Thе only question in,the case is whether Mary Bentley (Carroll), appellee, was the wi-fe-of R. J. Carroll at the time of his death. His heirs have appealed from á judgment that she was his wife.
R. J. Carroll died a .resident of Carter County in December, 1950, at the age of 71. He was a prominent farmer and at one time had served as a justice of the peace. He and his first wife, who died in 1940, had raised a family of five children аnd accumulated considerable property, After the death of his wife he lived alone on his farm near Iron Hill in Carter County.
The appellee had lived in Carter County as a child but had for many years lived in Michigan, and later in Idaho with her first husband, Cy Frasure. In the winter of 1943 she brought the body of her father, who had died at her home in Idaho, to Carter County for burial. After the funeral she spent a few days in the neighborhood visiting relatives and friends and renewed her acquaintance with R. J. Carroll. It appears that Mr. Carroll, as justice of the peace, had performed the ceremony uniting her in marriage with Cy Frasure. She testified that after 1943 she returned to Carter County each year for visits of ten days to two weeks and saw R. J. Carroll on each of those visits. She secured a divorce from Frasure in February, 1945, although she says they had been separated since 1941.
In the summer of 1946 appellee moved into the home of R. J. Carroll and they cohabited as man and wife from that time until his death in 1950. It is admitted
The day after R. J. Carroll's funeral, ap-pellee and some of his children by his first wife met in the office of the attorney who then and now represents the children, at which time there was some discussion about the administration of the decedent’s estate. Some ten days later the parties again met in the same attorney’s оffice and at that time appellee was informed there was a question about her marriage to the decedent. In response to questions by the attorney, she stated she and R. J. Carroll were married by a justice of the peace, in the presence of witnesses, at or near Ironton, Ohio, on the night of March 5, 1944. She later testified by deposition that she was mistaken about the date of her marriage and that the correct date is March 5, 1945.
Appellants place considerable emphasis on the change in appellee’s testimony as to the date of the marriage. It is pоinted out she was not divorced from her first husband until February, 1945, and it is implied that she deliberately changed her testimony so that the date of her marriage to the decedent would not conflict with the date of her divorce from her first husband. We do not place much significance on the confusion as to dates, although it is one weak link in the chain of circumstances upon which appellee relies. Of more significance is her testimony that immediately after the ceremony in March, 1945, she returned to Idaho and did not even see her new husband again until the summer of 1946.
Although appellee testified she and the decedent were married by a justice of the peace in Ironton, there is no other testimony on this point and it is stipulated there is no record of such a marriage. Although there is some question abоut the competency of appellee’s testimony concerning the ceremony in Ironton, Civil Code of Practice, § 606(2), we think the competency of the testimony was waived by appellants when they introduced testimony in chief concerning appellee’s statement as to the date of the ceremony. Appellee now relies mainly on a common law marriage which it is clаimed was consummated in the state of Florida. Common law marriages are recognized both in Florida and Ohio, but there is no contention the parties entered into a common law marriage in Ohio.
We gather from the Chancellor’s opinion, which is a part of the record, that he placed little reliance on appellee’s testimony that she and decedent went through a ceremоnial marriage in Ironton, and we are in full accord with his finding on this point. It seems inconceivable to us that such a ceremony could have taken place without appellee, who is reprеsented by able counsel, being in position to present some evidence of the fact other than her bare statement that it occurred. It must be remembered that the ceremony is alleged tо have taken place in 1945, a little more than five years before this action was instituted. So we are not dealing with a case where it might be expected that in the natural course of events thе records might have been lost or destroyed, and the witnesses dead or removed.
The Chancellor’s judgment is based on a finding of a common law marriage consummated in Florida and the decision in the case must turn on the correctness of that finding. It is conceded, of course, that if there was a common law marriage in Florida it will be recognized in this state, although it is generally stated that a common lаw marriage may not be consummated in Kentucky.
This Court has had before it in recent years two cases somewhat similаr in facts to this case. In Damron v. Damron,
In Brown’s Adm’r v. Brown,
The general rule is that where the relationship is meretricious in its inception, it will be presumed to continue so in the absence of evidence to the contrary. 55 C.J.S., Marriage, § 36, page 882; 55 C.J.S., Marriage, § 43 d (2), page 898; Brown’s Adm’r v. Brown, supra,
We are reluctant to hold that these people were not married, but the same reasons which impel the Courts to protect the marriage institution preclude us from making any exception in favor of those who disregard the solemnities which experience has proved are necessary to protect the sanctity of that institution. It is possible that Mary Bentlеy believed in good faith she was married to Mr. Carroll, but we are unable to find in this record sufficient evidence to support such a finding.
The judgment is reversed with directions to enter one consistent with this opinion.
