Jordan v. Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co.

116 S.W. 432, 136 Mo. App. 192, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 25
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 432 (Jordan v. Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Missouri & Kansas Telephone Co., 116 S.W. 432, 136 Mo. App. 192, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 25 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

The plaintiff, claiming to be the widoAV of Conrad A. Jordan, brought this action for damages on account of his 'death, occurring wddle in de[197]*197fendant’s employment, and, as is charged, through defendant’s negligence. The judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.

Defendant denied that plaintiff was Jordan’s widow, and placed its denial on the ground that at the time of the ceremony of marriage between them Jordan had a living wife from whom he had not been divorced, and, under the statute (section 4313, Revised Statutes 1899) such marriage was void.

The following facts developed at the trial: Jordan and Ethel Hannah lived in the State of New York. Ethel married Thomas Meskill, and thereafter discovering that he had concealed from her that he had a bad disease at the time of their marriage, she brought an action in the proper court in New York to annul the marriage on account of the fraud of Meskill in thus concealing his loathsome disease, wThich, it seems, may be done in that State. An interlocutory decree was entered for her on the 1st of November, 1902, and a final decree was entered on the 27th of February, 1903. After the interlocutory decree, but before the final decree, viz., some time in the month of November, Jordan and Ethel went into the State of New Jersey and were married, that is, they had a marriage ceremony performed and then immediately returned to New York. They lived together for some months, until August, 1903. Jordan then came out to St. Louis, in this State, and on the following 16th of March, 1904, he and plaintiff were married in that city.

If the marriage between Jordan and Ethel Meskill was a valid marriage, then Jordan and this plaintiff’s marriage was void, for the case shows that Ethel was then alive and no divorce had been obtained. So the parties hereto join issue on the validity of the former marriage. Plaintiff insists that it having taken place before the final decree in Ethel’s favor annulling her marriage with Thomas Meskill, she had a living husband at the time and her marriage with Jordan was an [198]*198'idle and unlawful ceremony and void; while defendant contends that the interlocutory decree was a sufficient annullment of the Meskill marriage to make the marriage of Ethel to Jordan valid, or, if not, the final decree afterwards pronounced related back to the date of the marriage and made it void from the beginning.

To concede that a void marriage (as, for instance, where one of the parties was already a married person), may be disregarded and another marriage had without annulling the void one, the concession would not aid the defendant in its contention that Jordan’s marriage with Ethel was valid. For, her marriage to Meskill was not void; it was merely voidable; and there is a vast difference between the two words, or the two situations they describe. It is true that there are decided cases and instances where text-writers use the two words interchangeably. But when attention is called to the distinction between them and the difference in the consequences which results from the conditions they stand for, it is believed there can be but one opinion. [Tomppert v. Tomppert, 76 Ky. 326.] A voidable contract is good until avoided, and if never renounced or disowned, it remains valid. Thus, in the present instance, Ethel was deceived by the assurance that Meskill was free from disease. The law does not' prohibit a woman from marrying a man who has a disease and, if she so wishes, she may contract such a marriage. But the law does prohibit her from marrying a married man, or her brother. The former act, if the disease was unknown, may be avoided on the ground of fraud; but if the defrauded party concludes that she will overlook the false representations there is no law to say that she shall not. The principle is the same as in any other contract, though there is a difference in the remedy by reason of the peculiarity of the marriage contract and its relation to the social order. In the ordinary contract the defrauded party may rescind and the two may voluntarily put themselves back [199]*199in their former position. Bnt in the marriage contract, not absolutely void, while the defrauded party may have the' right to rescind, so to speak, the rescission must come through the pronouncement of a competent court. The difference results from the disability of persons who have contracted a marriage from voluntarily abandoning it, as may be done with other contracts. So, if Ethel had concluded to overlook or condone MeskilPs fraud, their marriage would have been binding and indissolvable.

But she had a right, if she so chose, to have it annulled by a competent court and she elected to do so. It is therefore too clear to be a proper subject of dispute that her situation and her rights were different from what they would have been had she married her brother, or a man with a wife. Her marriage to Meskill was a valid marriage until annulled.

When, then, was it annulled? .Clearly not at the date of the interlocutory decree. The word itself indicates that it is not the end — that it is intermediate— that something' may supervene affecting the status of tbe thing adjudged. In this case, suppose that after the interlocutory decree, Ethel had come into court and asked that it be set aside and the case dismissed; or that Thomas had come in and shown some reason why it should not have been entered; or that the court, when the final decree was asked, had, in a proper way, have become advised that the parties were in collusion, maybe by their own confession. In these instances there would never be a decree.

If these things could be, it demonstrates that an interlocutory decree is not the dissolution of the marriage. It shows there could not be a valid second marriage based on such decree, for there cannot be a valid marriage where either of the parties is in such situation that it may be rendered utterly void by the voluntary act of such party. Two persons cannot contract a valid marriage when either of them is possessed of the [200]*200privilege of annulling it by the assertion of a legal right. A valid, marriage and a right reserved in either party to annul it, are wholly incompatible. They are legally impossible. A marriage, to be valid, must be absolute and not depend upon a contingency. Suppose that after a second marriage, the wife should say to her husband, “I am sorry I married yon and I will go and dismiss my suit against my other husband, or I will refuse a final decree, and thus I will cease to be your wife and again become his.” It would be hard to find more unreasonable or demoralizing condition of affairs; and yet that is the end to which defendant’s position leads.

Reliance is placed on authorities cited by defendant which we think are without application. Thus in Eichoff’s case, 101 Cal. 600 (36 Pac. Rep. 11), a second marriage was said to be valid which was entered into without an annullment of the first. But the first was absolutely void as having been entered into with an insane woman. That is, there was never a contract. That case assumed that the general l$.w does not permit a marriage by insane people; and so the court said that a marriage had never in fact existed, and tha-t the decree did not make it- void, but merely declared that it had been void from the start. In the case at bar, as we have already seen, the marriage was valid until avoided by the decree.

But, aside from the foregoing suggestions, the decrees themselves show how much the interlocutory one lacked of being a disposition of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 432, 136 Mo. App. 192, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-missouri-kansas-telephone-co-moctapp-1909.