In re Estate of Speeler

22 Ohio Law. Abs. 223, 6 Ohio Op. 529, 1936 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1041
CourtCuyahoga County Probate Court
DecidedJune 27, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 223 (In re Estate of Speeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Probate 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 Speeler, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 223, 6 Ohio Op. 529, 1936 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1041 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

OPINION

By BREWER, J.

This cause came on to be heard on a motion by William Feeney to vacate the appointment of Vera Ainsworth as administratrix of the estate of Eva Speeler. William Feeney alleges in his motion that he is the common law husband of Eva Speeler,- deceased, and for that reason is entitled to appointment as administrator. The motion is opposed by Vera Ainsworth, administratrix, daughter of Eva Speeler, deceased. The sole question before the court is whether or not William Feeney is the common law husband of the decedent.

The evidence shows that the decedent had previously entered into a ceremonial marriage with a Mr. Neff and that children were born to said union, prior to his death in 1907. She then entered into a ceremonial marriage with Mr. Speeler, who died in 1913. After the death of said Mr. Speeler and prior to Mrs. Speeler’s living with William Feeney she had been living with a Mr. Louis Marcus. The attorney for William Feeney admits in his closing argument, that after the death of Mr. Speeler, her second husband, and previous to her living with her alleged common law' husband, she cohabited with the aforesaid Mr. Marcus, and that on the occasion of her meeting with Mr. Feeney, she used these words, to Mr. Marcus: “Bill is my man now and I don’t want any more of you.” Thereupon Mr. Feeney began to cohabit with her. The evidence further discloses that after Mr, Feeney’s mother died, he moved some of her furniture into the hotel which was owned by Mrs. Speeler. He bought Mrs. Speeler an engagement ring. Mrs. Speeler introduced him to some of her relatives and told them that Feeney and she w'ere married. They opened joint bank accounts. The evidence also shows that at the time Feeney was sick in the hospital, the nurses believed that he was her husband. This cohabitation continued from October, 1925 to March, 1936. It is further shown that Mr. Feeney did repairing and carpentering and had no other employment except around the hotel owned by Mrs. Speeler. On this evidence the court is confronted with deciding: does this constitute a common law marriage?

Common law marriages are recognized in Ohio, but as a matter of public policy sueh marriages are not favored. In re Barrett, 49 Bull, 222. This court is interested in the case at bar, from both a legal and a social point of view. A history of marriage and the customs on which ceremonial marriage is based, reveals that in the beginning, marriage was the result of capture and purchase. The method of capture was to take a girl by force and run away with her. As the tribes became more civilized, the idea of capture became in reality an agreement. A young lady who really wished to marry the young man in question would sham and offer very little or no resistance and the moment he rode off with her they were looked upon as man and wife by the -tribe. In Gray’s Travels a poem is found which gives evidence of the custom of wife capture. Purchase is self-explanatory and is still followed in some countries today.

The first ceremonial marriages were inaugurated by and received the approval of the Council of Trent, when in their 24th discussion in 1563 the “Decretum de Re-' formatione Matrimonii” was passed. At this session, concubinage was condemned and the validity of marriage made dependent on its being performed by a priest and in the presence of two or three witnesses.

In England by the Marriage Act of 1753, common law marriages were rendered invalid. This Act was made necessary in a large measure because of clandestine marriage and because of the loose and easy manner in which matrimony could be accomplished.

In the United States the Colony of New Plymouth enacted legislation as early as 1636 to regulate the law of marriages, and to discourage common law marriage. The General Assembly of New Hampshire, [225]*225March 16, 1679, passed the following law:

“For prevention of unlawful marriages; it is ordered that no person shall be joined in marriage, before the intention of the parties proceeding thereon, before three times published at some public meeting, in the town 'where the parties or either of them do ordinarily reside; and be set up in writing upon some posts of their meeting house door, in public view, and to stand so as it may be easily read, for the space of 14 days.”

Otto E. Koegel, D.C.L., Professor of Domestic Relations, National University Law School, in his book on Common Law Marriages, page 9, gives the following introduction in this authoritative work:

1. That common law marriages have not been valid in England since 1753.

2. That such marriages were valid prior to that time, notwithstanding a decision of the House of Lords, in 1843 that they were never valid in England.

3. That such marriages were invalid at common law for possessory purposes, that is, the children could not inherit, the wife took no dower, etc.

4. That such marriages were invalid in some of the American colonies, and certainly contrary to legislation and the policy of all the colonies.

5. That the earliest decisions in the United States are against the validity of such marriages, but these decisions are not referred to in the decisions establishing the rule in this country.

6. That such marriages owe much of their validity to dicta of Chancellor of Kent in 1809.

7. That the Kent doctrine was not generally accepted until more than half a century later, the Supreme Court of the United States being evenly divided on the question in 1843.

8. That the early decisions in this country, both those establishing the rule and those denying it, are extremely poorly considered cases, citing no authority and of only a page or two in length, whereas, the English cases show that no one subject in their jurisprudence was ever more carefully considered, one case alone covering nearly four hundred pages.

9. That some states, apparently upholding the validity of common law marriages, have in effect discarded the rule “consensus non concubitas facit matrimonium,” and adopted one, "concubitas facit matrimonium.” In other words, some states require cohabitation in addition to words of consent and thus we have one law providing that persons must cohabit before they become husband and wife (in itself anomalous) and another law providing that persons who do this without marrying are guilty of a crime.

10. That, strictly speaking, the common law doctrine is in most states recognized in name only; certainly in all of the states where the question has arisen marriage “per verba de futuro” has been discarded and the question of the validity of marriage “per verba de praesenti” without cohabitation has not frequently arisen.

11. That the American decisions show that the courts of this country have not carefully investigated the subject.

12. That such marriages are opposed by the American Bar Association, The Commission of Uniform State Laws, all modern authorities on Sociology, Marriage and kindred subjects and should be abolished.

It is interesting to note that one-half of the states have declared common law marriage null and void either by statute or decision. Martindale in his 1936 edition put the following states in that column:

Arkansas, California, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

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Related

In Re Estate of Maynard
192 N.E.2d 281 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1962)
In re Estate of Woods
34 Ohio Law. Abs. 169 (Marion County Probate Court, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio Law. Abs. 223, 6 Ohio Op. 529, 1936 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-speeler-ohprobctcuyahog-1936.