Miller v. Dalton

167 P.2d 690, 109 Utah 503
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1946
DocketNo. 6905
StatusPublished

This text of 167 P.2d 690 (Miller v. Dalton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Dalton, 167 P.2d 690, 109 Utah 503 (Utah 1946).

Opinion

PRATT, Justice.

The executrix of the estate of Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton has appealed from an adverse decree of the Third District Court setting aside as a homestead the real property and exempt personal property of the estate to respondent, as the surviving husband of deceased.

Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton died February 8, 1944, leaving, as her surviving husband, Orin Dalton, respondent [505]*505herein,-and one married daughter, Violet McKissick Miller, executrix and appellant herein. To her daughter she bequeathed a life estate in her real property, consisting of a home in Salt Lake City, Utah, valued at $1500, and all of her personal property, valued at $1150, except $1, which was bequeather to a former husband — not respondent.

Respondent instituted this proceeding, requesting the court to set apart to him as a homestead the devised, real property and furniture. Appellant in answer alleged that on or about May 8, 1944, the parties herein entered into the following written agreement, whereby each did release, satisfy and discharge the other from any and all claims, demands, accounts and proceedings of whatsoever nature and kind which either of them then had or claimed to have against the other, and thereupon settled and satisfied for all times all differences and accounts between the parties':

“Agreement
“This Agreement made this 8th day of May, 1944, by and and between Orin Dalton of Salt Lake City, Utah, first party, and Violet Miller, individually and as executrix of the Will of Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton, deceased, of Salt Lake City, Utah, second party, Wit-nesseth:
“Whereas, some differences have arisen between said parties with reference to the property of the estate of .the said Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton and the claims of said parties with respect thereto and the said parties have agreed upon a settlement of the said differences.
“Now, Therefore, in consideration of the mutual acts and agreements herein set forth it is agreed as follows:
“1. First party will pay to second party or to her attorneys, Romney & Nelson of Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before thirty (30) days from date, the sum of Two Hundred Seventy and No/100 Dollars ($270.00),
“2. Upon payment of the said sum of money, second party will transfer to first party all of the right, title and interest of the estate of Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton in and to one (1) 1937 Chevrolet Coach Automobile, Utah license No. D6357, 1944.
“3. By this agreement the said parties do each respectively release, satisfy and discharge the other party from any and all claims, demands, accounts and proceedings of whatsoever nature and kind which the said parties or either of them have or claim to have against the other party with respect to funeral expenses, expenses of last illness and burial of the said Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton advanced heretofore [506]*506by the said first party, as well as any claims which the second party may have against the said automobile, and any and all other matters of whatsoever nature and kind and description; it being the intent and purpose of this agreement hereby to settle and satisfy for all time all differences and accounts whatsoever between said parties. First party does further agree and stipulate that the transfer of the property herein set forth to him constitutes full satisfaction of any claims he may have against the estate of Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton as an heir, devisee or legatee of the said estate or by reason of any Will of the said deceased.
“Signed in the presence of:
“J. S. Nelson
“J. S. Nelson
“Orin Dalton,
“First Party
“Mrs. Violet McKissick Miller, Individually and as executrix of the estate of Minnie Dittmer Llewelyn Dalton,
“Second Party.”

At the conclusion of the trial, the court having decided in favor of respondent, appellant moved for a new trial and offered to show that respondent was not the husband of deceased. The proof offered was an interlocutory-decree of divorce on December 18, 1940, between respondent and one Mildred Jolley Dalton; a marriage between respondent and one Valhalla Dalton on January 14, 1941; proof that his marriage to Valhalla Dalton was not invalidated by court action in an annulment proceeding until April 9, 1943; and that respondent married decedent herein on April 2, 1943.

This evidence, however, does not support the conclusion that respondent was not the husband of decedent. Section 40-1-2(7) Utah Code Annotated provides:

“The following marriages are prohibited and declared void: * * * (7) Between a divorced person and any person other than the one from whom the divorce was secured until the divorce decree becomes absolute, and, if an appeal is taken, until after the affirmance of the decree.”

[507]*507At the time Orin Dalton married Valhalla Dalton, his divorce of December 18, 1940', had not yet become a final one, and so that marriage was void from its inception.

In Sanders v. Industrial Comm. et al., 64 Utah 372, 230 P. 1026, Ruby Sanders was divorced from one Sam Saris April 25, 1923, in Utah and married O. R. Sanders at Evan-ston, Wyoming June 16, 1923. When O. R. Sanders was killed in an accident arising out of his employment, Ruby Sanders was denied compensation as the surviving widow. This court, after pointing out that a decree of divorce does not become absolute for six months after its entry, and that any marriage contracted by a party to a divorce proceeding within the time allotted for an appeal from such final decree shall be null and void, stated that the marriage was void ab initio, and no decree of court was needed to determine that the marriage ceremony was a nullity.

This is the same situation as exists in the present case. On January 14, 1941, Orin Dalton could not marry Valhalla Dalton because he was on that date a married man. The ceremony on January 14, 1941, was a nullity, and Valhalla Dalton was not and did not at any time become Orin Dalton’s wife. The relationship between these two parties was no legal impediment to the marriage between Orin Dalton and deceased on April 2, 1943. So far as the question of marriage is concerned, Dalton was entitled to homestead rights in the estate of deceased. See In re Peterson’s Estate, Peterson v. Parry, 97 Utah 324, 93 P. 2d 445. The real question in the case is: Did he waive that right by the agreement quoted? It is not pleaded as a waiver.

The homestead right of a surviving spouse may be waived. Such a waiver, however, must be established by clear and conclusive evidence, and it must be shown that the party waiving actually intended to waive his homestead rights as such. In Plistil v. Kaspar, 168 Iowa 333, 150 N. W. 584, 585, it was contended that the surviving wife had waived her homestead by an antenuptial [508]

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Related

Mill Owners Mutual Fire Insurance v. Petley
229 N.W. 736 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
Front & Huntingdon Building & Loan Ass'n v. Berzinski
196 A. 572 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
Sanders v. Industrial Commission
230 P. 1026 (Utah Supreme Court, 1924)
Plistil v. Kaspar
168 Iowa 333 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
167 P.2d 690, 109 Utah 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-dalton-utah-1946.