71 So. 391 | Miss. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a second appearance of this case in the supreme court, the former appeal having been prosecuted from a decree sustaining a demurrer to the bill of inter-
Counsel for appellant concede that, if the proof showed a ceremonial marriage, one “solemnized according to the forms of law” between Henry Howard and Fannie Banks that every presumption would be indulged in favor of its validity, and that this presumption would overcome the presumption of law that Sarah Biley the first wife, was still alive, although she had not been absent seven years at the time Henry first began cohabiting with Fannie Banks. If a ceremonial marriage had been shown between Henry and Fannie, then the question would be put at rest by many previous holdings of this court. Spears v. Burton, 31 Miss. 555; Hull v. Rawls, 27 Miss. 471; Wilkie v. Collins, 48 Miss. 496; Railway Co. v. Beardsley, 79 Miss. 417, 30 So. 660, 89 Am. St. Rep. 660; Sullivan v. Grand Lodge, 97 Miss. 218, 52 So. 360; Bennett v. State, 100 Miss. 684, 56 So. 780. The proposition is settled beyond doubt that, where a second marriage, duly solemnized, is shown, the presumption arises that the first spouse has been either
In every expression of our own court in the cases mentioned the court refers to the second marriage as ■ one solemnized according to the forms of law or solemnized in due form. It cannot be doubted, however, . prior to the adoption of the Code of 1892, that a common-law marriage was recognized as lawful and binding as une contracted in pursuance of a license and the usual ceremony. We are persuaded that every presumption should then be indulged in favor of the legality of a union thus shown in the same way and to the same extent as the law indulges in favor of a ceremonial marriage. The contract of marriage is one and the ■essential thing; the ceremony giving utterance to and public evidence of the contract is an incident. In making this declaration we do not wish to be understood as discounting the wisdom or propriety of the usual ceremonies by which marriages are solemnized. We are not to be understood either as interpreting the meaning of our present statute requiring licenses to be issued. We simply assent to the holding repeatedly announced,
But it is contended that this second union or common-law marriage should not be upheld because the cohabitation of Henry and Fannie was meretricious in its inception. It may be conceded that this meretricious relationship is presumed to have continued until this cohabitation changed from an unlawful to a lawful relationship, or, in other words, until the cohabitation be
£ ‘ The true rule and the great weight of authority is that, inasmuch as the law itself and all its presumptions deprecate illegal, and favor lawful relationships, slight circumstances may be sufficient to establish a change from an illicit to a legal relation, and that proof . of its time or place is not indispensable.”
The supreme court of Georgia, in the case of Drawdy v. Hesters, 130 Ga. 161, 60 S. E. 451, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 190, announces that:
“The presumption that cohabitation shown to have been illicit in its inception so continued may be overcome by direct or circumstantial evidence that during
The same result is announced in the note to Chamberland v. Chamberland, 6 Ann. Cas. 486, where the rule is stated as follows:
“It has been held that, although cohabitation between a man and woman is meretricious in the beginning, a valid marriage may.be shown by proof that the parties sustained the relation of husband and wife after the impediment to their marriage was removed, and that it is not absolutely essential to prove a ceremonial marriage.” "
We .conclude, therefore, that the unlawful character of the cohabitation is shown by the proof to have changed by the public announcement of the parties that they were man and wife and the assumption of all the burdens incident to matrimony, especially the burdens of maintaining a home and of bearing, caring for, and rearing the very children whose interests were put in jeopardy by the contention of the widow Aliena Howard in the present litigation.
There is another question, the answer to which must lead to an affirmance of this case. The action against the railroad company 'for the death oí Henry Howard was instituted by Aliena as his lawful widow under section 721, Code of 1906. In the former opinion of the court in this case, this court expressly held that:
The suit in question “fixes the interest of all parties, and nothing that the court can do can eliminate their interest. So far as the widow and children are concerned, they derive their title from the same source.”
The court further said:
“If Henrietta, Robert, and Sam Howard are children of Henry Howard, deceased, as they claim to be, they were by law plaintiffs in the suit of Aliena Howard against the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad Company just as though their names appeared in the declaration.”
The decree of the chancellor, in onr judgment, is eminently correct, and should he, and is hereby, affirmed.
Affirmed.