Jones v. General Motors Corp.

17 N.W.2d 770, 310 Mich. 605, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 504
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1945
DocketDocket No. 24, Calendar No. 42,863.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 N.W.2d 770 (Jones v. General Motors Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. General Motors Corp., 17 N.W.2d 770, 310 Mich. 605, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 504 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

For the main, facts in the instant case, we refer to Watts v. General Motors Corporation, 308 Mich. 499, wherein we held that Mrs. Winifred Watts, alleged widow of the late Senica Watts, by. virtue of a common-law marriage, was not entitled to workmen’s compensation benefits, inasmuch as at the time he married and lived with her he was not legally divorced from Mabel Ruth Watts Jones-of Memphis, Tenn. We remanded the case to the department of labor and industry for the determination of whether Mabel Ruth Watts Jones was entitled to compensation. The statute, 2 Comp. Laws 1929, §8422 (Staifc. Ann. §17.156), provides that a widow shall be conclusively presumed to be wholly dependent for support upon her husband with whom she lived at the time of his death or from whom at the time of his death the department of labor and industry shall find the wife was living apart for justifiable cause or because he had deserted her. The statute further provides under subsection (c) that:

“Upon the remarriage of a dependent wife receiving compensation as such, compensation payments to such wife shall cease,” et cetera.

Section 8423, 2 Comp. Laws 1929 (Stat. Ann. §17.157) provides:

*607 “Questions as to who constitute dependents and the extent of their dependency shall be determined as of the date of the accident to the employee, and their right to any death benefit shall become fixed as of such time, irrespective of any subsequent change in conditions.”

When we remanded the case to the department, no further testimony was taken at the second hearing. The department determined that Mabel Ruth Watts Jones was entitled to compensation because of death of Senica Watts which occurred as a result of injuries received by him arising out of and in the course of his employment by defendant herein. At this second hearing- defendant asked leave to take further testimony for the purpose of showing that Mabel Ruth Watts Jones had ceased to be the wife of Senica Watts long prior to his death, but the department refused to permit the taking of any further testimony and held that the record as it stood was sufficient.

Mabel Ruth Watts Jones testified that she married Mr. Jones March 21, 1925, and that on the 20th of November, 1942, when the deposition -was taken, she was still married to him. The record does not show whether she contracted a ceremonial or common-law marriage with Jones in 1925. The department made some determinations not supported by a careful reading of the record. There can be no question but that the record indicates that Senica Watts deserted Mabel some 17 years prior to his death. She testified that she waited two years after Senica Watts deserted her in October, 1923, and the department held that approximately two years after the deceased left her, she remarried. The record specifically shows, however, that she waited only from October, 1923, to March, 1925,17 months, before she remarried. She stated that she believed Watts was *608 dead, that she made inquiry, that relatives believed him to be dead, but she had no positive information whatsoever. When asked why she thought he was dead, she stated because he had left her without cause and did not “show up.” Desertion in order to be a cause for divorce in Tennessee must be for two whole years. Michie,. Tennessee Code, 1938, § 8426. This also was the law in 1917. The marriage to Mr. Jones in 1925 was absolutely irregular. Mrs. Jones, however, testified that she acted in good faith. Section 8411, Michie, Tennessee Code, 1938, states the law as it existed prior to and since 1925, as follows:

• “A second marriage cannot be contracted before the dissolution of the first. But the first shall be regarded as dissolved for this purpose, if either party has been absent for five years and is not' known to the other to be living. ’ ’

Therefore, after five years from the time Senica Watts disappeared, Mrs. Jones, if acting in good faith, had a right to believe he was dead, and under the law of Tennessee could contract a valid marriage.,- Irrespective of the form of her marriage to Mr. Jones in 1925, she and Mr.-Jones lived together and held themselves out' as husband and wife, both before and after the five-year period and continuously so until the time of the injuries to Senica Watts as well as after his death. It was at least a common-law marriage after 1930. Under the law of Tennessee common-law marriages are not recognized, but it has been expressly held that in the case of parties who live together as husband and wife and who treat each other as such and are so accepted by the public, an estoppel would arise on the part of each to deny the validity of the marriage. Hale v. *609 State, 179 Tenn. 201 (164 S.W.[2d] 822). Under the law of Tennessee as was stated in Smith v. North Memphis Savings Bank, 115 Tenn. 12, 33 (89 S. W. 392):

“For nearly a quarter of a century before the filing of this bill, the parties had cohabited as husband and wife, believing all that time that they had been lawfully married, as did all others with whom they had intercourse. And the question whether, after so great a lapse of time, such a marrjiage can be declared void from the beginning, is one in which not only the parties but the public also have a deep interest, in view of the consequences as affecting the status of the children born of the marriage, the relations of affinity and consanguinity which may have sprung from it, the rights of property which may have been acquired on the faith of it, and all the consequential rights, obligations, and duties growing out of it.
“Upon established principles and analogies of the law, we think it may be held that under the circumstances of this case a lawful marriage for all civil purposes will be conclusively presumed, and that neither the-parties themselves, nor third persons, perhaps, will be heard to disprove or deny the marriage.
“It is a familiar doctrine that in all cases, except prosecutions for bigamy and actions for criminal conversation, a marriage may be presumed, or be established by reputation after a lapse of many years. Ewell v. State, 6 Yerg. (14 Tenn.) 364 (27 Am. Dec. 480); Rogers v. Park’s Lessee, 4 Humph. (23 Tenn.) 480.”

A somewhat similar question was before the Tennessee court in Wright v. Armstrong, 179 Tenn. 134 (163 S.W.[2d] 78). The workmen’s compensation act in Tennessee provides that a wife shall be con- *610 abusively presumed to be wholly dependent unless it is shown that she was voluntarily living apart from her husband at the time of his injury:

“Arthur Armstrong and Melvina Armstrong were married prior to June 2, 1928. They were colored people and worked as tenant farmers in Mississippi county, Arkansas. During the latter part of December, 1929, Arthur Armstrong told his wife he was going to move to another farm a few miles away. 'She went to visit her brother and when she returned her husband had already moved.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.W.2d 770, 310 Mich. 605, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-general-motors-corp-mich-1945.