Stevenson v. Gray

56 Ky. 193
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 56 Ky. 193 (Stevenson v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Gray, 56 Ky. 193 (Ky. Ct. App. 1856).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the court:

In December, 1854, this petition in equity was filed in the Logan circuit court, in the name of Hugh Stevenson, suing by M. W Stevenson, his guardian, against George W. Gray, senior, and George W. Gray, junior, and Preston R. Gray, the two last named, who were made defendants by amendment, being the children of George W. Gray and Sarah G. Gray, deceased, the grandmother of the plaintiff, and former wife of Joseph Gray, their grandfather. The object of the petition is to recover a portion of certain estate, real and personal, which the plaintiff claims as one of the heirs of his grandmother, Sarah G. Gray, in right of his deceased mother, one of her daughters by the said Joseph Gray, her deceased husband, but which it is alledged is claimed and held in possession by the defendant, G. W. Gray, senior, in his pretended right as husband of the said Sarah G. Gray, in virtue of a marriage celebrated between them in the state of Tennessee, about the 10th day [204]*204of August, 1830. This marriage is alledged to have been .illegal and void, and to have been ineffectual to vest in the said G. W. Gray any right as husband, because he was the nephew, by consanguinity, of Joseph Gray, the deceased husband of said Sarah G.; and by the laws of this state, in which the said G. W. and Sarah G. Gray, before and at the time of their pretended marriage were residents and had their domicil, and so continued afterwards until the death of said Sarah G., a marriage between persons sustaining this relation was prohibited. And it is charged that the said parties being residents of Logan county in this state, there engaged themselves to marry, and went temporarily to Robinson county in the state of Tennessee, with the design and purpose of evading the laws of Kentucky, by consummating, beyond its limits, their illegal engagement; and that immediately after the rites of marriage were performed in Tennessee, they returned to their residence in Kentucky, where the property sued for was then and is still situated. It is also charged that the said pretended marriage was not lawful as performed in Tennessee, because, by the laws of that state, a license authorizing a marriage can only be issued by the clerk of the county in which the female party resides, which, though recited in the license, was not true in the present case. And the plaintiff, admitting that the defendants, G. W. Gray, jr., and Preston R. Gray, children of said Sarah G., by her pretended husband G. W. Gray, sr., are entitled to portions of said estate, pray for a division, distribution, &c.

The defendant G. W. Gray, sr., demurred, and upon the demurrer the petition was dismissed. In this state of case the facts alledged in the petition are to be taken as true, and such as bear upon the question of the validity and legal consequences of the marriage have been substantially detailed, except that, although the petition does not state the time at whieh Sarah G. Gray died, it may be infer[205]*205red that she survived her daughter, Massie R., whose will was dated in 1847, and was admitted to probate in-, from which it is to be assumed that G. W. and Sarah G. Gray lived together as husband and wife for many years, during which two children were born, and G. W. Gray enjoyed all the rights of a husband, with respect to the person and property of the plaintiff’s grandmother.

This case, therefore, presents the very serious and, in this court, novel question, whether at this late period, when one of the parties to the marriage is dead, when more than twenty-four years had elapsed from its celebration before it was impeached, and when the law itself which is relied on as making the marriage void has been repealed, and such marriages can no longer be deemed unlawful, the aid oU the chancellor can be successfully invoked to declare the marriage thus sanctioned by time and the acquiescence of all concerned and of the community, to have been absolutely void, and to annul or disregard all rights claimed under it by the surviving party.

The objection to the marriage is founded on the 91h section of the act of 1798, (2 Statute Law, 1157,) which is as follows: “If any person shall marry within the following degrees, that is to say, if the son shall marry his mother or step-mother, or if the son shall marry his aunt, being his father’s or his mother’s sister, or marry his uncle’s wife, or the father shall marry the son’s wife, &c., &c., every person so unlawfully married shall be separated by the definitive sentence or judgment of a district court or court of quarter sessions ; and the attorney for the district or county, upon complaint being made to him of any such marriage, shall file an indictment against such persons, and upon conviction by due course of law, they, or any of them, shall be fined at the discretion of a jury, and the court shall proceed to give judgment, and, moreover, shall declare such marriage null and void to all intents and purposes; and if the court see fit, may cause the parties so [206]*206separated to give bond, with sufficient security, that they will not cohabit hereafter, in such penalty as the court shall judge reasonable: Provided, always, that nothing herein contained shall be construed to render illegitimate the issue of any marriage so annulled.”

On the side of the plaintiff it is contended, that the parties having been domiciled in Kentucky, and having gone into Tennessee, not with a view of residing there, or changing their domicil, but for the single purpose of evading the laws of Kentucky by a marriage celebrated outside of her territorial limits, within which they immediately returned, and continued to reside with their property, it would be giving effect to an obvious fraud upon the laws of this state, and in derogation of its sovereignty over its own citizens and their rights and relations, to determine, and especially with regard to property situated from first to last in this state, that if the marriage was valid according to the laws of Tennessee, where it was celebrated, it must also be deemed valid by our law, although in direct violation of its mandates. And it is insisted that by virtue and operation of the 9th section of the act of 1798, as above quoted, the marriage of G. W. Gray with his uncle’s widow should be deemed utterly void, both on the ground of being prohibited under a penalty, and on the ground of being expressly declared or made void.

It is contended on the other side, that as the act of 1798 does not pretend to regulate marriages in other states, even between citizens of Kentucky, and as it is the law in Kentucky, as in almost all other Christian or civilized countries, that a marriage valid by the law of the place or country where it is celebrated, is to be deemed valid everywhere ; this marriage having taken place in Tennessee, where it was lawful, its validity cannot here, any more than there, be impeached on the ground of the particular motives which may have induced the parties to choose that [207]*207as the place of its celebration; but that the marriage in Tennessee not having been subject to the laws of Kentucky, nor in violation of any law of Tennessee, was at the time and place of its celebration a valid marriage, and is everywhere entitled to the character and consequences of a valid marriage, even if it would have been invalid if celebrated in Kentucky. But it is moreover, contended that even if the marriage had been celebrated in Kentucky, it would not, by the mere force and operation of the statute of 1798, have been absolutely and ipso facto

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Bluebook (online)
56 Ky. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-gray-kyctapp-1856.