58 Iowa 431 | Iowa | 1882
It is essential to a consideration of some of the errors, discussed by counsel to settle what issues are presented in the pleadings. The petition alleges a marriage between Edwards
menced by Edwards as plaintiff and a decree therein ordered by the court, one Patterson and others were introduced as witnesses, and Patterson testified he, in 1873, was assistant to the then clerk; that he did not know anything about a decree of divorce, but he saw the judge’s calendar and therein was a case of ¥m. Edwards against appellant, and an entry of “default, judgment for plaintiff as prayed for in petition, upon payment of costs.” This evidence was objected to, but the same was overruled. It is insisted the judge’s calendar is not a record, and that the entries therein are merely memoranda of the judge, and therefore not admissible as tending to prove there was a decree. As supporting this proposition Traer Bros. v. Whitman et al., 56 Iowa, 443, is cited. All that was held in that case applicable to the one at bar was, that the entry on the calendar was not the decree, but' it was said such entry was “intended for the guidance of the clerk in entering orders and judgments.” To the same effect is Smith v. Cumins & Co., 52 Iowa, 143. Now if the entry in the calendar is for the guidance of the clerk, and therefrom he enters the required judgments, it seems to us such entry tends to show a decree was ordered by the court, and this
It is conceded, as we understand, that under the first clause of section 3639 of the Code, the appellant was prohibited from testifying in her own behalf. Her right to so testify is claimed under the last clause of the section. It is as follows: “ But this prohibition shall not extend to any transaction or communication, as to which any such * * * administrator shall be examined on his own behalf.” The transaction spoken of is a personal transaction between the deceased and the party testifying, and the communication is from one to the other. The statute contemplates that when the sdministrator, or other representative of the deceased, testifies there was such a personal transaction and describes it, then the party may also testify in relation thereto and give his version of the transaction. In the present case the administrator testifies the deceased might have visited appellant during the night time. This was favorable instead of being adverse to the appellant. The testimony of the administrator was of a negative character; he affirmed nothing. He did not speak of a personal transaction between the appellant and the deceased. At most he simply denied there was any such transaction to his knowledge. We do not think this would authorize the appellant, as a witness in her own behalf, to give evidence showing there was a personal transaction between her and deceased, and describe it or state its effect, or what took place.
On the other hand there is evidence which cannot be ignored, that a petition was filed and that a decree of divorce was ordered by the court, and a sufficient memorandum made by the judge in his calendar to enable a decree to be drafted, or the clerk to make the appropriate entry of record that a divorce had been granted. It was the duty of the clerk, under the direction of the judge, to have made a record of all the judgments and decrees of the court which were made at the April term, 1873. It must be presumed, both the clerk and the judge did their duty.
The appellant repeatedly, and to divers persons, after the divorce is claimed to have been obtained, admitted such to be the fact, and afterward she married one Baker, and eo habited with him as his wife in the same house at which the deceased boarded. It is insisted the admission of the appellant that there was a divorce should not be considered, because whether there was a divorce or not can only be shown by the record. Whether a decree of divorce was ever en
That there was a divorce must be conceded, or the other result follows that appellant was guilty of bigamy when she married Baker, and that the deceased so knew. In the absence of clear and satisfactory evidence to the contrary the presumption should he indulged that a divorce had been obtained, and the appellant lawfully contracted the marriage with Baker. The presumption of innocence, rather than guilt, should be indulged. The evidence is quite pursuasive, if not entirely satisfactory, there was a divorce. When to this there is added the presumption of innocence, and the acts and declarations of the appellant, we think the preponderance of the evidence is that the appellant and the deceased were duly and legally divorced. As supporting the views above expressed as to the presumption which should be indulged the following authorities may be consulted: 1 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, § 444; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 35; Clayton v. Wardell, 4 Comstock, 230; Blanchard v. Lambert et al., 43 Iowa, 228. The judgment of the Circuit Court is
Affirmed.