Hartman v. Valier & Spies Milling Co.

202 S.W.2d 1, 356 Mo. 424, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 583
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 21, 1947
DocketNo. 40071.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 202 S.W.2d 1 (Hartman v. Valier & Spies Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartman v. Valier & Spies Milling Co., 202 S.W.2d 1, 356 Mo. 424, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 583 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

*427 ELLISON, J.

The defendant Milling Company appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of the City of St. Louis reversing a finding and award of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission in favor of it and its insurer, and against the claimant-respondent. The Commission had found there was not sufficient competent evidence to support respondent’s claim for compensation as widow and sole dependent of Thomas A. Hartman, who admittedly was killed on January 14, 1945, by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment by appellant.

The ground of the Commission’s finding was that respondent’s evidence failed to prove she had previously been married to the deceased, in consequence of which she could not be his widow and dependent. The circuit court found to the contrary — that the appellant’s evidence was insufficient to overcome the presumption of law in favor of respondent’s marriage.to the deceased. The sole question all the way through the case was marriage vel non. Appellant’s brief splits this issue into two parts: (1) was a marriage ceremony performed between the respondent and the deceased at Belleville, Illinois on September 17, 1942, as she testified? (2) is there a presumption of law in favor of marriage in the case of a compensation claim such as this?

First as to the facts, stated chronologically. The respondent testified she had been married once before in July, 1931, she thought, to H. B. Hidy, from which marriage two daughters were born, aged respectively 18 and 22 years at the time of the trial on May 28, 1945, which would make the year of their births respectively 1927 and 1923. Hidy divorced her in St. Louis, she testified, because she could not afford to bring the suit herself. She produced a copy of the divorce decree, but it is not preserved in the record. She said she first met her (later) deceased husband, Hartman, in Platte City in 1940 or 1941, while he was working for the Government at a Veterans’ Gamp. She was living in Platte City then, doing laundry work for the men in that camp. After nine or ten months the camp was moved to Wentzville, Missouri, and Hartman went with it. She moved to Kansas City.

Thereafter, Hartman would come back to visit her in Kansas -City over week ends, staying at a hotel. Over a month before their- marriage she moved to St. Louis and continued to do laundry work for the men in the camp at Wentzville, which is about 40 miles from St. Louis. With reference to her engagement of marriage with Hartman, she testified:

*428 “Q. Now, will you tell us the circumstances of your marriage to Mr. Hartman? A. The circumstances?

“Q. Yes. A. Well hé was working at Wentzville at the time and he came home one afternoon and he said, ‘well, lets get married,’ and it was on a Saturday and—

“Commissioner Lahey: ‘Wentzville, is that AVentzville, Missouri?’

“The Witness: ‘Yes, that’s Wentzville, Missouri. He said: ‘Honey, I have a license, let’s go and get married.’ He said he wanted to go over to Illinois and get married. I said, ‘Why do you want to go to Illinois ? ’ And he said that he bought the license there and wanted to go to Illinois to get married. Therefore that is the reason we went .to Belleville, Illinois.”

On cross-examination respondent testified that she didn’t mean Hartman proposed marriage to her at Wentzville; that they had previously become engaged while she was living in Kansas City, on one of his numerous trips back there. And the incident narrated in the last paragraph as having occurred in Wentzville was simply Hartman’s proposal to act on the engagement and have the marriage ceremony performed in Illinois. The conversation occurred in her home in St. Louis, not at Wentzville. He had theretofore been married and divorced and had two sons (or so told her) — indeed had grandchildren. He had lived in Illinos in former years,' and his two sons still lived there. But none of Hartman’s relatives attended his wedding to respondent in Belleville.

Respondent testified her friends Mr. and Mrs. McClure accompanied her and Hartman on the trip to Belleville in the latter’s automobile. Mr. McClure was a “buddie” of Hartman’s, both having worked in the Platte City and AVentzville Veterans’ Camps. He was not called as a witness. 'Mrs. McClure had know'll respondent for five years, at Platte City and before that. On further cross-examination respondent said the reason she and Hartman went to Belleville to be married was, that she had known the pastor óf a Pentecostal Church in that city, named Johnson, who had been stationed in Harrisonville, Missouri when she lived there during her first marriage; and a lady friend of her’s had told hdr that Mr. Johnson was in Belleville. So when Hartman asked her “Do you have any particular minister you want?” she answered “Yes, I would like to have Brother Johnson.” Respondent telephoned Mrs. McClure at Maplewood, a suburb of St. Louis, about noon of the impending wedding, and asked her and her husband to act as witnesses. The party started about 3 p. m. and the wedding took place about 4:30 p. m.

Respondent narrated that they went to Rev. Johnson’s “Mission” as the Pentecostal denomination calls its churches. It was a small building. Hartman handed the minister the license and the latter performed the ceremony. Hartman gave her a ring, which she had whén testifying. The minister handed the “paper” back to Hartman. *429 First she said'she didn’t sign anything at the wedding, and then that she signed a paper — it was the marriage license. She said the marriage ceremony in the Pentecostal Church is distinctive; that they all knelt down and had a prayer; everybody says a prayer first; and the preacher blessed them. When Mrs. McClure testified, she said the ceremony was “just like any other marriage, I believe. . . . We were standing there; they were holding hands and he just performed the ceremony. I think they had to sign a paper” — a marriage license. She saw Hartman hand the minister a paper. It was “something like our marriage license and it said ‘Holy Matrimony.’ ” The- witness, M!rs. McClure, signed her name on it.

With respect to the marriage license, respondent said she did not-see it, “only just the headline.” She repeated that statement, and was questioned by Commissioner Lahey as follows, after she said she had lost the license:

“Q. You never saw this license only the headline? A. No.

“Q. How long did you have this license when you lost it? A. .Well we had it a good while after we got married, we brought it home and put it in the trunk.

“Q. How do you know that it was a marriage license? A. Because I would know that it was. He said that it was a marriage license and I don’t think he would lie about it.

“Q. And you say you never looked at it and you don’t-know whether it was a marriage license or not ? A. I know it was.

“Q. How do you know? Because he said it was? A. Well I don’t think he would go and get something and get a preacher and get married like that if it wasn’t a license.

“Q. I am just asking you, you don’t know if it was a' marriage license? A. No, sir.” ■' ' ■:

‘ ‘ Q. In other words, you just saw a piece of paper, folded up, and that’s about all you did see ? A. Yes, but I know it was a license.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W.2d 1, 356 Mo. 424, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-valier-spies-milling-co-mo-1947.