Court Opinion

ID: 8073186
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 11:40:04.924533+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:15.326999
License: Public Domain

SMITH, J.
I find that this defendant married this plaintiff in good faith after her husband had absented himself for more than five successive years without being known to be alive during this time. He was in fact living, but died in 1896, two years after the second marriage. The second husband did not discover that the first husband was living at the time of the second marriage until some years after his death. After such discovery he commenced this action for the annulment of the second marriage. As far as applicable to this case, the right of either to annul a marriage is conferred and regulated by sections 1743 and 1745 of the Code of Civil Procedure. I do not agree with defendant’s attorney in the interpretation of these two sections, that a cause of action is not given to annul the second marriage unless the first marriage is in force at the time of the commencement of the action. The language of the two sections will not bear that construe*219tion; and, besides, if that construction be adopted, it might be impossible in many cases for the court to render judgment annulling a void marriage. The serious question is, does the statute apply at all to a case where the facts are similar to the facts in this case ? In my opinion, it does not. The statute authorizes the annulment of a void secqnd marriage if a valid first marriage is in existence at the time of the second marriage. In this case after the second marriage there were for two years two valid marriages in existence. Upon proof of these facts the court may annul the second marriage because it is contrary to public policy that there should be be two valid marriages in existence at the same time. In this case the reasons for the application of the statute and the intervention of the court have been removed by the death of the first husband and the dissolution of the first marriage. There is in existence now one valid marriage. A cause of action once existed for the annulment of the marriage, but it exists no longer. See Griffin v. Banks, 24 How. Prac. 213. The construction of the rights of the parties to this action is in harmony with the purposes of the statute, and in the interest of public morality.
It follows that the complaint of the plaintiff must be dismissed, with costs, and, in pursuance of the stipulation of the parties, I fix the amount of the counsel fee to be allowed to the defendant at $100.