Shirley Baynes appeals from the denial of a motion for new trial. It followed the probate court’s denial of her request for issuance of letters of administration to herself and the issuance instead to appellee Trina Baynes, whom the court simultaneously appointed as administratrix. The estate at issue is that of Harold George Baynes, whose common law wife Shirley Baynes claimed to be. Trina, who had objected to the appointment of Shirley, is his daughter.
A trial was held, and the trial court set out its findings of fact.
*849 1. The first enumeration is that the court erred in holding that “collateral” evidence was sufficient to overcome the presumption of a common law marriage established by “direct evidence.”
The evidence was in conflict, as recited by the trial court and as admitted by appellant in her brief. The court’s observation, that the parties held themselves out as married when it was to their benefit to do so and maintained their non-marital status when it was to their benefit, is supported by the evidence. This led to the finding that there was no marriage, as such legal relationship cannot be partial or periodic. The evidence must be construed in favor of the judgment.
Brown v. Carr,
As the trial court recognized, there are three elements of a marriage in Georgia. OCGA § 19-3-1. They must exist “all at one period in time.”
Brown v. Brown,
Both direct evidence and indirect evidence are admissible,
Scott v. Jefferson, 174
Ga. App. 651, 653 (2) (
2. Contrary to the appellant’s second enumeration, the court did not erroneously consider motive as determinative of the fact of existence vel non of a common law marriage.
The actions of the appellant and the deceased were sometimes inconsistent with respect to marriage. Of particular significance to the trial court was the evidence that in all the fifteen years the two lived together, the deceased never told his daughter, his mother, his brother, or his best friend that he was married to appellant. His firearms license showed his mother’s address as his actual residence address, as did his voter registration card, and appellant herself did not list the deceased as her spouse on documents filed for public housing.
*850
Compare
Beals v.
Beals,
This evidence supports the court’s findings, and the court’s deduction regarding the various patterns of “holding out” behavior was not an impermissible one. The court did not consider it determinative of the fact of marriage, but as some evidence that the parties had not intended to enter into a binding marriage.
Judgment affirmed.
