CAROL A. FRASER vs. STEWART A. FRASER & another.
Essex. October 7, 1955. - March 29, 1956.
March 29, 1956
334 Mass. 4
Present: QUA, C.J., RONAN, WILKINS, SPALDING, & COUNIHAN, JJ.
The judgment is to be modified so as to read, “The subject matter of this petition having become moot, the petition is dismissed,” and as so modified is affirmed.
So ordered.
Marriage, Validity, Foreign marriage. Evidence, Presumptions and burden of proof.
A woman was bound by her testimony showing knowledge on her part that a man with whom she went through a marriage ceremony in another State was at the time incapable of marrying her in Massachusetts. [6]
The fact that a woman, who went with a man from Massachusetts to another State and there married him less than six months after he obtained a decree nisi of divorce here and immediately returned here with him and lived with him here until long after the divorce decree had become absolute, knew at the time of the marriage that he could not marry her here during such six months required the conclusion that she joined with him in going to the other State to evade the laws of Massachusetts contrary to
PETITION, filed in the Probate Court for the county of Essex on March 22, 1954.
The case was heard by Costello, J.
In this court the case was submitted on briefs.
Arnold H. Salisbury, for the petitioner.
RONAN, J. This is a petition brought in the Probate Court under
The male respondent married one Germaine Verrette at Andover in this Commonwealth in 1947, and obtained a decree nisi from her in the Probate Court for Essex County on November 2, 1950. That decree became absolute on May 3, 1951. Fraser and Mary Jane Bigbee, both residents of this Commonwealth, went to Salem, New Hampshire, on December 1, 1950, and were married there. They returned to this Commonwealth on the same day and lived here together until Fraser left her in January, 1954. A child was born on April 9, 1951. The petitioner met Fraser while he was living with his second wife, learned the circumstances connected with his marriage with that wife, and married him on May 11, 1954, at Barnstable. The judge found that Mary Jane believed that Fraser had been divorced and was free to marry her in New Hampshire on December 1, 1950, that they lived together as husband and wife, in good faith on her part, until January, 1954, when he left her, and that the marriage of the petitioner and Fraser was invalid.
Mary Jane testified that before their marriage Fraser had told her that he expected his divorce case would come up in the fall of 1950, and that as soon as he had secured it “we were going to be married in New Hampshire, because he said we couldn‘t get married in Massachusetts, but it was
It is a well settled rule of evidence that a party is bound by his testimony concerning his knowledge, motives, beliefs, purposes, feelings, and other similar subject matters of which he alone may be presumed to have personal information and concerning which he might be thought to speak with reasonable assurance of the truth. Testimony upon such subjects has properly been held to bind the party who gives it. He has no right to ask a judge or a jury to disregard it. Mary Jane in the face of this testimony must be held to have known that Fraser was incapable of entering into a marriage with her in this Commonwealth before the decree nisi had become a decree absolute. Laffey v. Mullen, 275 Mass. 277. Butler v. Graves, 284 Mass. 84, 85. Germaine v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 298 Mass. 501. Ramseyer v. Conlon, 303 Mass. 270. Beebe v. Randall, 304 Mass. 207, 210-211. McFaden v. Nordblom, 307 Mass. 574, 575. McCarthy v. Brockton National Bank, 314 Mass. 318, 327. Meunier‘s Case, 319 Mass. 421, 424. Dubois v. Atlantic Corp. 322 Mass. 512, 522.
Notwithstanding her unequivocal testimony, Mary Jane contends that her marriage was valid within
At the time of their marriage both parties were domiciled here, and both knowing they could not marry in this Commonwealth intended to go through a marriage ceremony in New Hampshire and to return here to live as husband and wife. This was contrary to the provisions of
We do not agree that
An attempt by residents of this Commonwealth to avoid her laws through the expedient of a marriage ceremony in another State is not the “good faith” to which special consideration is extended by that section. Gardner v. Gardner, 232 Mass. 253, 258. In that case the parties had gone to New York to be married, and it was said by this court at page 257, “If they went to New York, both knowing of the
A few words will serve to make plain the difference between the case last cited and the present case. One Rosella Gardner obtained a divorce from her husband Horace on January 16, 1901, but in November, 1900, he under an assumed name went through a marriage ceremony in New York with one Sadie, then a young school girl eighteen years of age. She learned of Horace‘s real name in April, 1901, and separated from him. Later she joined Horace in this Commonwealth and then learned of his real marital situation. He took her to New York where they were remarried on July 15, 1901, one day before Rosella‘s divorce had become absolute. The trial judge found that “She [Sadie] knew that she could not be remarried in Massachusetts without a license, and that a license could not be obtained without her parents’ consent, because she was still under age.” As the statutes then stood it was
Mary Jane knew of his impediment and she joined with him in evading the statute. Even if she honestly took Fraser‘s advice and joined with him in a marriage ceremony which she knew could not be performed here, such a marriage was violative of the provisions of
The final decree should be reversed and a decree entered that the male respondent and the petitioner are husband and wife.
So ordered.
COUNIHAN, J. I regret that I am unable to concur in the opinion of the court in this case.
The issue to be determined depends upon the construction of
I am in accord with the facts as set forth in the opinion but I differ in the inference which the court draws from such facts. I think it should be emphasized that, although Fraser told Mary Jane that they could not be married in Massachusetts, he also told her that it was all right to be married in New Hampshire. In her testimony Mary Jane insisted several times that she honestly thought that it was all right and legal to be married in New Hampshire.
The probate judge found as a fact that “Mary Jane acted in the full belief that the respondent Fraser had been divorced and was free to marry her in New Hampshire on December 1, 1950,” and that “after the marriage they lived together in Massachusetts as husband and wife, in good faith on her part, until January, 1954, when the respondent Fraser left her,” a period extending far beyond the time when the impediment to their marriage was removed.
The familiar rule should be applied that we do not reverse
I am of opinion that Vital v. Vital, 319 Mass. 185, 193, 196, establishes the proposition that
The effect of
In the Turner case at page 375 it was said, “While one of the objects of the statute [R. L. c. 151, § 6, a predecessor of
In the Gardner case it appeared that the wife of the second marriage went out of this Commonwealth to evade
The opinion in no way distinguishes any of the cases above referred to. I agree with the law as expressed in the cases like Ewald v. Ewald, 219 Mass. 111, but the results in those cases are all predicated upon the principle that one who knowingly enters into a marriage with purposeful intent to evade the laws of our Commonwealth is guilty of bad faith and cannot avail himself of
I believe that the cases cited in the opinion to support the principle that
The result of the opinion is contrary to the oft expressed statement that the purpose of
I am of opinion that full weight and credit should be given to the findings of the judge of the Probate Court as to the good faith of one of the parties who enters into a marriage prohibited by
Finally I am of opinion that Carol was fully aware of all the circumstances of Mary Jane‘s marriage when she married Fraser. It is plain that she and Fraser discussed the situation on many occasions and both sought the advice of a lawyer. It is fair to infer that they were advised that if Fraser brought proceedings to annul the marriage to Mary Jane he could not prevail. Ewald v. Ewald, 219 Mass. 111. Korostynski v. Korostynski, 328 Mass. 6. The result was the marriage of Carol and Fraser so that she could institute these proceedings. I do not think that what Fraser could not do directly Carol should be permitted to do indirectly, particularly when the status of the acknowledged son of Mary Jane and Fraser is involved and his future may be seriously affected.
I think the decree of the probate judge should be affirmed.
