Hawkins v. Oklahoma Scrap Paper Company

1964 OK 9, 389 P.2d 513, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1964
Docket40081
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1964 OK 9 (Hawkins v. Oklahoma Scrap Paper Company) 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
Hawkins v. Oklahoma Scrap Paper Company, 1964 OK 9, 389 P.2d 513, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 262 (Okla. 1964).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Chief Justice.

The order entered by the State Industrial Court en banc on April 3rd, and corrected April 9th, 1962, and reviewed herein, sustained an order previously entered by one of its judges (hereinafter referred to as the “trial judge or court”) awarding death compensation benefits to Stella Mae Glover (often referred to as “claimant”) and her two children, Curtis and Shirley Ruth, as administratrix of the estate and surviving widow and ’minor son and daughter, respectively, of William (Bill) Glover, deceased. At the time of Glover’s fatal accident on October 25th, 1961, he had been employed by Oklahoma Scrap Paper Company several years. The trial judge’s conclusion that claimant, Stella Mae, was an heir of the said deceased employee was based upon his finding that she was Glover’s wife “ * * * by reason of a common law marriage * * Whether or not this finding is sufficiently supported by the evidence is the principal issue in this case.

The petitioner, who is Glover’s mother, apparently recognizes that on the basis of the undisputed evidence Stella Mae, whose maiden name was “Atkins” and William, or “Willie”, Glover lived together for several years in a relationship which resembled that of a husband and wife, at least in some respects ; but she takes the position generally that this relationship was meretricious, that it amounted to concubinage, and was not sufficiently proved to have certain necessary elements of a common law marriage. Her attack on the sufficiency of the evidence pertains more to its quality and credibility than to its quantity.

Petitioner’s “Proposition One” is:

“The evidence Before The State Industrial Court Was Not Clear And Convincing And Was Insufficient To Establish A Common-Law Marriage.”

Under this proposition, she points out certain features of part of claimant’s evidence which she attempts to show renders it incredible, unworthy of belief, or at least unconvincing as to certain essential ele *516 ments of a common law marriage. The first of these pertains to the date which claimant and Glover agreed to live together as husband and wife.

After testifying that she moved with her parents from Boley, Oklahoma, to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in 1947, when she was only fourteen years of age and was still attending public school, claimant testified that in 1948, Glover (who was then in his late twenties) told her, at the home of her parents, and in their presence, that he wanted her to be his wife, and that she agreed, and that thereafter she and the two children started living with Glover in one side of a duplex, whose other side his aunt, Irene Sanders, occupied. Claimant’s testimony was corroborated by her father, Les-Atkins, who also testified that Glover asked him “ * * * would it be satisfaction with me to live with Stella Mae and take care of the children and I told him yes.” Atkins further testified that the subject couple took the children with them, when they moved to said duplex. The birth certificates of the two children in evidence, show, however, that the son Curtis was not born until June 24, 1949, and the daughter, Shirley Ruth, until July 24, 1950. Thus, if (as the named witnesses testified) the couple took the children with them when they left claimant’s parents’ home to begin living together, this must have occurred after the latter date, rather than in 1948, or at any time prior to July 24, 1950. We think that in view of this inconsistency and the conflict between this part, and other parts, of these witnesses’ testimony, the date “1948” must have been an error; but whether this error was due to the witnesses’ confusion, momentary lapse of memory, or to conscious prevarication, we do not think it impeached or nullified their testimony as to the fact that such an agreement was entered into, especially when this latter fact was never directly contradicted. We think it may be reasonably concluded from the evidence as a whole, that the parties’ agreement to live together as husband and wife probably occurred in 1949 or 1950, rather than in 1948. Nor do we think the fact that Stella Mae’s testimony contains some apparent conflicting statements as to her Oklahoma City street address, when she became acquainted with Glover, renders her testimony, as to the more pertinent facts, unworthy of belief.

The undisputed evidence shows- that Glover and Stella Mae were still living together in 1958, while occuping a house Glover rented from one Herbert Slusher,. who operated a grocery store in the same neighborhood. Slusher testified that both Glover and Stella Mae purchased groceries-at the store and that he knew her as “Mrs. Glover”. The evidence further shows that, although claimant, during the months of November and December, 1960, cohabited with one Lawrence Smith, a bellman at the Huckins Hotel, where she was employed as a maid, this was just a temporary interlude, and that she thereafter resumed, and continued, marital relations with Glover until' his death; and Glover’s income tax return for the year 1960, executed in March, 1961, in which he specifically claimed Curtis and Shirley as his dependent children, reflects no change in said taxpayer’s marital status from that indicated in the earlier years of his and the claimant’s relationship. We find nothing in the testimony of the Huckins Hotel bell captain, Howe, who was called' as a witness by the petitioner, that renders the trial judge’s finding questionable. If Stella Mae worked at the Huckins under her maiden name of "Atkins” it is not surprising that this witness, who testified that he knew her there “ * * * I’d say pretty near a year and a half”, and is not shown to have come into contact with her anywhere else, -also testified that he had never known her to go under the name of “Glover”. In our opinion, neither Howe’s testimony, nor that of Glover’s first cousin, Dorothy Johnson, nor his aunt, Irene Sanders, was unequivocal and responsive as to the matter of whether or not the couple’s general reputation in the community was that of husband and wife. At least we cannot, say, in the face of a finding to the contrary by the trial tribunal, who was able to ob *517 serve the witnesses testify, that this testimony was sufficient to invoke application of the “divided reputation” rule which respondents urge in their Proposition Three. After thoroughly examining the evidence as a whole, we do not agree with respondents counsel that the testimony of the claimant of itself, shows that the reputation of her relationship with Glover was a “divided” one, in the community in which they lived together.

Furthermore, in view of the evidence as a whole on the subject, and what we have already said concerning the testimony upon which petitioner relies to make it appear that Glover and claimant agreed to live as husband and wife as early as 1948 (rather than later, after both children were born) we do not think the rule on contracts for future marriage or cohabitation is applicable to this case, as contended in petitioner’s Proposition Two.

We are not impressed by the questions petitioner’s argument raises concerning the paternity of claimant’s children. They do not place in question the inescapable conclusion from the evidence that claimant and Glover had regular sexual relations, in the manner of a husband and wife, over an extended period of years.

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Bluebook (online)
1964 OK 9, 389 P.2d 513, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-oklahoma-scrap-paper-company-okla-1964.