Webster v. Modern Woodmen of America

192 Iowa 1376
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 7, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 192 Iowa 1376 (Webster v. Modern Woodmen of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Modern Woodmen of America, 192 Iowa 1376 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Preston, J.

There is no conflict in the testimony as to the material facts. The question is whether plaintiff or inter-veners are entitled to the money. Interveners are the children and only heirs of deceased.

It appears that Jed Webster first became a member of defendant association in 1894, at Merritt, Illinois, and the $2,000 certificate was issued to him. At that time, he made his then wife, Emma Webster, the beneficiary in the certificate. She was the mother of appellants. She died in 1913. On September 12, 1919, plaintiff obtained a divorce from her then husband, Lewis, in the courts of Illinois. That decree provides in part:

“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the said complainant be, and she is, divorced from said defendant, and the bonds of matrimony existing between complainant and defendant be and the same are hereby dis[1378]*1378solved, and said parties and each thereof is freed from the obligations thereof, subject to the provisions of the statutes of the state of Illinois in regard to the remarriage of divorced persons.”

On September 15, 1919, plaintiff removed from Illinois to Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and on September 20, 1919, deceased, Jed Webster, removed from Illinois to Mt. Pleasant. Both were employed in the state hospital there. They lived together as husband and wife, at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, from the time of their marriage until his death, and were so living at the time of his death at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. Plaintiff and her deceased husband were married at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, May 25, 1920. This was a little more than eight months after plaintiff had divorced Lewis. Oto. June 15, 1920, the original benefit certificate was surrendered by deceased, and a new one issued to him of that date, in which he named this plaintiff, wife, as the beneficiary. Deceased, Jed Webster, died August 31, 1920, in Iowa. It is admitted that at that time the beneficiary certificate was in full force. It was stipulated that plaintiff paid the funeral expenses of her deceased husband, amounting to $450. It was also stipulated that the statute of Illinois, in relation to divorces, is correctly set out in the petition of intervention. It was further stipulated that the last benefit certificate was delivered by defendant to said Jed Webster at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and was in his possession at the time of his death, and is now in the possession of plaintiff; that all premiums, assessments, and dues on the certificate sued on were paid by deceased, and that none of the same were paid by interveners; that plaintiff and her deceased husband were actual residents of Henry County, Iowa, from the date of their removal from Illinois, in September, 1919, to his death; and that plaintiff is still an actual resident of said county. Defendant is a fraternal beneficiary society, organized under the laws of Illinois, with the right to transact business in Iowa.

The petition of intervention admits that appellee pretended to marry Jed Webster, May 25, 1920, but they say that said marriage was not lawful and was void, because in conflict with the laws of Illinois and with the decree of divorce; that, because of this, plaintiff had no insurable interest in the life of de[1379]*1379ceased at tbe time tbe certificate sued on was issued. Tbougb it is argued by appellants that a person must bear a certain relation to deceased, we do not find in tbe abstract tbat tbe Illinois statute or tbe by-laws of defendant were proved or admitted, or tbat tbey are set out in the abstract.

Tbe statute of Illinois provides that, when a divorce is granted, neither party shall marry again within one year from tbe time tbe decree is granted; and that every person marrying contrary to tbe provisions of this section shall be punished by imprisonment in tbe penitentiary, and said marriage shall be held absolutely void. Tbe Iowa statute, Section 3181, Code Supplement, 1913, provides tbat, in every case in which a divorce is decreed, neither party shall marry again within a year from the date of said decree, unless permission to do so is granted by the court, and that any person marrying contrary to the provisions of this act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor', and punished. This statute does not, as does the Illinois statute, in express words declare that the marriage contrary thereto is void. On the contrary, it impliedly confers power upon the court to grant permission to do so in the decree. Lee v. Lee, 150 Iowa 611. Nor is there, in the section of the statute just referred to, any necessary implication that such a marriage is void. Farrell v. Farrell, 190 Iowa 919.

Code Section 3151 provides that:

“A marriage between persons prohibited by law, or between persons either of whom has a husband or wife living, is void; but, if the parties live and cohabit together after the death or divorce of the former husband or wife, such marriage shall be valid.”

Under this statute, it has been held that a bigamous marriage is void. Drummond v. Irish, 52 Iowa 41.

We take it that the principal point in the case is whether plaintiff shall be denied the proceeds of the benefit certificate because of her marriage within a year after the divorce. Appellants cite Illinois cases' to sustain their contention, and the courts of some other states follow the same’rule. It is probable that the Illinois court would sustain appellants’ contention; and yet the courts of Illinois have held, by inference at least, that marriages made in other states, after a divorce in Illinois [1380]*1380and within the period of prohibition, are valid, except as to property and personal rights in Illinois; that the prohibition to remarry applies only to residents or parties within the state of Illinois, — thus by justifiable inference holding that the law would not apply to residents of other states, and that the marriage would be valid elsewhere. Wilson v. Cook, 256 Ill. 460 (100 N. E. 222); People v. Prouty, 262 Ill. 218 (104 N. E. 387). See, also, Gardner v. Gardiner, 232 Mass. 253 (122 N. E. 308). In this last named case, there was the question as to whether the parties living in Massachusetts left there for the purpose of evading the Massachusetts law by going to New York to have the marriage solemnized there. There is no presumption in the instant case that plaintiff and deceased left Illinois and came to Iowa for the purpose of evading the Illinois law. State v. Kimbrough, 52 L. R. A. 668. There is nothing in the record indicating that such was the fact. On the contrary, the fact that they did not marry for eight months after coming to Iowa tends to negative such an intention. They never returned to Illinois, and there is nothing in the record tending to show that they ever intended to do so. If plaintiff had remarried in Illinois, where the divorce was granted, and this case was. pending in Illinois, a different question would be presented. Our own decisions are contrary to appellants’ contention. In Dudley v. Dudley, 151 Iowa 142, defendant was divorced in Iowa, while our statute, Section 3181, was in force. She immediately went to Nebraska and was married, and at once returned to Iowa. We held that the marriage was not in violation of our law, as it took place in Nebraska; that it was not in violation of the Nebraska law, for the reason that there was no decree entered in that state forbidding the remarriage. The marriage, being good in Nebraska, where consummated, was valid when the parties returned to Iowa. It was held, and is generally held, that a marriage valid where solemnized is valid everywhere.

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192 Iowa 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-modern-woodmen-of-america-iowa-1922.