Court Opinion

ID: 1334033
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:33:13.812037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:43:01.134909
License: Public Domain

64 S.E.2d 422 (1951)
233 N.C. 449
SCARBORO et al.
v.
MORGAN.
SCARBORO
v.
SCARBORO.
No. 237.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
April 11, 1951.
*423 Lyon & Lyon, Smithfield, and Sharpe & Pittman, Wilson, for appellant, Mary Morgan (Scarboro).
Leon G. Stevens, Hooks, Mitchiner & Spence, and Mary H. Lehew, all of Smithfield, for appellees.
JOHNSON, Justice.
The appellant, Mary Morgan (Scarboro) insists that her motion for nonsuit, renewed at the close of the evidence, should have been sustained for failure to make out a case of bigamous marriage against her. A study of the record impels the opposite view.
It appears in evidence that Mary Knight married Herman Morgan in Wilson County in December, 1914; that she lived with him about seven years, bore him three children, and thereafter was deserted by him in 1921; that thereafter she went through a marriage ceremony with Everette Scarboro in Johnston County in November, 1934. Certified copies of both marriages were introduced in evidence. It was further shown that at the time of the second marriage Herman Morgan was living; and substantial evidence was offered tending to show that the first marriage had not been dissolved by divorce at the time of the second ceremony. Mary Morgan (Scarboro) admitted upon the witness stand that she went through both marriage ceremonies. She also admitted that about two years after the second marriage, Herman Morgan came to her Scarboro home looking for the children, and she stated she talked with him at that time. She further admitted that she had never been divorced from Herman Morgan. It would seem that the foregoing evidence, supported as it was by other testimony, exceeded the minimum requirements necessary to overcome the demurrer and take the case to the jury. See State v. Williams, 224 N.C. 183, at page 190, 29 S.E.2d 744; State v. Herron, 175 N.C. 754, at page 759, 94 S.E. 698. Also annotations: 34 A.L.R. 464, pp. 491 and 495; 77 A.L.R. 729, pp. 740 and 741. The motion to nonsuit was properly overruled.
The rest of appellant's exceptions relate to the admission and exclusion of evidence. Chief emphasis is placed on the exception relating to the action of the court in refusing to permit appellant to offer in evidence a certified copy of a judgment rendered in the Superior Court of Wilson County in an action entitled "Mary Knight Morgan (Scarboro) v. Herman Morgan," purporting to decree an annulment of the marriage between Mary Knight and Herman Morgan. The judgment recites personal service of summons on Herman Morgan. It also recites a jury verdict, finding, among other things, that Mary Knight and Herman Morgan were married in December, 1914; that Mary was then under the age of fourteen, and that she "disaffirmed the purported marriage to the defendant before she reached the age of 14." How she disaffirmed the marriage while living with Herman seven years and bearing him three children is not made to appear. But nevertheless, the judgment decrees that the marriage was and is "null and void ab initio for all intents and purposes." The judgment in the annulment case was rendered in June, 1949, after the instant actions were instituted in October, 1948. It also appears that the annulment judgment was rendered after the ratification of Chapter 1022, Session Laws of 1949, which amends G.S. § 51-3 by adding the following proviso: "provided further, that no marriage by persons either of whom may be under sixteen years of age, and otherwise competent to marry, shall be declared void when the girl shall be pregnant, or when a child shall have been born to the parties unless such child at the time of the action to annul shall be dead." Two children of Mary and Herman Morgan were alive at the time this judgment was *424 entered. The record indicates that both of them testified in the trial below. Therefore, the decree of the Superior Court of Wilson County, being in conflict with the cited statute, was improvidently entered.
But should we concede, arguendo, that the judgment is valid, it would be effective only from the date of rendition and would not affect the instant case so as to give retroactive validity to a prior bigamous marriage. Sawyer v. Slack, 196 N.C. 697, 146 S.E. 864; Watters v. Watters, 168 N.C. 411, 84 S.E. 703. Here the rights of the parties became fixed and determined as of the date of the death of Everette Scarboro in August, 1948. Simpson v. Cureton, 97 N.C. 112, 2 S.E. 668.
The annulment judgment does not come within the exceptions to the rule "that a judgment in another cause, finding a fact now in issue, is ordinarily not receivable" in evidence. Wigmore on Evidence, 3d. Ed. Vol. 5, § 1671a, p. 687, et seq.; Wigmore on Evidence, 3d. Ed. Vol. 4, § 1346a, p. 671. In any event, the heirs-at-law of Everette Scarboro, not being parties to the action in Wilson County, are not bound by the annulment judgment. 30 Am.Jur., p. 951. The judgment was properly excluded.
We have examined the other exceptions brought forward in appellant's brief and find in them no cause to disturb the results below.
No error.