that county that he could have lived near it and still resided in another county. Nor does the evidence establish that the counties named in the depositions are the only counties in which Shugart resided during said time, or that said courts were the only courts that would have had jurisdiction to grant him a divorce. The evidence establishes that, about two years after defendant in error separated from Shugart, she returned to the community where they had theretofore lived as man and wife. Shugart was' then residing in the same community with his second wife, whom he had married in that community. It does not appear that any prosecution was ever made against Shugart for bigamy, and thereafter defendant in error married a second husband with whom she lived a number of years before his death. Her first husband, Shugart, moved to Texas, taking with him his second wife and his children by her, where he lived with them until his death. To hold that defendant in error’s marriage to Hale is invalid would be to make Shugart’s relation to his alleged second wife bigamous, his two children born by her bastards, and defendant in error’s second marriage illegal. So far as it appears from the evidence in this record, the parties to all these marriage contracts have lived'together during .the lifetime of the respective parties .under the impression that they were lawfully iparried. Defendant in error *106 and Mr. Hale lived together in such relation about four years before his death. The stability of descent and distribution, the rendering illegitimate innocent children upon such facts as are presented by this record, establishes the wisdom of the presumption that sustains the validity of a marriage contracted under the forms of the law; and we are of the opinion that the trial court did not err in his finding to the effect that this presumption had not been overcome.

Under the statutes of this state, upon the death of the husband, the homestead and certain personal property are required to be set aside to be occupied and used by the widow and children, or either. Sections 5265 and 5266, Comp. Laws 1909 (Rev. Laws 1910, secs. 6328, 6329).

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Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 540, 135 P. 1143, 40 Okla. 101, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haile-v-hale-okla-1913.