Hynes v. . McDermott

91 N.Y. 451, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 58
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by130 cases

This text of 91 N.Y. 451 (Hynes v. . McDermott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hynes v. . McDermott, 91 N.Y. 451, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 58 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The adult plaintiff, Mary Eliza Hynes, is the alleged widow of William Rose Hynes, who died in London, England, June 27, 1874. The infant plaintiffs William Rose Hynes and Andrew Hynes, are the children of William Rose Hynes, Sr., by Mary Eliza Hynes, and were born in London, the one Dec. 18,1871, and the other May 10, 1873. The father *455 of the infant plaintiffs died intestate, seized of the premises in controversy, and the right of the plaintiffs to recover depends upon the question of the marriage of them mother with their father, William Rose Hynes. This issue was found by the jury in favor of the plaintiffs. There was no proof of a formal ceremonial marriage between the parties, and the sole question upon the merits is whether upon the whole facts appearing on the record, the jury were authorized to find that a marriage between the parents of the infant plaintiffs, was consummated prior to their birth.

William R. Hynes, the father, was a native born citizen of the United States, and prior to 1871, was a bachelor, residing in the city of Hew York. He had retired from active business. He possessed a quite large property in this country, mainly real estate. He was- accustomed to make annual visits abroad, and in the spring of 1871, while stopping at the Langham Hotel, London, made the acquaintance of the adult plaintiff, a young woman employed in the hotel in the capacity of still-room maid, having charge of the linen, and the supervision of the female servants of the house. She was an English subject, the widow of Charles Saunders, who died in 1869, and had always resided in England. The plaintiffs, to establish the marriage between Mr. Hynes and Mrs. Saunders, proved an intention of marriage between the parties, and subsequent cohabitation in the apparent relation of man and wife, from about the 1st of June, 1871, to the death of Mr. Hynes, which occurred in June, 1874. It was shown that in the spring of 1871, at the Langham Hotel, Mrs. Saunders introduced Mr. Hynes to one of her brothers as the person she was about to marry. In June of that year, Mr. Hynes and the plaintiff Mrs. Hynes, were in Paris. A Mr. Fargo, of San Francisco, an acquaintance of Mr. Hynes, saw them together there at a hotel dinner table, and was introduced by Mr. Hynes, to the adult plaintiff, as Mrs. Hynes, and he afterward frequently saw them at their temporary residence in Place Madeleine. How long they remained in Paris, does not appear. They were in London at the birth of their eldest child, and were then residing in Q-lou- , *456 cester street. In the spring of 1872, they removed to a house in Leverton street, where they remained until the spring of 1873, when they removed to a house known as Victoria Villa, in Kentishtown, where their second child was born, and where they continued to reside until Mr. Hynes’ death. Mr. Fargo testified that he was a constant visitor of Mr. Hynes, both at the Place Madeleine and at Victoria Villa; that Mr. Hynes was in the habit of addressing the adult plaintiff in his presence, as Mrs. Hynes, or Lizzie, and that he had frequently seen Mr. Hynes address letters to her as Mrs. Hynes. Their life in England, as detailed by the relatives of Mrs. Hynes, and other witnesses for the plaintiffs, was the ordinary household and family life of persons lawfully married, having children, the fruit of lawful wedlock. He treated Mrs. Hynes with apparent respect and affection, and was fond of his children. He spoke of Mrs. Hynes in the presence of others, as his wife. The relatives of his wife visited him on the footing of relatives by marriage. He introduced Mrs. Hynes’ brother, as his brother-in-law. When he applied for a lease of Victoria Villa, he stated that he required a house for himself, his wife and family. In June, 1874, he was thrown from a carriage in which he was riding with Mrs. Hynes, and received the injury of which he died. On being taken into á public house, he asked if his wife was much hurt, and requested that his children should be sent for.

These circumstances, cohabitation, family fife, declarations of the parties, repute of marriage, while they do not constitute marriage, evidence it, because they are the circumstances which usually attend and characterize that relation, and the cohabitation having commenced in England, the presumption is that the marriage was contracted in accordance with- the forms and requirements of the English law. The defendants sought to overthrow the presumption of marriage in England, arising from habit and repute, by showing the circumstancés under which the cohabitation commenced. It appears that Mrs. Saunders in May, 1871, had left the Langham Hotel, and was living in lodgings at 169 Cleveland street, London. It was proved that on the night of Derby day, in that month, Mr. Hynes visited her, and *457 desired to remain with her, and she refused to consent without marriage, and complained that he had not kept a promise of marriage. He said he did not believe in the marriage ceremony or the mumbling of priests. He thereupon, in the presence of witnesses, took a ring from his pocket and gave it it to her, saying that if she would wear the ring and be true to him, he would consider her his wife as much as if they had been married in church. She accepted the ring on these conditions, and he remained there that night, and from that time until his death, openly lived and cohabited with her. At the time of this occurrence, Mrs. Saunders was pregnant of the eldest child, William Hose, born in the following December. This evidence seems conclusively to establish the commencement of an illicit intercourse between Mr. Hynes and Mrs. Saunders, prior to May, 1871, and also that the cohabitation of the parties did not" commence with a marriage valid by the English law. The British Marriage Act prescribes that marriages shall be publicly celebrated, and expressly annuls all marriages not solemnized in church, or under a license before a magistrate. Mor is there any evidence of a subsequent marriage in England in accordance with the local law. There seems to be no ground for such a presumption in view of the facts above stated, and of the further fact which was found, that by the British statute, all marriages in England are required to be registered and that no registry of a marriage between these parties could be found.

If the issue of marriage, depended upon evidence that there was a marriage, according to the forms of the English law, the plaintiffs could not recover. The presumption of such a marriage, raised in the first instance, by proof of habit and repute, was rebutted by the evidence on the part of the defendants. But it is claimed that what took place in Cleveland street constituted a valid marriage, according to the law of Mew York, and while it is admitted that by the general rule of law, a marriage valid or void by the lex loci, is valid or void everywhere, it is insisted that this rule does not apply to. the case of a domiciled citizen of this State, who, while temporarily *458 sojourning in another country, contracts a marriage there, valid according to our law, although invalid by the law of the place, by reason of non-compliance with the forms of celebration prescribed by the local law, and especially that the law of the dornieile will control as to legitimacy, and rights of property depending upon marriage. This question if necessary to be decided, would require careful consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.Y. 451, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hynes-v-mcdermott-ny-1883.