Irwin v. Peals

33 So. 2d 298, 203 Miss. 44, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 229
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1948
DocketNo. 36600.
StatusPublished

This text of 33 So. 2d 298 (Irwin v. Peals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. Peals, 33 So. 2d 298, 203 Miss. 44, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 229 (Mich. 1948).

Opinions

The appellants exhibited a bill of complaint against the appellees for the cancellation of a lease executed by them to the appellant Vick, and of a quit-claim deed executed by them to Laura Peals, both being on the same tract of land; the ground of the appellants' complaint being that both of these instruments were fraudulently obtained. The land here involved is in Adams County, Mississippi, and was formerly owned by Monroe Johnson, who died many years ago leaving a number of heirs, among whom was his daughter Laura, the mother of the appellee Laura Peals. In 1896 or 1897 Laura Johnson was living openly with Clem Peals as his wife, either on the land in question or a short distance therefrom in Jefferson *Page 49 County, and continued so to do until her death in 1899. There was evidence that they were united by a ceremonial marriage, which we will assume, for the purpose of the argument, the evidence establishes. No marriage license is shown to have been issued for this marriage. After Laura Johnson Peals, the mother of Laura Peals, died, Clem Peals removed to Louisiana and continued to reside there until his death some years before the filing of this bill of complaint, making no claim whatever to having any interest in this land which was inherited by his former wife from her father. Some time after he removed to Louisiana, he married the appellant Lucy Peals Haynes, she having, after his death, married a man by the name of Haynes. The appellant, Lettie Peals Irwin, is the only child of Clem and Lucy Peals.

The case was heard on bill, answer, and cross-bill of the appellee Laura Peals, and evidence, resulting in a decree dismissing the bill of complaint and cancelling the claims of the appellants to the property. Several questions are presented by the record, one of which is whether the marriage of Clem Peals and Laura Peals was valid, and as we have arrived at the conclusion that it was not valid, it will be unnecessary for us to consider the other questions, for if this marriage was not valid, Clem Peals, through whom the appellants claim, was not an heir of his alleged wife Laura, and her daughter Laura was her sole heir. Laura Peals had two children, but one of them died in infancy. The alleged marriage between Clem Peals and Laura Johnson Peals occurred in 1896 or 1897, and as hereinbefore stated, Laura Johnson Peals died in 1899. Section 2864, Code of 1892, which was in force until the adoption of the Code of 1906, provides that: "A marriage shall not be contracted or solemnized unless a license therefor shall first have been duly issued, and such license shall be essential to the validity of a marriage." While this statute was in force a common-law marriage entered into with, or without, the usual marriage ceremony, was void. Sims v. Sims, 122 Miss. 745, *Page 50 85 So. 73. See also Succession of Marinoni, 177 La. 592,148 So. 888. The validity of this marriage, or, to be more specific, that it was solemnized pursuant to a certificate issued therefor, will be presumed in the absence of evidence that no such certificate was issued. The appellants introduced no evidence as to whether such a certificate was or was not issued, but the appellees introduced certificates of the clerks of the Circuit Courts of Adams, Jefferson, Claiborne, and Warren Counties, competent under Section 1727, Code of 1942, "that I have made a careful search of the colored records of marriages kept in my office from the time of the beginning of same down to and including December 31st 1902, and from said examination do hereby certify that I find no record where marriage was ever contracted in this county between Clem Peals and Laura Johnson." But, it is said that this evidence is not sufficient to negative the contraction by Clem and Laura of a valid marriage in some other county or country. Under Section 2860, Code of 1892, the only Mississippi officer authorized to issue a license for a marriage was the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the female usually resided, we must therefore presume that no such license was issued anywhere in Mississippi for the reason that Laura Johnson Peals resided continuously in either Jefferson or Adams County. Of course, she and Clem may have contracted a valid marriage in some other country, but that they did is, under the evidence here, such an improbability as not to require proof negativing it. From this it follows that Clem Peals was not an heir of his alleged wife, Laura, and therefore did not have any interest in this property to transmit to the appellants by inheritance.

Affirmed. *Page 51

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Bluebook (online)
33 So. 2d 298, 203 Miss. 44, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-peals-miss-1948.