33 Ga. App. 259 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
Martha Daniel brought suit against Atlanta & West Point Eailroad Company for the homicide of her alleged husband, Olin Daniel. The defendant denied that it was negligent, and, also, that the plaintiff was the widow of the deceased. The plaintiff married Harper after the filing of her suit, and the action was amended so as to proceed in her new name. Upon the trial the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted.
The following facts are recited in the bill of exceptions: The plaintiff testified that she was the wife of Olin Daniel at the time of his injury and death; she then introduced five witnesses who testified concerning the homicide of her husband, and rested. The defendant, without motion of any kind, proceeded to introduce evidence upon the issue of negligence. Upon the issue of the plaintiff’s alleged widowhood the defendant “introduced the case of Attorney General v. Vance, 210 Ala. 9 (97 So. 230), as evidence of 'the Alabama law upon the matter of marriage and divorce,” the same not being otherwise referred to or more fully shown in the bill
The plaintiff called the court's attention to certain decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama, described in the bill of exceptions only by name, volume, and page, “declaring the Alabama law to recognize common-law marriages. . . The court, without objection from the opposing counsel, accepted these decisions as containing the Alabama law.” The defendant thereupon asked the court to direct a verdict in its favor, “stating as the only ground for such request that the plaintiff had not shown herself to have been the legal wife of the deceased, Olin Daniel, at the time of his injury and death, nothing being said as to the sufficiency of the evidence of negligence. After a hearing of argument upon this sole point, . . -the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, stating that said verdict was directed solely upon the question of whether or not plaintiff was the lawful wife of Daniel” at the time of his death.
None of the evidence offered by either party upon the subject of negligence is set forth; nor is there any evidence touching the value of the life of the deceased.
The defendant in error made a motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions, upon two grounds: First, because it does not sot forth
We will consider the grounds of the motion to dismiss in their inverse order. The second ground is clearly without merit. The verdict was directed upon a sole ground. Upon this point the case is controlled by the decision of the Supreme Court in Lamar v. Gardner, 113 Ga. 781 (1) (39 S. E. 498). See also Houser v. Savannah Electric Co., 9 Ga. App. 766 (3) (72 S. E. 276); Georgia &c. R. Co. v. Georgia-Alabama Power Co., 152 Ga. 172 (1) (108 S. E. 521).
Even if we could agree with the counsel for the defendant in error upon the propositions asserted in both grounds of the motion, it would be questionable as to whether the bill should be dismissed or merely that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed. See Roberts v. City of Cairo, 133 Ga. 642 (4) (66 S. E. 938); Jennison v. Jennison, 136 Ga. 202 (3 b) (71 S. E. 244, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 441); Hancock v. McNatt, 116 Ga. 297 (1) (42 S. E. 525); Williams v. Childers, 145 Ga. 91 (88 S. E. 557); Pierce v. Felts, 146 Ga. 716 (92 S. E. 212); Fairburn Banking Co. v. Citizens Bank, 20 Ga. App. 732 (1) (93 S. E. 234).
If it appears, by the recitals of a bill of exceptions, that not all of the evidence material to a determination of the question raised for decision has been brought up, there can be no reversal of the judgment, but if there are questions as to the correctness of the judgment which can be determined without reference to the evidence appearing to have been omitted, they may be considered. Roberts v. City of Cairo, supra. The view which we take of the second ground of the motion to dismiss really controls our decision upon the propriety of the judgment excepted to. We are of the
We may assume that the decision of the Alabama court in the Yance case would have proved that the plaintiff’s marriage to Daniel within less than sixty days from the decree of divorce was absolutely void, and that she was even guilty of bigamy under tJie Alabama law. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we would presume that the common law prevails in that State, but we may assume further that if the evidence had been properly set out in the bill of exceptions, or attached thereto and identified as an exhibit, it would have disclosed that the common law is not in force there, and that the marriage within the sixty-day period being void, the parties could not have become husband and wife as at common law when the period had expired. It will not be presumed that an appeal was ever taken from the divorce decree by either party.
We may say then that the plaintiff and Olin Daniel were never husband and wife under the laws of Alabama, and further that sire might even now be carried hack to that State and be subject to a prosecution, unless it is barred by limitation, because of her marriage to him within less than sixty days from the date of tire decree. She could have married him, however, by express ceremony at any time after the expiration of the sixty-day period. It clearly appears that the marriage bond between her and Powell was completely dissolved, and that she was restrained from marrying again only for the limited time stated in the decree. But there was no marriage by ceremony either in Georgia or Alabama, after the removal of her impediment by the lapse of the prescribed time. They took up habitation in the State of Georgia in the year 1917, and, to give to the defendant the benefit- of all evidence that may lie contained in the report of tlie decision in the Yance case, the plain
In this State marriage may be consummated as at common law. The relation between them had at no time been meretricious. The impediment in the plaintiff was, in view of her evidence, strictly legal, not moral. She thought she had the right to marry again. Perhaps ignorance on her part of the effect of the decree would not avail her as a defense if she were being prosecuted for bigamy in Alabama on account of the marriage. A person is not permitted to set up ignorance of the law as an exemption from punishment for crime, or from damages for torts, or from liability for the breach of a contract, but knowledge of the law for all intents and purposes will not be imputed to every person. Ryan v. State, 104 Ga. 78, 80 (30 S. E. 678). There is a prima facie presumption that every one knows the law, but there is no conclusive presumption to that effect except in the three instances just stated. Compare Carter v. Walden, 136 Ga. 700 (3) (71 S. E. 1047); Butler v. Livingston, 15 Ga. 565 (1); Glover v. Wright, 82 Ga. 114, 118 (S. E. 452); Rylee v. Bank of Statham, 7 Ga. App. 489 (3) (67 S. E. 383); 4 R. C. L. 873, § 17. The rebuttal evidence offered by the plaintiff,- including the deed, was certainly sufficient to authorize, if not to demand, the inference of a valid common-law marriage between her and the deceased under the laws of Georgia, regardless of the relation obtaining between them before their removal to this St^te. It is noted that in the deed she is referred to as the grantor’s wife, and the conveyance is based upon the consideration of his love and affection for her as such. She accepted the deed. This is shown prima facie, if not conclusively, by its record and the fact that she had it in her possession, and produced it, at the trial.
Our conclusion then is that no evidence material to the question to be decided (that is, was the inference of a common-law marriage in Georgia authorized?) appears to have been omitted from the'hill of exceptions. The evidence which the defendant in error insists was omitted would have been material if common-law marriages were not sanctioned in Georgia, or if our inquiry should be confined to the relation existing between the plaintiff and the decedent while they remained in Alabama. The omitted evidence might possibty be-material if we were called upon to determine the question as to whether a finding for the plaintiff would have been
From what we have said above, it follows that the first ground of the motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions is also without merit, and that the court committed error in directing the verdict in favor of the defendant. Smith v. Reed, 145 Ga. 724 (1) (89 S. E. 185; L. R. A. 1917A, 492); Powers v. Powers, 138 Ga. 65 (1) (74 S. E. 759); Park v. Barron, 20 Ga. 702 (65 Am. Dec. 641).
Before concluding, we must confess to have stealthily examined the Alabama decision in the Vance case as contained in a volume like that described in the bill of exceptions. As individuals and lawyers we’know what it says of the Alabama law. In fact, the writer has a report of the decision before his very eyes at this moment. But since it is not properly brought up in the record as evidence of a fact, we must as judges remain ignorant of whatever it may prove. We can not use it. as we might in examining the decisions of other jurisdictions as persuasive authority upon some law question to be decided. But as stated above, whatever may be the law of Alabama determining the relation of the parties in that State, it conclusively appears that at the time of their removal to Georgia, the period of restraint upon the plaintiff’s right to marry had expired, and their status thereafter should be determined by the laws of this State and not the laws of Alabama. Hancock v. McNatt, 116 Ga. 297 (42 S. E. 525); Roberts v. City of Cairo, supra; Champion v. Wilson, 64 Ga. 184 (1); Craven v. Bates, 96 Ga. 78, 80 (23 S. E. 202); 18 R. C. L. 388, § 9.
Judgment reversed.