73 P. 1000 | Cal. | 1903
This is an appeal from an order denying an application to set aside a homestead. The facts are brief, and as found by the lower court are, that John P. Harrington, the deceased, and appellant intermarried in Calumet, Michigan, in 1874, where a week after the marriage the decedent left her and came west, ultimately settling in the city of San Francisco. After he left her, and between 1874 and 1876, he wrote her four letters and sent her some sums of money. Subsequent to the latter year she received no communication from him, or information of his whereabouts, and it was generally reputed in Calumet, where she continued to live, that he was dead, and she so believed him to be. In 1886 at Calumet she remarried in good faith one James Carley. After her marriage to Carley, rumors having reached Calumet that Harrington was alive, she and Carley voluntarily separated, and his present whereabouts are unknown. No annulment, however, of the second marriage was had.
In 1900 Harrington died in San Francisco, leaving, in addition to other property, a lot in said city suitable for a dwelling-place, which respondent, having come from Michigan to California, petitioned the probate court to set apart to her as a homestead, which was denied.
This case comes within a very narrow compass, the only point involved being whether the respondent is the widow of the deceased. The lower court held that she was not, and we think that determination was correct. While it is contended by appellant that by the law of Michigan the second marriage to Carley was absolutely void, there was no proof of such law, and it must be assumed that the law of Michigan is similar *247
to that of this state (Estate of Richards,
The general rule of law upon this subject is as stated in Tiffany on Persons and Domestic Relations (p. 37): "Where a marriage is merely voidable, and voidable by a decree of nullity only, it is valid unless a decree is obtained, and the decree must be made, if at all, during the lives of both parties. Until it is made the marriage is valid for all purposes. The children are legitimate; the parties are entitled respectively to curtesy and dower; and all other incidents of a valid marriage attach."
In New York, which has a statutory provision similar to our section
Be that as it may, however, her right to have the court set apart to her as a homestead, property of the estate of Harrington, can be based only on the fact that she is his widow. As we have seen, her marriage with Carley being valid and never annulled, she is still his wife. She cannot, then, at the same time and under these circumstances, be the wife of Carley and the widow of Harrington.
The cases cited by appellant (In re Eichhoff,
Counsel for appellant attacks the sufficiency of the finding of the court, that appellant, in good faith, believing Harrington to be dead, contracted the second marriage with Carley, and contends that the evidence shows directly the contrary. If this claim of appellant were true, the marriage to Carley would be absolutely void, as not coming within the exception of section
The order of the lower court is affirmed.
McFarland, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Beatty, C.J., dissented from the order denying a hearing in Bank, and filed an opinion, which is reported post, page 295, in connection with the opinion in Estate of Harrington, S.F. No. 3200, decided September 22, 1903.