Werden v. Thorpe
This text of 867 P.2d 557 (Werden v. Thorpe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
pro tempore
Darin H. Werden (Darin), the son of decedent Robert Werden (Werden), filed a petition to set aside Werden’s 1983 will, which had been admitted to probate. He alleged that, as a matter of law, the will had been revoked in 1989 by Werden’s marriage to respondent Linda Thorpe-Werden (Linda). After a trial, the court entered judgment in favor of respondents. We affirm.
Werden met Linda in 1975, while he was married. He later divorced his first wife. In November, 1978, Werden and Linda went to Los Barriles, a small town in Baja, Mexico, with a number of friends and Werden’s sister, Nancy Amitin. While there, Werden married Linda in a ceremony performed by the town’s mayor. Amitin described it as consistent with a traditional marriage ceremony, and she and another guest signed what appeared to be an official document afterwards. The location of that document is not known, and it is undisputed that no formal record of the marriage exists.
In 1983, Werden fought with Darin and executed a new will in which he disinherited his son and left his entire estate to Linda. Werden told the attorney that he was uncertain about the legal effect of the 1978 Mexican marriage and instructed the attorney to include a declaration in the will that Werden was not married. In 1989, Werden and Linda went through a marriage ceremony in Oregon which they, and those in attendance, described as a “reaffirmation” ceremony. Werden died in August, 1990.
Darin argues that the 1978 Mexican marriage was null and void, without legal effect, and, therefore, Werden was not married when he executed his 1983 will. He contends that, when Werden married Linda in 1989, the 1983 will was revoked by operation of law under ORS 112.305.1 The trial [100]*100court rejected Darin’s position. It held that Darin had not satisfied his burden to prove that the 1978 marriage was not valid and that he was without standing to challenge the validity of the marriage. It also held that Werden’s will showed an intent that it would not be revoked by a later marriage and, thus, ORS 112.305 did not apply.
In order to challenge the validity of Werden’s and Linda’s Mexican marriage, Darin must show that it was void ab initio:
“The general law is that a third party, such as an executor, may not object to, or have disallowed, a voidable marriage. Dibble v. Meyer, 203 Or 541, 546, 280 P2d 765 (1955). Rather, an annulment proceeding must be initiated by the husband or wife. A voidable marriage is valid unless annulled, State v. Anderson, 239 Or 200, 207, 396 P2d 558 (1964), and a suit for annulment does not survive the death of one of the parties. Hunter v. Craft, 37 Or App 545, 550-551, 588 P2d 617 (1978), reversed on other grounds 287 Or 465, 600 P2d 415 (1979).
“A void marriage, on the other hand, is invalid from the outset and may be challenged by third parties. Garrett v. Chapman, 252 Or 361, 449 P2d 856 (1969).” Davis v. Davis, 55 Or App 982, 985, 640 P2d 692, on recon 57 Or App 145, 643 P2d 1351 (1982). (Emphasis in original; footnote omitted.)2
The party challenging the validity of a marriage has a heavy burden of proof to overcome the strong presumption that marriages are valid. Davis v. Davis, supra, 55 Or App at 986. On de novo review, we agree with the trial court that Darin failed to meet that burden here.
Darin argues that, under Mexican law, the marriage was void, because it was not performed in strict accordance with the laws of the place where the ceremony took place. However, the Civil Code of Mexico demonstrates that, [101]*101although the marriage might have been voidable, it was not void ab initio. Chapter IX, entitled “Of Void and Illegal Marriages,” provides:
“Art. 235. — The following are grounds for nullity of a marriage:
“I. Error regarding the person with whom it is contracted, when one spouse, believing he is contracting a marriage with a specified person, contracts it with another;
“II. When the marriage was performed while any of the impediments enumerated in article 156 existed;
“III. When [the marriage] was performed in contravention of the provisions of article 97, 98, 100, 102, and 103.
“Art. 236. — The action of nullity founded on error can be brought only by the deceived spouse, but if the latter does not complain of the error immediately upon perceiving it, the consent shall be considered ratified and the marriage shall remain effective, unless some other impediment exists to annul it.
“Art. 249. — Nullity founded on the lack of formalities essential for the validity of the marriage, may be alleged by the spouses or by anyone having an interest in proving that there was no marriage. It may also be declared at the request of the Department of Public Prosecution.”
Darin contends that, under Article 235, if any one or more of the “prohibited circumstances” in subsection III existed at the time of the marriage ceremony, “the ‘marriage’ would be invalid from the outset; it would not exist as a legal fact.” He argues that, with the possible exception of the marriage record, which is prepared and signed after the ceremony, the civil code requires an application and documents to be prepared and filed before the wedding. He contends that, because it is undisputed that those requirements were not met, the marriage is void.
When Article 235 is considered in the context of other code provisions, it does not support Darin’s conclusion that marriages are void at the outset unless there is compliance with all of the requirements of subsection III. Article 235 contains three subsections that address the validity of marriages. An “error” under subsection I may be challenged by a spouse, but must be challenged immediately or the marriage [102]*102will be effective in the absence of an impediment. The impediments to marriage in Article 156, referred to in subsection II, are central to the nature of the couple and their relationship to each other. They include, for example, lack of age, relationship by “legitimate or natural consanguinity,” adultery, duress, and idiocy.3 Only two may be negated:
“Of these impediments [in article 156] the only ones for which a dispensation can be given are the lack of age and relationship by consanguinity in a collateral line of unequal degree.”
In contrast, the articles listed in subsection III are very different in nature from the circumstances set out in the articles listed in subsection II. They address the civil requirements for formalizing the marriage contract: witnesses, medical certificates, even fingerprints. To accept Darin’s interpretation would require that no marriage would be valid if a party or official failed to fingerprint the parties or to record names, surnames, ages, occupations, domiciles or [103]*103birth places of the contracting parties.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
867 P.2d 557, 126 Or. App. 97, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/werden-v-thorpe-orctapp-1994.