Hutchinson v. Hutchinson

63 N.E. 1023, 196 Ill. 432
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 1023 (Hutchinson v. Hutchinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchinson v. Hutchinson, 63 N.E. 1023, 196 Ill. 432 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The circuit court of Cook county, on the hearing of a bill in chancery for separate maintenance filed by the appellee, found and declared that the appellant and the appellee were husband and wife and that the appellee was living separate and apart from the appellant, her husband, without her fault, and decreed that appellant should pay appellee $100 per month for the support of herself and their daughter Violet, the youngest child of the. parties. An appeal prosecuted by the appellant re-suited in an affirmance of the decree in the Appellate Court for the First District. A further appeal in the same behalf has brought the record into this court.

The parties were never united in marriage by any ceremonial or public solemnization of the marriage rite between them. The finding of the circuit court was that they came together and agreed by a present contract to accept each other as husband and wife, and thereafter entered into the marriage relation and lived and cohabited together as husband and wife. The appellant admitted the cohabitation substantially as charged, conceded he had become the father of four children born to the appellee as the result of such cohabitation, but denied that any contract of marriage, per verba de presentí or otherwise, had ever been entered into between them or that any undivided repute of such marriage ever existed, but insists that his intercourse with her was purely meretricious and never matrimonial. The relation between them at its inception was illicit. It began in the year 1867, while appellee, a young girl, was a servant in the home of appellant’s father, in the city of Chicago. The appellant, then a young man, made his home with his father. Appellee became pregnant with child—the fruit of their illicit intercourse. She testified he then promised to make her his wife and fixed a time when they would be married. He, however, went away from his home and she went to the home of her sister and instituted proceedings in bastardy against him, which he, with the aid of his father, settled by payment to her of $100 in cash and giving to her nine notes, each for the sum of $50, one of which fell due each year thereafter for nine years. Appellee was delivered of this child on the 8th day of July, 1868. The child was a daughter, and was given the mother’s name, which was Jennie. Soon after the birth of this child the parents resumed their illicit intercourse, which continued until the year 1874, when appellee again became pregnant. The appellee testified that during this time the appellant made repeated promises of marriage, and that when it became evident that she was again pregnant with another child of which he was the father, she insisted that the second child should not be born out of lawful wedlock; that he consented, and that a contract of marriage was verbally entered into between them in the month of April, 1875. Her testimony as to this contract of marriage was as follows: “Why, Mr. Hutchinson came to see me one evening. I felt rather blue and downhearted. He asked me what was the matter, and I said, ‘You know what is the matter.’ He said, ‘I do.’ He says, ‘Is that all?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ He looked at me for awhile, and he says, ‘Jennie, are you willing to be my wife?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ He took a ring out of his pocket and he placed it on my finger, and he said, ‘I now take you for my wife.’ I said, ‘I now take you for my husband.’ He put his arms around my neck and kissed me, and he said, ‘Are you satisfied with that?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ He says, ‘From this night we are husband and wife.’ ‘Now,’ he says, ‘You go and get a flat and we will go housekeeping.’ I says, ‘I cannot leave mother just now, because she is on the point of death.’ ‘Well,’ he says, ‘as soon as you can.’ I says, ‘All right.’” Appellant denied these statements of the appellee, but the chancellor, who saw them both and heard them both testify, accepted her version as being true. No reason is perceived why we should insist the court fell into palpable error in regarding her as the more truthful of the two. In the light of all the testimony bearing upon the character of the appellant we heartily agree with the chancellor that of the two her statements are the more worthy of weight and credit.

The appellee testified that within about a month after the contract of marriage was entered into between them, and in pursuance of that contract, she left her home with her father and mother, and with the appellant as her husband began living together as husband and wife in a flat at 286 West Congress street, in the city of Chicago; that their child Jennie resided in the family with them; that their second child was born while they so lived together in said flat, on the 17th day of August, 1875; that this child, a boy, was given the name of its father, Charles G-. Hutchinson; that they resided together at the same place for a year and a half and then moved to West Lake street, where they continued to live and cohabit together as husband and wife for nine years and until the year 1884, during which time two other children, Grace and Violet, were born of their union; that soon after the birth of the fourth child he practically abandoned his home with her and their children, and, beyond the payment of sums not exceeding $50 per year, failed and refused to provide for the wants of herself or of the children.

The facts and circumstances bearing upon the life and conduct of appellant and appellee, and upon the question of the character of their cohabitation and the repute of their association among their neighbors and acquaintances, during" the period of years intervening between April, 1875, the date when appellee testified the contract of marriage was entered into, and the year 1884, when she testified he deserted and abandoned her and their children, and the somewhat conflicting testimony bearing thereupon, to which counsel devote so many pages of their printed briefs, cannot be taken up seriatim, and discussed without extending this «opinion to an unreasonable length, nor would any benefit accrue from such discussion to the parties, their children, their counsel, the public or the profession. We patiently listened to the very full and forcible oral arguments of counsel, and have diligently read their printed briefs and arguments and freely consulted the testimony preserved in the record, and the result of our reflection and deliberation has only served to confirm in our minds the correctness of the views expressed by the Appellate Court as to the facts established by all the proofs upon these questions. We therefore approve the following extract from the opinion of that court rendered by Mr. Justice WiNDES:

“During all the time appellee lived at these different places, and up to the year 1884, when he entirely left and abandoned appellee and his children, he lived and cohabited with her and to all outward appearances sustained to her the relation of husband, though he was frequently absent from home, as he explained to her and to his children, on account of business or on hunting and fishing expeditions, as long as six weeks at a time. During that time appellant was known by certain of the friends and acquaintances of himself and appellee as her husband. He acknowledged all the four children as his own, always permitted them, without any remonstrance or objection, to call him papa and father, and when at home with appellee and his children he always occupied the same bed with appellee. He spoke to different persons of appellee as his wife.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 1023, 196 Ill. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-hutchinson-ill-1902.