203 P. 647 | Utah | 1921
Appellant brought this action to establish her right to and
“One-third in value of all the legal or equitable estates in real property possessed by the husband at any time during the .marriage, and to which the wife had made no relinquishment of her rights, shall be set apart as her property in fee simple if she survive him.”
Briefly stated, it is alleged in the complaint that prior to June 16, 1897, appellant and one John Beck intermarried and thenceforth'and until the death of said Beck on April 2, 1913, they continued to be husband and wife; that during said marriage said Beck was a resident of Utah, and was seized and possessed of certain real property in Utah county (describing same) which he conveyed by deed of trust to the Security Loan & Storage Company, a corporation, and that thereafter by mesne conveyances the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company acquired the said property, and now denies appellant any rights therein; that appellant has never sold, conveyed, or in any manner relinquished her rights in or to the premises. Appellant prayed to be adjudged the owner of one-third of the property; that it be partitioned if practicable, otherwise that she have judgment against the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company for the value of one-third the value of the property. Judgment was also demanded against- the sugar company for one-third of the rents and profits of the property since it has had possession thereof. Appellant also •prayed for general relief and costs.
The answer sets forth three separate defenses, to wit:
The first defense denies, upon information and belief, that appellant and John Beck intermarried. Seizure and possession of the property by said Beck, also the sale thereof by him to the Securities Loan & Storage Company, as stated in' the complaint, are admitted. As affirmative matters for a defense it is then alleged that the said John Beck conveyed and confirmed the property in trust to certain trustees to secure the payment of certain indebtedness contracted by him; that the aforesaid trust deeds were thereafter duly fore
In the second defense it is pleaded in bar that in certain foreclosure proceedings against John Beck through which a predecessor in interest of the sugar company acquired the property appellant herein was made a party defendant; that she was duly served with summons and defaulted, and that thereupon the court found that all her right, title, and interest in the property involved in this action was subject to and subordinate to the rights and lien of plaintiff in said foreclosure proceedings, and entered its judgment and decree accordingly; that in the deed of trust so foreclosed said John Beck described and acknowledged himself to be a widower, and that in said trust deed so foreclosed John B'eck did not merely grant, bargain, sell, and convey said property, but also confirmed the same unto the trustees therein named.
In the third defense it is averred'that, even though appellant and the said John Beck did intermarry as alleged in the complaint, appellant is, by reason of her conduct, estopped from claiming any inheritance rights in the property described in her complaint for the following reasons: That in the year 1883, while John Beck was lawfully married to one Sarah Schilling Beck, he married appellant as a polygamous wife under the sanction and ceremonies of the so-called “Mormon” church; that thereafter within four years John Beck likewise married Matilda Goss and Louisa Goss as plural wives under the rites and sanction of said church; that said lawful wife died in 1894 and from thenceforth, and until his death said John Beck consorted and lived with his said plural wives as plural wives without distinction, supplying them with homes and with the necessaries of life, and habitually, divided his time equally between them, except within the last few years of his life when he had fallen into abject poverty and had become ill he- made his home with the said plural
Upon the issues thus joined by the pleadings the trial court heard the evidence and found the facts to be substantially as set forth in the answer. From the facts found the court concluded as matters of law that appellant’s claims were barred by laches and by reason of the foreclosure proceedings to which she had been made a party. The court also reached the conclusion that there was no legal marriage between appellant and J ohn B'eck, and entered judgment dismissing the complaint. Motion for new trial having been denied, the cause is brought to this court on appeal.
As grounds for reversal of the judgment of the trial court many alleged errors are assigned in the admission and rejection of evidence, but more especially appellant relies upon the insufficiency of the evidence to justify or support the findings and conclusions of law of the trial court, and particularly the conclusion arrived at “that the plaintiff [appellant] was not legally and lawfully married to said John Beck prior to the 16th day of June, 1897, nor was she prior to or since said date the lawful and legal wife of the said John Beck.”
Appellant’s own testimony, corroborated by several witnesses, also shows that upon their return to Utah Mr. Beck continued to make his home with her; that they lavishly entertained, and that she was also introduced and known at social functions as “Mrs. Beck,” or “Mrs. John Beck.”
In still later years, the record shows, Mr. Beck became financially involved. It further shows that upon numerous occasions thereafter he sold real property and incumbered the same, including the property involved in this action, as a “widower” and at other times no marital status was defined or declared by his instruments of conveyance. The record further shows quite conclusively that until John Beck met with severe financial reverses and was reduced to a state of poverty he bestowed the same care and attentions upon
“Q. Now, Mr. Merill, did you ever have any conversation with John Beck respecting his having made or making Bertha his wife? A. Yes, sir. Q. You may state the conversation. A. The date as near as I can fix the first, his comment or conversation in regard to it was the early summer of 1897. * * * We talked about various matters, and while at the table I don’t recall whether we had completed the meal and just sat there talking or whether it was during the course of the meal. Mr. Beck told us * * * that Bertha was urging him to make her the legal wife, and that he would not do it because he proposed to keep all his wives on the same basis. Then he added, with a laugh, ‘Besides, when I get ready to take a legal wife I have another woman already picked out.’ Next time I recall his speaking of it — I recall it definitely — he was angry. Q. Fix the time. A. I should say in the spring of 1898, as near as I can place it. It was not very long, some few months prior to the time we left ,the house at 55 North State Street. * * * Mr. Beck told us that he and Mrs. Beck had had a very serious quarrel. Q. Which Mrs. Beck? A. Mrs. Bertha Beck I refer to. Had had a very serious quarrel. I don’t know whether at the time he positively denied that he had been married to Mrs. Bertha Beck, but I remember his getting angry and saying, ‘And she calls herself Mrs. John Beck.’ Threw up his hands and said, ‘She may call herself anything she * * * pleases if she will only give me peace.’ The last time I remember of his speaking of the matter — Q. Just a moment. This is the third conversation? A. The one I am about to relate is the third. Q. Fix the date. A. Late in the fall of 1912. He was calling at our house at 333 Ninth East street. * * * We had talked of other matters, and Mr. Beck again introduced the question of his trouble with Mrs. Bertha Beck. He said that Mrs. Bertha Beck was again claiming to be his legal wife, but she could not prove it, because she was not, as near as my memory serves me. Q. ' Did you ever have any other conversation respecting this'*321 matter? A. I cannot recall them positively, but I have very distinct impressions of his speaking of the matter sometimes in a jocular way, sometimes sarcastically, sometimes very earnestly. In fact Mr. Beck very seldom came to our house to visit us without bringing up the question of his trouble with Mrs. Bertha Beck, and very often her claims as to being his legal wife were spoken of, and, as I remember it, he invariably denied it.”
The record further shows that after John Beck had been reduced to poverty and for some time prior to and during his last illness, he lived at the home provided by him for his plural wife Matilda, and that she, unaided, supported, cared for, and nursed him there until his death, while appellant was living elsewhere.
Appellant contends that her statements that a valid common-law marriage was entered into by an express agreement made between herself and John Beck on the 15th day of August, 1895, in the state of Nevada while they were passengers upon a train en route to California, stands wholly uncontra-dicted in the record, except for incompetent evidence admitted and received by the trial court as to the declarations made by John Beck during his lifetime, to the effect that no such marriage had ever been entered into, and that the appellant was not his legal wife. Moreover, it is argued in appellant’s brief that immediately after the California trip there was a change in the relationship between the parties; that appellant occupied the station of and was held out to be the wife of John Beck in such a way before the general public as would, in the absence of direct evidence of a legal marriage, compel a finding that such a marriage relationship had been consummated and entered into. In support of this last-mentioned contention counsel have cited and quoted at length in their brief from the following cases: Maryland v. Baldwin, 112 U. S. 490, 5 Sup. Ct. 278, 28 L. Ed. 822; Travers v. Reinhardt, 205 U. S. 423, 27 Sup. Ct. 563, 51 L. Ed. 865; Hamlin v. Grogan (C. C. A. 8th Circ.) 257 Fed. 59, 168 C. C. A. 271; Brewer v. Brewer’s Estate, 68 Colo. 84, 188 Pac. 725; Redgrave v. Redgrave, 38 Md. 93; Jackson v. Jackson, 80 Md. 176, 30 Atl. 752; In re Meade’s Estate, 82 W. Va. 650, 97 S. E. 127. Also Schouler, Dom. Rel. (3d Ed.)
But it is seriously contended by appellant’s counsel that the trial court should'have been bound by the direct evidence of appellant alone, that a valid marriage between herself and John Beck took place in the state of Nevada in the manner and under the circumstances testified to by her. After taking into consideration the attending circumstances, the previous relationship, and the conduct of the parties toward each other both before and after the alleged common-law marriage, we are of the opinion that appellant’s contention that a legal marriage was consummated in the state of Nevada cannot be
For the reasons stated, we are of the opinion that the trial court was right and fully justified in its conclusion that appellant and John Beck were not legally married,