Court Opinion

ID: 7966111
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:50:43.830842+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:38.845235
License: Public Domain

Gilfillan, G. J.
It is doubtful that appellant is in position to complain of the decision of the court below, whatever view may be taken of respondent’s claim to be, so far as rights of property are concerned, the widow of Henry Charles; for, if she was not his widow, so as to be entitled to the widow’s share of the property, the first wife, Eachel, was, and was entitled to that share. It is difficult to *203see how appellant can complain that the court, instead of assigning it to Rachel, awarded it to respondent. But the court’s construction of the statute was right.’ Section 1, c. 62, Gen. St. 1878, provides : “All marriages which are prohibited by law on account of consanguinity between the parties, or on account of either of them having a former husband or wife then living, shall, if solemnized within this state, be absolutely void without any decree of divorce or other legal proceedings: provided that, if any person whose husband or wife has been absent for five successive years, without being known to such person to be living during that time, marries during the lifetime of such absent husband or wife, the marriage shall be void only from the time that its nullity is pronounced by a court of competent authority.” Section 3 provides: “When a marriage is supposed to be void, or the validity thereof is disputed, for any of the causes mentioned in the two preceding sections, either party may file a complaint in the district court of the county where the parties, or one of them, reside, for annulling the same.” The case of Henry Charles and his first wife, Rachel, and second wife, Juliette, comes precisely within the proviso to section 1. The rule of the proviso seems based on the presumption that one absent and not heard from for a specified period is dead. At common law the period was seven years. The proviso shortens it to five, and permits persons to act on the presumption, or assumes that they may act on it, when contemplating marriage, and it treats such a marriage as innocent, and attaches to it consequences which do not belong to a guilty marriage, or one not within the conditions of the proviso. The latter kind of marriage is to be deemed void whenever the facts appear, and although there has been no previous judgment of a court declaring its status. In the former case, the facts specified in the proviso appearing, the marriage is not to be held void unless nor until its status has been passed on, and its nullity pronounced, by a court of competent authority. An action by either party to such marriage to have it annulled is provided by section 3. The proviso must be understood to mean just what it says, to wit, that the marriage shall be void only from the time that its nullity is pronounced. It is to be deemed valid for the time prior to the entry of a judgment declaring *204its nullity, and is void only for the time after the entry of such judgment.
It is difficult, in a Christian country, to comprehend the idea of two legal marriages of the same person existing at the same time. It is unnecessary, however, to consider that. We need not consider the rights of the parties to • the first marriage, whether, as suggested in Griffin v. Banks, 24 How. Pr. 213, when considering a similar statute, the first marriage is placed in abeyance, and thé rights of the parties to it are temporarily suspended, nor whether the absent husband or wife, as suggested in that case, and also in Valleau v. Valleau, 6 Paige, 207, may have an action to annul the second marriage» and for restoration to marital rights. No party to the first marriage is a party to this proceeding. The status of the second marriage, and the rights of the wife under it, are alone in question. That marriage was never pronounced a nullity. The appellant contends that whenever in any case the validity of a marriage comes in question, and it appears that there was a former husband or wife living, the court must hold the marriage void. This would do away with all distinction between the cases mentioned in the proviso to section 1 and the other cases mentioned in the section. For a court could do no more in such other eases. When the validity of the marriage comes collaterally in question, and it has taken place under the circumstances mentioned in the proviso, its validity is established, unless there has been a decree annulling it, and it is established for the time of its eontinuance prior to such decree. That makes the distinction, as to the consequences, between the cases in the proviso and those in the other part of the section. The words “by a court of competent authority” mean a court with the proper parties before it, in an action instituted for the purpose of annulling the marriage, and having jurisdiction of such matters. The decree of such a court would determine the matter conclusively, so as to be binding as to the status of the parties whenever and wherever the question might arise. The marriage is valid until such a court has annulled it.
Judgment affirmed.