Thomas v. James

1918 OK 241, 171 P. 855, 69 Okla. 285, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 700
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 23, 1918
Docket8512
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1918 OK 241 (Thomas v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. James, 1918 OK 241, 171 P. 855, 69 Okla. 285, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 700 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEWART, C.

Missouri A. Thomas filed petition in the county court alleging that she was the widow of John Thomas, who died intestate, and as such widow entitled to letters of administration on the estate of the deceased, or the right to name an administrator, the petitioner waiving the right to letters and requesting that N. J. Gubser, a competent and qualified person, be appointed as such administrator. Petition was also filed by Mabel E. Walters, daughter of the deceased by a former marriage, claiming the right to letters, and asserting that the deceased did not leave a surviving wife. Jacob Thomas, brother of the deceased claiming to be an heir of the deceased, asked that letters be issued to Ollie Marshall. The respective petitioners were heard at. the same time in the county court, such court finding that the marriage between Missouri A. Thomas and the deceased was void; that he had not been divorced from Mary Thomas, a former wife, and that said Mary Thomas was his surviving wife; that Rozella James, Jennie A. Patterson, and Mabel É. Walters were children of the deceased by such former marriage; that neither the said Mary Thomas nor any of skid children were suitable persons to act as administratrix; and that letters of administration should issue to F. M. Rudolf upon his making bond and subscribing the 'oath required by law. An appeal being duly taken to the district court, and, the matter coming on for hearing, the petitions of Missouri A. Thomas and Jacob Thomas were denied, and the court ordered that Mabel E. Walters, daughter of the deceased, be appointed administratrix upon making bond and subscribing to the oath as required by law. From the judgment of the district court, the petitioner, Missouri A. Thomas, dujy prosecutes an appeal.

The only question to be determined is whether or not Missouri A. Thomas was the common-law wife of the deceased at the time of his death. If such relationship existed, Missouri A. Thomas, under section 6245, Revised Laws 1910, had the right to administer on the estate, or to name some competent person to act. There was no issue raised as to the competency of N. J. Gubser, who was named by thfe petitioner, Missouri A. Thomas, and, if under the facts Missouri A. Thomas is the surviving wife of the deceased, it was the duty of the court to ap *286 point N. J. Gubser administrator.

The uncontradieted evidence shows that about 37 years prior to the death of the deceased he contracted a common-law marriage with onq Mary Nunn, and as the issue of such marriage there were at the time of his death three surviving children, all adults, to wit, Rozella James, Mabel E. Walters, and Jennie A. Patterson. Jennie A. Patterson having died since the perfection of this appeal, her sole surviving heir, Pearl Laney, has been duly made a party. Mary Thomas nee Nunn, lived with John Thomas for 12 or 14 years, after which time they separated and have not lived together since. About 15 years prior to the death of John Thomas, Mary Thomas remarried, and has continuously resided with her second husband, one Beynes, since the date of their marriage. In 1909 John A. Thomas was married to the petitioner, Missouri A. Thomas, nee Malone. They resided together as husband and wife until February, 1913, at which time Missouri A. Thomas obtained a divorce. There were no children as issue of such marriage, but Missouri A. Thomas had a daughter and young son by a former marriage. After the granting of the divorce John Thomas, whose home was in Tulsa,procured rooms apart from Missouri A. Thomas in another part of the city. A few weeks afterwards, however; he returned to Missouri A. Thomas at their former home, which home had been decreed by the court in (he divorce proceedings to Missouri A. Thomas. After his return the. two proceeded to cohabit and live together as husband and wife, he at the time saying that the divorce could- not separate them, and that they would remain together until death, both agreeing to the proposition. John Thomas at the time told the children that he wanted them to call him father, and to be good to him and their mother. 'Many of the neighbors testified as'witnésses, all of the testimony showing that continuously after-wards the two were recognized as man and wife, and held themselves out to be such; (hat they continuously resided together and cohabited up to the time of Mr. Thomas’ death on March 10, 1915, the children residing with them most of the time, he paying the household expenses and providing for the care and maintenance of the family, paying -taxes on the home in which they lived, and introducing Missouri A'. Thomas as his wife, acknowledging her children as his children, and assuming the attitude of a father toward them. It appears that Mr*. Thomas was a seamstress, doing sewing for some, of her neighbors. These neighbors testified that they were present on different occasions at her home for the purpose of having sewing done; that Mr. Thomas would be present, and that he and Mrs. Thomas assumed toward each other the attitude of husband and wife. There is no testimony to show that there was any doubt in the neighborhood a® to such relation existing. On one occasion Mrs. Thomas applied for a position in a restaurant conducted in a building owned by the deceased, and the deceased, hearing of the incident, told the proprietor of the restaurant that his wife, meaning Missouri A. Thomas, did not have to work in a restaurant. At another time he told the proprietor of the restaurant that the son of Mrs. Thomas by a former marriage was his son, and bought a lunch and other articles for the boy at the restaurant. No one testified as to any understanding in the neighborhood that the relations between the deceased and Missouri A. Thomas were other than that of husband and wife. There is no evidence to show that the deceased did not have a divorce from his first wife, Mary Thomas. Missouri A. Thomas waited on the deceased in health and in sickness, attending him during his last illness and making arrangements for the funeral. On the day of his death, however, Mabel B. Walters, his daughter, arrived, and with her came a man from Sapulpa who, from the’ evidence, appears to have been on very friendly relations with her. This man testified that he sat up with the body on the night of the death, and that, during the conversation, Mrs. Thomas said the deceased alwavs paid her $5 a week for his board, and that Mabel E. Walters, daughter of the deceased, asked Mrs. Thomas whom she wanted to preach the funeral sermon, and that Mrs. Thomas said:

“There is no use to get a preacher; he couldn’t do any more than preach his soul in hell.”

The evidence shows that Mr. Thomas was a man who drank and gambled consider-ablv, and was not- of the highest moral character. Mrs. Thomas says that she did not sav anvtbing about her husband paying her $5 a week board. With reference to preaching the funeral, s’he swears that she said:

“There was no man who wanted to -preach a man ;n hell, and that Mr. Thomas never did go to church, and they don’t know a thing about him.”

It appears that Mrs. Thomas’ son, Emmett, had been confined in the training school at Pauls Valley as a delinquent. A. M. Welch, the prohibition officer of the county, testified that, just before the divorce from Mr. Thomas, she desired him (Welch) to recommend a parol for the boy: that he objected to the boy staying at the *287 Thomas home because the boy and Mr. Thomas had trouble, and Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 241, 171 P. 855, 69 Okla. 285, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-james-okla-1918.