McCaffrey v. Benson

38 La. Ann. 198
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1886
DocketNo. 9545
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 38 La. Ann. 198 (McCaffrey v. Benson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaffrey v. Benson, 38 La. Ann. 198 (La. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Poomí, J.

Plaintiff snes for a judgment of separation from bed and board against the defendant on the grounds of cruel treatment and of outrageous excesses.

Defendant first pleaded the general denial, and subsequently urged by way of a peremptory action that there was no legal marriage between him and plaintiff, for the reason that when he. agreed to marry her, she was, by previous legal marriage, the wife of another man then living, and from whom she. had never been legally separated. Hence [199]*199lie prayed for a judgment recognizing the nullity of his marriage with plaintiff. He prosecutes this appeal from a judgment which overruled his exception and granted to plaintiff all the relief which she prayed for.

Tiie undisputed facts of the record are as follows:

Plaintiff was legally married to one Christopher Anthony in April, 1848, and lived with him until 1851, when she voluntarily separated from him on the ground of general ill-treatment. Anthony remained in New Orleans until 1856, when he disappeared.

In 1859, plaintiff, believing that he was dead, contracted a marriage, valid in form, with the defendant, Benson. In 1861, Anthony reappeared, and was seen by several persons, some of whom testify that he was then a resident of the parish of Plaquemines, in this State.

The reappearance of Anthony brought trouble to the Benson household. Friends of the couple expressed the opinion that their union was illegal and was simply concubinage, and advised them to take steps to regulate their conjugal affairs. As rumors had reached plaintiff’s family, asserting the death of Anthony since his reappearance, the parties adopted the plan of presenting themselves to a priest for a second nuptial benediction; that ceremony took place in 1865, but was not irreceded by a license, and the fact was not registered on the archives of the church or of any other institution. This is the marriage which plaintiff declares upon in her action for separation.

The parties continued1 to live together as man and wife during the time which intervened between the reappearance of Anthony, in 1861, and the marriage of 1865. From this state of facts plaintiff draws two legal propositions:

1st. That the burden of proof is on the defendant to show that Anthony was yet alive in 1865.

2d. That the legal presumption is that Anthony was dead in 1865.

I.

Under a proper construction of the law, it appears to us that plaintiff is in error in her first proposition.

Wo find no textual provision in our code, or in fact in the entire system of our laws, -which justifies the presumption of death of any person after an absence of four years, or of less than five years.

In treating of the effects of absence respecting marriages our code, article 80, provides: “Ten years of absence without any news of the absentee, is a sufficient cause for the husband or wife of such absentee to contract another marriage, after having been authorized to do so by [200]*200tlie judge, on due proof that such absentee, without any news, had continued the time required as aforesaid.”

Prom that text we are authorized to conclude, that in a question involving the validity of a marriage of either the husband or the wife of an absentee, an absence of four years is of itself insufficient to create the legal presumption of the death of the absentee, or to create a presumption iii favor of the, prima facie validity of a marriage contracted by the husband or the wife of such absentee.

That presumption could flow only from proof of an absence of ten years, or from circumstantial evidence of the death of the absentee,, and from a compliance with the positive provisions of the code.

Orir conclusion is clear that under the issue raised by defendant’s exception, the burden of proof is on plaintiff to establish the legality and validity of her marriage with him.

II.

These considerations easily foreshadow orir opinion on her second proposition.

Her counsel contend that the rules of law as contained in our code, on the subject of presumption of death from prolonged absence, are not inflexible, and that courts are authorized to consider any other circumstances which may lead to 'the same conclusion.

They rely very strenuously on the dieta of this Court in the cases of Boyd vs. New England Life Insurance Company, 34 Ann. 848, and of Jamison vs. Smith, 35 Ann. 609. Two very important principles, embodying very wise rules of construction, are reaffirmed in these two opinions, and they have been our mainstay and particular guide in our analysis of the questions involved in the case in hand.

In both oases we reiterated after our predecessors the following language: “It is essentially within tire province of the judge to draw the line of distinction, by the exercise of a sound discretion, founded on the facts of each particular case.”

And in addition to this, we said in Boyd’s case: “But death like all other facts, may bo established by circumstantial evidence, when, from the nature of the case, direct evidence is not accessible.”

“Absence, without-being heard of, though not of sufficient duration to create a legal presumption of death, may yet be one of other and supporting circumstances, which, taken together, would satify the mind and conscience of the judge or jury that the party was dead.” * *

“This disappearance under circumstances of shipwreck, or earthquake, or battle, or explosion, or like perils, might well produce such conviction.”

[201]*201Reasoning- witliin the scope of these rules, we found legal presumption of the death of Boyd, in the circumstances which showed that he was last seen on a vessel at sea, in rough weather, while he was very sea-sick, by his room mate who, in the night saw him leave the room to go out on the guards of the vessel, whence he never returned, and after which he never was seen, although diligent search and inquiry was made for him on the vessel after she had reached shore; and that he was not seen leaving the vessel with all the other passengers, although a close lookout was kept for him.

In Smith’s case we found that he had joined one of the armies in the late war between the States, and had gone on the battlefield — whence iie never returned; that he liad never returned to this city where he had left his mother and all his relatives and where he owned valuable property and other rights, from all of which we felt justified, many years after his disappearance, to conclude that he was dead.

From the record in this case we find that Anthony was an insignificant, obscure man, with few acquaintances, or friends and no relatives in this city, where he lived for five years after the voluntary separation between him and iiis wife, for whom he had no fondness, or had formed no attachment; that he was homeless and childless after the year 1853; that he had disappeared from this city and from his usual haunts from 1856 to 1861; that he tlieD reappeared and had been seen by his brother-in-law, who had given him some little money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 La. Ann. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaffrey-v-benson-la-1886.