Hodge v. Hodge

14 V.I. 238, 1977 V.I. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedDecember 14, 1977
DocketJDR No. 107-75
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 V.I. 238 (Hodge v. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodge v. Hodge, 14 V.I. 238, 1977 V.I. LEXIS 4 (virginislands 1977).

Opinion

SILVERLIGHT, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

This is an action for support, instituted by Lorna Hodge, Plaintiff (hereinafter Lorna), individually, and on behalf of her two minor children, Franklyn, Jr. and Mario.

The issue of support of the minor children had been decided previously, but that decision was reversed on appeal,1 and the cause remanded to this Court for disposition. The issue of support for Lorna which, by stipulation of the parties had been held in abeyance pending the appeal, is now also before me for disposition.

Franklyn Hodge, Defendant (hereinafter Hodge), acknowledges paternity of Franklyn, Jr. and Mario, the minor children here involved, and concedes his obligation to support them. He contends, however, that no such duty of support is owed to Lorna on the grounds that his purported marriage to her was void ab initio, Lorna having been a party to a previous marriage which had not been terminated by death or divorce. 16 V.I.C. § 1(a)(3). The issues presented, then, are:

1. What sum, if any, shall be awarded for the support of the minor children ?
2. Is the marriage between plaintiff and defendant valid ?
3. If the marriage is valid, what sum, if any, should be awarded to the plaintiff for support?

After carefully considering all of the testimony and evidence presented by or on behalf of both plaintiff and defendant, this Court finds as follows.

Lorna concedes that she was lawfully married to one [242]*242James Attwood on December 17, 1955, in Antigua, British West Indies, where both parties were then domiciled. Plaintiff and Attwood lived together thereafter until 1958, at which time Attwood left Antigua, ostensibly relocated in London, England, and, according to plaintiff’s testimony, was never seen nor heard from by her again.

In 1966, Lorna moved to St. Croix. In 1968, she met defendant, entered into a relationship with him which might be described as a “pseudo-marriage,” and, in 1970, bore him a child, Franklyn Hodge, Jr. (one of the minor children herein). Thereafter, the parties desiring to transform their “pseudo-marriage” into a lawful union, decided to “take the plunge.” They both recognized, however, that Lorna’s prior marriage to Attwood, unless it was terminated in some manner, constituted an impediment to the lawful contraction of their marriage.

Defendant, therefore, as the motivating force, and plaintiff, as the acquiescing follower, commenced an effort to resolve the question of this troublesome prior marriage. In pursuance of this goal, Hodge induced Lorna to attempt to obtain a divorce from Attwood; he arranged and paid for a trip by both plaintiff and himself to Antigua for the purpose of retaining counsel to institute an action for divorce; he paid for plaintiff’s counsel who, on July 30, 1973, filed a divorce action against Attwood in Antigua. No decree was ever entered in this action, nor was it pursued because neither personal nor substituted service of process was ever effected upon Attwood. Without any further action on her petition for divorce in Antigua or elsewhere, both parties being fully aware of the facts above recited, Hodge and Lorna were ceremoniously married in St. Croix on June 5,1974.2

[243]*243All then went well in this saga of matrimonial intrigue, the parties enjoying a fair measure of wedded bliss which resulted in the birth of Mario Hodge, the second child involved in this case, on December 19, 1974. Even then, the parties continued to enjoy a reasonable degree of connubial tranquility which, however, had begun to be undermined by the specter of avarice arising out of defendant’s tort claim against Hess Oil-Virgin Islands Corp., and his recovery of an award which, in the eyes of these average people, was astronomical. In April, 1975, the wedge of greed having been driven between the parties, they separated and have not cohabited since. As is so often the case, this action for support was filed, followed by defendant’s denial of the validity of his marriage to plaintiff.

Thereafter, in pursuance of sustaining his burden of proof, Hodge hired a private investigator to ascertain where Attwood now lived or if, indeed, he was alive. The investigator traveled to Antigua where, with the help of the local constabulary, he was directed to and interviewed three persons who identified themselves as Attwood’s mother, sister and nephew.3 There is little doubt that the person the investigator spoke with was the mother of the James Attwood who was married to plaintiff herein in 1955. This fact is established by her recognition of Loma’s maiden name as it appeared on the copy of the marriage certificate presented to her by the investigator.

Attwood’s mother told the investigator that she had heard from her son as late as 1974, when she received a letter from him which she showed to the investigator. There is no doubt that these proofs could have been strengthened by the use of depositions or letters rogatory (both processes being readily available to defendant), but the failure to utilize these legal forms does not preclude me from [244]*244concluding that defendant proved, by “clear and convincing evidence” the continuance of Attwood’s life by a different or less effective means.

I will now digress from the fact-finding process and address myself to an application of the law. If, as I have said before, the marriage of these parties is valid, the facts upon which support for plaintiff and the children may be awarded can be recited in full. On the other hand, if the marriage is declared invalid, those facts directed to the support of plaintiff may be omitted. In either event, logic demands that the legal issue be here resolved before I move on to the monetary issues which will then present themselves for resolution.

There is no doubt that, and this Court finds, there were two marriages: the earlier marriage of Loma and Attwood, and the subsequent marriage of Loma and Hodge. A marriage is prohibited and void when it is between “any persons either of whom has been previously married and whose previous marriage has not been terminated by death or a decree of divorce.” 16 V.LC. § 1(a)(3).

While defendant contends that plaintiff’s prior marriage was never terminated by death or divorce and that, therefore, his later marriage to her was void, such unsupported assertions are not enough. All ceremonial marriages are presumed valid until proven otherwise. Public policy demands that all persons are presumed to act in a moral and legal fashion rather than the contrary. Schaffer v. Richardson’s Estate, 93 A. 391 (Md. App. 1915).

It is well settled that there exists a strong presumption that the latter of two or more marriages involving a common participant is valid and that the prior marriage [245]*245has been terminated by death or divorce before the contracting of the last marriage.4

Such presumption is stronger than and overcomes the presumption of the continuance of a previous marriage. Grace v. Grace, supra, at footnote 4.

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Bluebook (online)
14 V.I. 238, 1977 V.I. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodge-v-hodge-virginislands-1977.