In Re Webster's Estate

242 P. 555, 114 Okla. 57
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 19, 1925
Docket11882
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 242 P. 555 (In Re Webster's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Webster's Estate, 242 P. 555, 114 Okla. 57 (Okla. 1925).

Opinions

BRANSON, V. C. J.

This cause had its inception in the county count of Okfuskee eo-unily. A petition ifór determination of heirship rwlas filed in conjunction with an administration proceeding of a deceased Creek allottee. One Edward Webster was the said allottee. He djed in December, 1918, intestate. At the time of his death, he was the o-wner of certain real estate, the description of which is unnecessary to set out herein. A decree of heirship was entered in the county court, and therefrom an appeal was taken to the district court of said county. The judgments of the county . and district courts reach the same conclusions, each finding that one Eliza Webster, a full-blood Greek citizen, was tbe sole heir of said decedent.

At the time of tbe trial in the county court, one Louisa Jimboy, for herself and two minor children, claimed by proper pleadings to be tbe sole heirs of the said de *58 cedent. She testified in the county court, but before the case was tried de novo in tne district court she had departed this life, and the cause there was tried after revivor, in name of her heirs, on the same issues as in the county court. The judgment of the district court, which is here for review, was based upon the sole question raised by the pleadings, as to whether Eliza Webster was the lawful wife of the decedent at the time of his death., or whether Louisa Jimboy was his wife. Eliza Webster was first married about 1890, to one Tom Canard, a full-blood Greek Indian. They lived together until 1906, when they separated. In 1907 the decedent obtained a marriage license in accord and with the then existing statute in the Indian Territory, of which the Creek Nation was a part, and entered into a ceremonial marriage with Eliza. They lived together continuously until 1915, and thereafter at intervals, until 1917, when the decedent deserted Eliza and sought conjugal fellowship and satisfaction by living with said Louisa Jimboy, under promises that he, the decedent, I would obtain a divorce from Eliza and marry Louisa. While so cohabiting, Louisa gave birth to one child, another being born after the death of Webster, who, with other of her children were the claimants in the district court, when the ear of that court was obtained on the issues between the parties.

A concession is made in the briefs by counsel. of which much is said, but it extended no further than that “neither Tom (Canard) nor Eliza were ever divorced by decree of court.” Canard died in 1911. Eliza and the decedent were at that time living together, their ceremonial marriage having been performed in 1907. If Eliza wa^ the lawful wife of the decedent at any time during their cohabitation, the correctness of the judgment of the district court cannot be questioned, for Louisa Jimboy testified that she lived with the decedent, he promising that he would secure a divorce from Eliza and marry her, winch promise, if ever intended in good faith, was forestalled by his death.

In considering whether Eliza bore the status of a wife to the decedent, it- cannot be considered solely as sentiment to take into consideration that these people were all Indians of the full blood, and that only a few years prior to 1906 had their tribal custom among the Indians of divorce by separation been abrogated by the abolition of all the laws and customs under which these people had their existence and governed their rights. Whether to be frowned on or to be treated as having bearing upon certain elements of her legal status, may depend upon the individual viewpoint' of each of us who are called upon to 'determine the issues here presented. But to the writer, it seems clear that both Eliza and Tom Canard believed in good faith, whether ignorantly or otherwise, that said so-called “custom” divorce by separation would re-tore to each the capacity to enter into a new marital relation, and did so, in a measure with that simplicity which is capable of being appreciated only by those who have come in contact with them and know the method of thinking of the average uneducated full-blood Indian. Tom Canard took unto himself another woman, soon after he left Eliza. The deceased undertook to comply with the new order of things, secured a marriage license, and went through a ceremony, in order to try to make Eliza his wife. The question is, Did he succeed in doing- so?

The deceased was capable of entering into the marriage relation in 1907, but Eliza was incapable. It is not conceded in the record, and there is no proof to that effect, that the deceased, Edward Webster, knew that Eliza was under a disability to contract marriage. Eliza’s adversary in this proceeding, by her oto word of mouth, places in the record before this court that the deceased many times told her that he would have to secure a divorce from Eliza, but would do so, and then marry her. (Louisa). Apparently not even to the day of his death did Edward Webster ever have any conception other than that he was the lawful husband of Eliza; that Eliza and Edward were known and recognized as such, even from the time of their ceremonial marriage in 1907, no other inference can reasonably be drawn. Under these conditions, were they husband and wife?

While marriage is primarily a contract, and is such in so far as it relates to the man and the woman personally, it is something other than that in so far as it relates to them as members of society. As it relates to- them as members of society, it is referred to in the law as a “status.” In the case of marriage, the law does not concede its impotency to stamp with a status known as marriage a relation which public policy would otherwise frown upon. It is a doctrine of ancient origin that the law presumes that a relation, connubial in it nature, is matrimonial, arid" not meretricious. This presumption does not extend to the point of undertaking to protect an illicit cohabitation, or to create in one of the parties who attempts to contract marriage a capability of entering into such, contract when the *59 same does not exist, but it does extend to tbe point that where a marriage is entered into according to the forms of law, and one of the parties is laboring under a disability, or is incapable by reason of a living spouse from whom she has not been divorced from legally contracting marriage, that if this disability ceases, by death or otherwise, the contracting parties continuing to live together ostensibly in the marriage relation, the lajw stamps such relation as a marriage, from the first moment the disability on the part of one of the parties ceases. That is to say, the law raises the conclusive presumption under such condition, that they had interchanged, each with the other, ithiat personal consent which as the basis of a legal marriage. As one author has said, in effect, -the policy of the law is that matrimonial conduct shall be referred to,the status of marriage, because it is this status which society takes to itself the right to impose upon such relation, recognizing, however, that while the contráct is made by the parties without consulting society, that society should have the correlative right, where a disability exists as to one of the parties, upon the termination of such disability, to impose the status intended without consulting the parties themselves.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Burdine v. Burdine
1952 OK 103 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1952)
Bowles v. McCarty
1945 OK 91 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1945)
Dicke v. Cully
117 P.2d 126 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
In Re Cully's Estate
1941 OK 183 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
Ross v. Ross
1936 OK 130 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
McCreath v. Dearborn
151 Okla. 58 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)
In Re Dearborn's Estate
1931 OK 484 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 555, 114 Okla. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-websters-estate-okla-1925.