In Re Estate of Baldwin

123 P. 267, 162 Cal. 471, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 560
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2952.
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 123 P. 267 (In Re Estate of Baldwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Baldwin, 123 P. 267, 162 Cal. 471, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 560 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

*473 HENSHAW, J.

Elias J. Baldwin died, leaving a vast estate which is in process of administration in the probate court of the county of Los Angeles. Beatrice Anita Baldwin, otherwise known as Beatrice Anita Turnbull, appeared by her guardian (she at that time being a minor, though she has since attained her majority) and petitioned for partial distribution of the estate to her as a pretermitted child of deceased. (Civ. Code, sec. 1307.) A jury was empaneled to try the issues presented, by this petition and the opposition thereto filed by the admitted heirs at law, and, after the taking of voluminous testimony, the trial judge withdrew the cause from the consideration of the jury and directed the jury to return a verdict for the contestants, stating the reason therefor to be that “as matter of law the evidence in this case falls far short of the requirements necessary to constitute a marriage.”

The conditions under which the course pursued by the court in this instance is held to be proper are defined by a series of uniform decisions of this court, to which it will be sufficient to make reference. The doctrine of scintilla of evidence is rejected, as it is by the courts of the United States. (Commissioners of Marion Co. v. Clark, 94 U. S. 278, [24 L. Ed. 59].) A directed verdict is proper, unless there be substantial evidence tending to prove in favor of plaintiff all the controverted facts necessary to establish his case. In other words, a directed verdict is proper whenever, upon the whole evidence, the judge would be compelled to set a contrary verdict aside as unsupported by the evidence. To warrant a court in directing a verdict, it is not necessary that there should be an absence of conflict in the evidence, but, to deprive the court of the right to exercise this power, if there be a conflict, it must be a substantial one. To the support of these incontrovertible declarations of the law, we need do no more than cite Lacey v. Porter, 103 Cal. 597, [37 Pac. 635]; Davis v. California St. R. R. Co., 105 Cal. 131, [38 Pac. 647]; O’Connor v. Witherby, 111 Cal. 523, [44 Pac. 227]; Los Angeles etc. Co. v. Thompson, 117 Cal. 594, [49 Pac. 714]; White v. Warren, 120 Cal. 322, [49 Pac. 129, 52 Pac. 723]; Estate of Morey, 147 Cal. 495, [82 Pac. 57]; Estate of Chevallier, 159 Cal. 161, [113 Pac. 130],

Appellant’s position and contention are the following: Her *474 mother was married to Elias J. Baldwin; the marriage was null in law, illegal and void, by reason of the fact that at the time it was contracted or entered into Elias J. Baldwin was the husband of a living wife to whom he had been joined by a solemnized marriage (Civ. Code, sec. 61); as the issue of this marriage null in law, she is the legitimate offspring of Elias J. Baldwin under the rule of section 1387 of the Civil Code, which declares that “the issue of all marriages null in law, or dissolved by divorce, are legitimate”; she is a pretermitted child of Baldwin, entitled to share in his estate, notwithstanding the disposition of that estate made by his will. (Civ. Code, sec. 1307.) Essential to the consideration of the evidence which must be had, is section 55 of the Civil Code, which at the time of the asserted marriage between Elias J. Baldwin and appellant’s mother, Lillian A. Ashley, read as follows: “Marriage is a personal relation arising out of a civil contract to which the consent of parties capable of making it is necessary. Consent alone will not constitute marriage. It must be followed by a solemnization or by a mutual assumption of marital rights, duties or obligations.” Admittedly, the asserted marriage between Baldwin and the mother of this appellant was not solemnized. It is said to have been a marriage entered into by mutual consent under a written contract, which consent was followed by a mutual assumption of marital rights, duties, and obligations.

At the threshhold, respondents deny the applicability of this section to the admitted facts in the case. They insist, and challenge a contrary declaration, that there can be, and could have been no marriage of any kind when one of the parties to it was incapable of contracting, by virtue of the legal existing marriage; that in terms section 55 limits the application of its language to “parties capable of making the civil contract” of marriage, and that, under the conceded facts, no marriage ever known to common or statute law could arise; that when section 61 of the Civil Code declares that a subsequent marriage contracted under such circumstances is “illegal and void from the beginning,” the word “marriage” as there used is but a loose though convenient way of expressing the true meaning, which is that of a “subsequent attempted marriage.” To this appellant makes answer that section 1387 of the Civil Code, in declaring that the issue of all marriages *475 null in law are legitimate, is designed to meet precisely such a case as the one at bar, and so to relieve the laws of this state from the workings of the unjust rule which would visit the sins of the parents upon the innocent children. And it is said that this view finds support in Graham v. Bennett, 2 Cal. 503; Sharon v. Sharon, 75 Cal. 25, 26, [16 Pac. 345]; Blythe v. Ayres, 96 Cal. 582, [19 L. R A. 40, 31 Pac. 915]; Estate of Gird, 157 Cal. 540, [137 Am. St. Rep. 131, 108 Pac. 499], These considerations, however, may be passed over without determination, and the case considered from the point of view most favorable to appellant; that is to say, the point of view which would hold the provisions of section 1387 of the Civil Code to be applicable to the conditions here admittedly existing. This may be done, we say, without impairment of the rights of any of the litigating parties, because, if there was no marriage in fact between E. J. Baldwin and Lillian A. Ashley, the determination that section 1387 of the Civil Code is applicable to such a marriage as is here asserted, would neither injure nor benefit appellant or respondents.

We are still further influenced to refrain from this consideration by reason of the fact that to stop what was becoming a public scandal and a reproach to the state, the legislature, seventeen years ago, amended section 55 to read: “Consent alone will not constitute a marriage; it must be followed by a solemnization authorized by this code.”

Wherefore, we indulge the not unreasonable hope that this case will prove the last of a most malodorous brood.

And thus we are brought to a consideration of the evidence. This consideration will be had with due regard to the rules of law governing conflicts in evidence and to the rights of the appellant to receive every reasonable inference which can be drawn from substantial evidence in her favor. But it will also be had with due recognition of the fact that evidence to be substantial must be humanly credible.

From the nature of the case, the evidence on behalf of appellant could not be and was not her own.

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Bluebook (online)
123 P. 267, 162 Cal. 471, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-baldwin-cal-1912.