73 P. 1131 | Cal. | 1903
Lead Opinion
This is an application by the alleged widow praying the court in probate to award her a family allowance from the estate of John B. Harrington, deceased. The court refused the application. The evidence upon the hearing is in all respects the same as that introduced upon the same alleged widow's application for a homestead, disposed of in the appeal in Estate of Harrington,ante, p. 244, filed September 18, 1903.
Upon the authority of that case the order appealed from is affirmed.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Beatty, C.J., dissented from the order denying a hearing in Bank in this case, and in case No. 3201, ante, p. 244, and filed the following opinion on the 17th of October, 1903: — *295
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent from the order denying a rehearing of these causes and from the conclusions of the court upon which the judgments are affirmed.
The case here differs from that presented in Estate of Newman,
I conceive that the only object of the legislature in the enactment of our statute was to secure to the children of such marriages the status and rights of legitimacy, and to the spouses their vested property rights as they should exist at the date of the discovery that the former husband or wife *296 is still living. I do not understand that the legislature intended, and, I think, we should be far from assuming, — as seems to be assumed in the opinion of the court, — that a doubly wedded wife, in the situation of Mrs. Harrington, can make her election between her two husbands, and keep the second by neglecting to have the marriage annulled, or get back the former by obtaining such a decree. I think the law intends that on the discovery that her first husband is living she shall cease to cohabit with either until by a decree of divorce the first, or by a decree of nullity the second, marriage is dissolved. In the mean time, however, there is nothing in the letter or policy of the statute to deprive her of her property rights in the estate of her first husband in case of his death, or of any vested right she may have as against her second husband.