Howard v. Central National Bank

152 N.E. 784, 21 Ohio App. 74, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 700, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 552
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 784 (Howard v. Central National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Central National Bank, 152 N.E. 784, 21 Ohio App. 74, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 700, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 552 (Ohio Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Matjck, P. J.

Harry B. Hulings, a resident of *76 Washington county, died intestate in September, 1922, leaving an estate of some $30,000. Thereupon a woman known as Maud Hulings was appointed administratrix of his estate on the supposition that she was the common-law widow of the decedent. Some time later one of the defendants, to be known herein as Lulu Hulings, appeared, and represented herself as the widow of the decedent, as a result of which the first-appointed administratrix resigned her trust, and the Central National Bank of Marietta was appointed administrator de bonis non of. the estate. The pleadings show that the estate has been administered, and that a large sum is now in the hands of the administrator awaiting the determination of the next of kin entitled to share in the distribution. A petition was filed in the common pleas by Elizabeth Hulings Howard, alleging that she is a sister of the decedent, and that she and another sister and three surviving children of a predeceased brother are such next of kin of decedent, who, she pleads, left no widow surviving him. She avers, however, that one Lulu Cochran (Lulu Hulings) claims an interest in the estate, and asks that she (the plaintiff) and her sister and the three children of her deceased brother be found to be entitled to the estate, and that the said Lulu be adjudged to have no interest therein. Thereafter Lulu Hulings filed her answer, setting up her claim to be the widow of the decedent. It then appeared that Harry Hulings Schaffer, a minor residing at Pittsburg, Pa., was the surviving son of Frances Margaret Hulings, who had been married to Charles E. Schaffer, and that said Frances Margaret was the daughter of the deced *77 ent and said Lulu Cochran Hulings, and had died, leaving the said Harry Hulings Schaffer her only child. Thereupon the Pennsylvania Trust Company of Pittsburg, which seems to be the guardian of that child, somehow appeared in the case without service and without pleading. The Central National Bank, as administrator de bonis non of the estate of Harry B. Hulings, filed its answer, admitting the conflicting claims of the parties, and asking that it be instructed by the court as to its duties in the premises. It appears there was another case pending in the common pleas at the same time, arising through exceptions filed to the account of the administrator de bonis non in the probate court, to which account exceptions had been carried to the common pleas by appeal, raising the same question sought to be raised in the action already referred to as originating in the common pleas. The two cases are here together, the sole questions at issue being whether or not Harry Hulings Schaffer is the surviving grandson, and Lulu Hulings the widow, of the decedent, these questions hinging on whether or not a common-law marriage had subsisted between Lulu and the decedent. The trial court found that such common-law marriage did exist, and entered judgment accordingly. To reverse that judgment this case comes into this court by a proceeding in error.

To perfect the record it is now ordered that the Pennsylvania Trust Company file its cross-petition asserting the interest of its ward in the property in accordance with the judgment now under review.

Lulu Hulings appeared as a witness, and, with *78 out objection, testified to an unusual chain of circumstances, briefly epitomized as follows:

She was born and brought up on Neville Island, an island some 12 miles from Pittsburg. In 1885 her father went to work for Harry and Ed IIul ings; Harry being the decedent in this case. Hulings Bros, were operating a steamboat that brought them to the island, and kept them there more or less. In August, 1885, the decedent, then a widower, came to the Cochran home, and there the parties met. Lulu was at this time 23 years old, Harry but a little older. Lulu’s family consisted of her parents and two younger brothers. Harry called at the home on three of the four days following, and on the fourth day asked Lulu to break off an engagement she had to marry another man, and this she did about three weeks thereafter. About Christmas of that fall they became engaged to be married. This engagement seems to have continued up until the fall of 1886, when Hidings inquired: “We are going to be married some day?” Lulu answered in the affirmative. He then said: “We are united from above.”

He followed this declaration with a proposal that the two live together as man and wife without a religious ceremony. The record then proceeds :

“Q. What else was said about that? A. I refused, and asked him why, and he said, ‘ unions like ours was made in Heaven,’ and that we loved one another, and, if we lived, we would be man and wife. I objected at first, but finally consented.
“Q. What, if anything, did he say about that kind of marriage? A. He said that, and he took *79 my hand and he said, ‘Now we are man and wife,’ and he kissed me, and after that we went in to my mother — of course, he had talked about marriage so much — and he told my mother we had gotten married, and she said she wasn’t surprised, and he put his hand on my shoulder, and my mother shook hands with us and kissed us both.
“Q. What did he tell you about the ways of getting married? A. Well, he said if he did get married no one would know about it; that the boys on the island were going to take him away down the river. They knew he was going to marry me, for he had told them.
“Q. Did he say what he meant by ‘taking him away?’ A. Was going to serenade him.
“Q. What, if anything, did he say to you about that way of being married — whether or not it was legal or proper? A. He said it was legal.
“Q. What, if anything else, did he say, if you can recall? Tell us just what his words were, if you can remember what was said. A. Of course, I did tell you. He said a marriage like ours was made in Heaven.
“Q. I mean anything you have not told. A. He said that we are now man and wife.”

It is agreed that the relation between the parties is to be determined by the laws of Pennsylvania, where the marriage was consummated if consummated at all. This is perhaps of no great importance, except in the fact that Pennsylvania is one of the states that recognizes a common-law marriage, but the essentials of such a union in that state, so far as the instant case is concerned, are probably not different from those of this state. In *80 Ohio such a marriage must be established by clear and convincing evidence. Umbenhower v. Labus, 85 Ohio St., 238, 97 N. E., 832. In Pennsylvania the court must be entirely satisfied. In re Stevenson’s Estate, 272 Pa., 291, 116 A., 162. In Ohio a contract of marriage per verba de futuro, followed by cohabitation, does not constitute a marriage (Duncan v. Duncan, 10 Ohio St., 181), while in Pennsylvania such an agreement will be sustained as marriage

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 784, 21 Ohio App. 74, 4 Ohio Law. Abs. 700, 1926 Ohio App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-central-national-bank-ohioctapp-1926.