Reifschneider v. Reifschneider

144 Ill. App. 119, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 447
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 8, 1908
DocketGen. Nos. 14,040 and 14,041
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 Ill. App. 119 (Reifschneider v. Reifschneider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reifschneider v. Reifschneider, 144 Ill. App. 119, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 447 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

These two appeals were consolidated for hearing and determination pursuant to an order duly entered upon the agreement of the parties. They both arise out of the same proceeding, viz: a statutory bill for separate maintenance. The appeals will therefore be considered and determined as a unit in this opinion, although separate orders will be entered in each case to carry into effect the judgment which will be here pronounced. The appeal in 14041 is from an order committing appellant for a contempt of court in not paying appellee alimony pendente lite, and the appeal in 14040 is from the final order in the cause decreeing appellee a separate maintenance with suitable allowance for support, solicitor’s fees and costs.

These appeals call for our determination of three questions:

First, are the parties, Walter E. and Kathryn E. Reifschneider, husband and wife?

Second, if they are, was Mrs. Reifschneider, at the time she filed her bill for separate maintenance, living separate and apart from her husband without her fault, within the meaning of the statute providing for an allowance for wives so living?

Third, are the allowances made by the chancellor suitable and necessary for the wife and within the financial ability of the husband to pay?

The parties were married at Hammond in the State of Indiana on August 12, 1904. Both the contracting parties were of immature years, one said to be a little more and the other a little less than nineteen years of age. These young persons became acquainted at the Austin High School, and were lovers. Reifschneider was anxious that the marriage ceremony should be performed, although he was not able to or desirous of assuming the full responsibility which such relationship would impose upon him both by law and custom. He was, however, anxious to secure appellee for his wife, fearing, as he expressed it, that if he waited until she was older she would not feel the same way about it. It was then agreed between them that they should be married at Hammond, Indiana, and that the fact of such marriage should be kept secret for two years. In pursuance of this understanding the parties proceeded to Hammond, where Beifschneider procured a marriage license from the clerk of the Circuit Court of Lake county, Indiana, on the 13th day of August, 1904, and on the same day as appears by the return upon the license, the parties were joined in marriage by T. M. C. Hembroff, a judge of the City Court of Hammond. The marriage is further evidenced by a certificate under the hand of the officiating judge. All of the foregoing was made to appear by a duly exemplified copy of the various documents referred to pursuant to the act of congress in relation to the exemplification and authentication of records. The marriage ceremony was followed by copulation, although each of the contracting parties returned to their respective homes without apprising their families of the new relationship existing between them. Appellee, however, did make known -to some persons the fact that she was married and was the wife of appellant. The parties continued to reside with their respective families, who were kept in ignorance of the marriage relationship until the following February, when the mother of appellant discovered from the marriage certificate the fact of her son’s marriage to appellee. Appellant’s mother then did what a good woman with natural instincts would have been expected to do under these circumstances. She counseled the young people to live together and proffered her help in furnishing a flat for that purpose. Appellee was quite willing to do so, and expressed herself as being willing to live with appellant as his wife. But appellant doggedly refused to live with appellee as his wife, and paid no-heed to the advice or admonishings of his mother to take his wife and go to housekeeping with her. Appellee was working at the time of this conversation and offered to keep at work and furnish her earnings toward paying household expenses. Appellant at this time made no denial of his marriage to appellee, but flatly refused to either live with her or support her. Subsequently the father of appellee died, and her mother, having predeceased him, she was thereby left an orphan, and as her father left no estate, she was without support. She then went to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and lived in the family of her aunt. Appellant did not contribute to the support of his wife during the time she lived in Pittsburgh. On April 24, 1905, appellant filed in the Superior Court of Cook county a bill for the annulment of his marriage with appellee, to which appellee interposed a demurrer. Upon the hearing of the demurrer it was held to have been well taken, and the bill was dismissed.

The following sections from the E. S. of Indiana were offered and received in evidence without objection:

“Sec. 7289. Marriage is declared to be a civil contract, into which males of the age of eighteen years and females of the age of sixteen years * * * are capable of entering.
“Sec. 7290. Marriages may be solemnized by ministers of the gospel and priests of every church throughout the State, judges of courts of record, justices of the peace, and mayors of cities within their respective counties. * * *
“Sec. 7292. Before any person, except members of the Society of Friends, shall be joined in marriage, they shall produce a license from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the County in which the female resides, directed to any person empowered by law to solemnize marriages, and authorizing him to join together the persons therein named as husband and wife.
“Sec. 7295. No marriage shall be void or voidable for the want of license, or other formality required by law, if either of the parties thereto believed it to be a legal marriage at the time.
“Sec. 7296. Every person who shall solemnize any marriage by virtue of the provisions of this act shall within three months thereafter file a certificate thereof
in the clerk’s office of the County in which such marriage was solemnized, which certificate shall by such clerk be recorded, together with such license, and such record or a copy thereof shall be presumptive evidence of the facts therein stated.” R. S. Stat. Indiana, 1901. Vol. 2, City Court.
“Sec. 3671. Such judge shall provide a seal for such court, which shall contain on the face the words, ‘City Court of-Indiana;’ (filling the blank with the name of the city and county). A description of such seal, together with an impression thereof, shall be spread on the records of said court.
“Sec..3672. City Courts shall be courts of record. # # #
“Sec. 3674. * * * Such judge shall have full authority to administer oaths, to take and certify acknowledgments of deeds and other instruments, to solemnize marriages, and to give all necessary certificates for the authentication of the records and proceedings in said court.”

The legality of this marriage must be adjudged from the laws of Indiana, the place where the marriage contract was entered into, and whose law officer performed the marriage ceremony.

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Bluebook (online)
144 Ill. App. 119, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reifschneider-v-reifschneider-illappct-1908.