257 Ill. 27 | Ill. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a writ of error to the circuit court of DeKalb county to review a decree of that court assigning homestead and dower in certain real estate to defendant in error, as surviving husband of Anna Moker, deceased.
Frederick Moker and Anna Moker were married in 1872 and lived together until the latter part of 1903, when they were divorced. The last few years of that period they resided in DeKalb county. In 1900 Frederick Moker had executed a contract relinquishing all right to any of Anna Moker’s property, waiving rights of homestead and dower, and agreeing to join in conveying any of her property on her request. The consideration specified in this agreement was $1000. Apparently this was not paid at the time, but shortly after the divorce Mrs. Moker sold a piece of her real estate and gave defendant in error $1200 of the proceeds for what she said she was owing him. In 1904 mutual friends attempted to effect a reconciliation. The two had a meeting in Sandwich, at the house of one Brandenbergér, in April of that year, and as a result agreed to live together again. Defendant in error gave Mrs. Moker his pocket-book, containing several notes and a considerable sum of money, she stating at the time that now she had all her money back and they would get married again. That night they slept in the same room and bed, in the house where they formerly resided, then occupied by a tenant, telling the tenant and his wife, before they retired, that they were the same as married,—that they were going to get married the next day. They left Sandwich the next morning on a train, coming back the same evening, when Mrs. Moker announced to the tenants, Mr. and Mrs. Olson, that they were married. On Mr. Olson stating that he did not see any announcement of the marriage in the paper, Mrs. Moker replied, “We are married, anyhow.” No evidence was introduced showing that any marriage ceremony was performed. Two of the plaintiffs in error, Otto B. Herald and Waldo W. Herald, were children of Mrs.'Moker by a former marriage. By her marriage with Frederick Moker she had one son, Paul F. Moker. At the time of their reconciliation Moker was about sixty-nine years of age and Mrs. Moker wás about sixty-four. At least seven witnesses testified that Mr. and Mrs. Moker said after they went to live together, in 1904, that they were married, several stating that the two were introduced, in their presence, as man and wife, and were reputed as married, from 1904 to her death, in the neighborhood where they resided. Mrs. Moker told one witness that they had gone to Dakota, after their reconciliation, to live but did not like it there and were now going “to malee a good home and stay together until God separate us.” About an equal number testified, on behalf of plaintiffs in error, to having heard statements from Mrs. Moker that Moker was only boarding with her, some stating that she took him back only because she was afraid of him. The testimony tends strongly to show that after they commenced living together again, in 1904, Mrs. Moker was the dominating power in the household. Mrs. Moker made a will in 1905 in which it was stated that she was unmarried. No explanation is given as to who drew this will or whether she understood its contents. She signed it by mark. By its terms her property was divided in various proportions among her three sons. The defendant in error testified, but neither on direct nor cross-examination was he asked whether any marriage ceremony had been performed between himself and Anna Moker after their reconciliation.
Plaintiffs in error contend that the relations of the Molcers after their reconciliation were meretricious, while the defendant in error claims that even if no ceremony was performed the acts of the parties showed that there was a common law marriage; that they had lived together before the enactment, in 1905, of the statute amending the law as to common law marriages.
The true relation of a man and woman living together is always a matter of evidence. (Hebblethwaite v. Hepworth, 98 Ill. 126.) To constitute a common law marriage prior to 1905 no particular words were necessary. “If what is done and said evidences an intention by the parties to assume the marriage status, and the parties thereupon enter into the relation of husband and wife, that is sufficient, whatever may be the form of expression used.” (Heymann v. Heymann, 218 Ill. 636.) “It is impossible to fix a standard by which the evidence of a marriage in every case should be measured. Each case must depend upon its own facts and attending circumstances.” Laurence v. Laurence, 164 Ill. 367.
Many of the cases cited by counsel for plaintiffs in error are those where the meretricious relations were clearly established and were continued without being chánged.- In view of this record we do not think the actions and words of the defendant in error and Mrs. Moker can fairly be construed as indicating a meretricious relation. They had been married thirty years and having had trouble were divorced. They were growing old. Their friends desired to bring them together and arranged a meeting for the purpose, at which the two talked the matter over and became reconciled, and after that lived together until Mrs. Moker’s death. We think the great weight of the evidence in this record supports the conclusion that they intended to, and did, assume the marriage relation after such reconciliation.
The circuit court rightly held defendant in error entitled to dower and homestead in the premises in question. The decree of that court will therefore be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.