Kuang v. Kuang

336 Or. App. 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 14, 2024
DocketA178456
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 336 Or. App. 168 (Kuang v. Kuang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuang v. Kuang, 336 Or. App. 168 (Or. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

168 November 14, 2024 No. 812

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

In the Matter of the Estate of Michael Jung Kuang, Deceased. Grace Liqing KUANG, Appellant, v. Tina KUANG, Respondent. Clackamas County Circuit Court 21PB09802; A178456

Cody M. Weston, Judge. Argued and submitted October 15, 2024. Andrew Newsom argued the cause for appellant. On the briefs was Terrance C. Hunt. Also on the reply brief was Terrance C. Hunt Attorney, PC. Kimberly A. Quach argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief was Quach Family Law, P.C. Before Tookey, Presiding Judge, Kamins, Judge, and Kistler, Senior Judge. KAMINS, J. Reversed and remanded. Cite as 336 Or App 168 (2024) 169

KAMINS, J. This probate proceeding concerns the estate of the decedent, Michael Kuang. Appellant, Michael’s widow Grace, appeals from a limited judgment that removed her as the personal representative of Michael’s estate and appointed respondent, Michael’s daughter Tina, as the successor per- sonal representative.1 Grace raises four assignments of error on appeal, which, as described below, reduce on the merits to whether the trial court erred when it determined that her marriage to Michael was void because it was a big- amous marriage and, for that reason, erred when it removed her as personal representative. See ORS 106.020(1) (prohib- iting marriages where “either party thereto had a spouse living at the time of the marriage”). Tina asserts that Grace and Michael’s marriage was bigamous, because at the time they were married, Michael was already married to Tina’s mother, Yan. We conclude that the trial court erred when it deter- mined that the marriage of Michael and Grace was void and that it therefore erred when it removed Grace as personal representative of Michael’s estate. We reverse and remand. I. LEGAL BACKGROUND As noted, the issue in this case, for purposes of our analysis of the merits, reduces to whether the trial court erred when it determined that the marriage of Grace and Michael was void because it was a bigamous marriage. On appeal, Tina contends that aspects of Grace’s arguments on that point are not preserved. To place the trial court pro- ceedings in their appropriate context, before describing the facts of this case, we provide a brief overview of the relevant law. Regarding the validity of marriages, at least in the context of probate proceedings, a party “challenging the validity of a marriage * * * has a heavy burden of proof.” Davis v. Davis, 55 Or App 982, 986, 640 P2d 692 (Davis I), adh’d to on recons, 57 Or App 145, 643 P2d 1351 (1982) 1 Because many of the individuals who played a role in the events underlying this dispute have the same surname, the parties have used first names through- out their briefing. To avoid confusion, we also use that convention. 170 Kuang v. Kuang

(Davis II).2 “In such cases the courts have invoked a strong presumption that marriages are valid.” Id. To overcome the “strong presumption” of the valid- ity of a marriage on the ground that the marriage is biga- mous, the party seeking to overcome the presumption must: “ ‘allege and prove that the parties to the alleged former marriage were eligible to consummate the same, [3] and that the spouse of such former marriage is still living; [and] that the first marriage has not been dissolved by divorce or by the death of one of the parties.’ ” Id. (quoting In re Estate of De Force, 119 Or 556, 249 P 632 (1926)). Such proof is necessary for a party challenging the validity of a marriage on the ground that it is bigamous to make out her “prima facie” case. See Davis II, 57 Or App at 147. The presumption of validity is “so strong that proof of a former subsisting marriage, in order to be sufficient to overcome [the] presumption, must be so cogent and con- clusive as to fairly preclude any other result.” Estate of De Force, 119 Or at 563; see also Smith v. Smith, 169 Or 650, 652, 131 P2d 447 (1942) (presumption that marriage is valid “is one of the strongest disputable presumptions known in law”). In the context of probate proceedings such as this one, the “net result” of the presumption is that “the dece- dent’s ‘wife’ at the time of his death is, in practical effect, his spouse for purposes of the probate code, because of the 2 Generally, a third party may not “object to, or have disallowed, a voidable marriage.” Davis I, 55 Or App at 985. On the other hand, a “void” marriage is invalid from the outset, and it may be challenged by third parties. Id. “A marriage solemnized in Oregon is clearly void if either party to the mar- riage had a then-living husband or wife.” Id. (citing ORS 106.020). Tina’s argument is that Grace’s marriage to decedent is void, because it was big- amous, not that it was merely voidable. Thus, we understand Tina to have standing to challenge Grace’s marriage to decedent. 3 We understand “eligible to consummate” a marriage, as the phrase is used in In re Estate of De Force, 119 Or 556, 249 P 632 (1926) and Davis I, to mean eligi- ble to lawfully marry. See Estate of De Force, 119 Or at 561 (discussing marriages “consummated in accordance with the forms of the law”); Davis I, 55 Or App at 988 (under De Force, a person seeking to overcome the presumption of marital validity must prove that “the parties to the earlier marriage were eligible to con- tract it”). Cite as 336 Or App 168 (2024) 171

nearly insurmountable burden of proving that the last mar- riage is invalid.” Davis I, 55 Or App at 988. The reason that the burden is “nearly insurmountable” is that it is a “ ‘virtu- ally impossible’ ” task to prove that “the parties to the earlier marriage were eligible to contract it,” insofar as that requires proof of a negative: it “must be shown that neither [party to the earlier marriage] had ever, anywhere, been previously married but not divorced.” Id. (quoting Booker v. Booker, 27 Or App 779, 787, 557 P2d 248 (1976) (Fort, J., concurring)).4 The presumption of marital validity furthers a pol- icy underlying the probate code, because “providing for the distribution of property to the spouse of an intestate dece- dent * * * provide[s] for one who played the part of spouse in his life, in accordance with the decedent’s presumed intent.” Id. at 989. Further, as recognized in Davis I, there is a “crucial distinction between invalidating the marriage of a living couple and invalidating a marriage after the death of one of the parties: in the second case the parties cannot correct the deficiency.” Id. That is, in the second case, notwithstanding the “centrality of marriage to the human condition” and the “transcendent importance of marriage,” the putative spouses are rendered legal strangers—and not family—and must remain that way because any deficiency in the marriage cannot be corrected. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 US 644, 656-58, 135 S Ct 2584, 192 L Ed 2d 609 (2015) (observing that Ohio statute that did not permit plaintiff to be listed as the surviving spouse on death certificate of the decedent rendered spouses “strangers even in death”). Additionally, as explained below, one issue in this case is the preclusive effect of a dissolution judgment on those who were not parties to the dissolution proceedings.

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Related

State v. Gilmore
336 Or. App. 706 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2024)
Kuang v. Kuang
336 Or. App. 168 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
336 Or. App. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuang-v-kuang-orctapp-2024.