The plaintiff brought this action to obtain a divorce from the defendant who cross-complained seeking an annulment of their marriage. An annulment was granted and the plaintiff appeals.
For several years prior to June, 1956, the plaintiff resided *82 in the State of Oregon during which time she was the wife of Draper Santry. She became estranged from her husban d had not lived with him for a considerable period of time; in May of that year met the defendant; in June of that same year filed an action for divorce from Santry; and on July 9, 1956, obtained a decree of divorce through the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon. Her divorce proceedings were a part of the plans agreed upon between herself and the defendant whereby they were to be married in Santa Barbara, California, on July 28, 1956. Pursuant to these plans the plaintiff left Oregon immediately following entry of the divorce decree; went to Santa Barbara; married the defendant on the scheduled date; and thereafter lived with him as his wife, in California, until her separation a few months before the commencement of this action.
The defendant contends that his marriage to plaintiff is invalid because, at the time thereof, she was not legally capable of entering into a marriage; that her Oregon divorce decree did not terminate her prior marriage so as to enable her to marry again until the expiration of six months.
The validity of a marriage, ordinarily, is determined by the laws of the state in which it is contracted.
(Colbert
v.
Colbert,
The effect of a decree of divorce is determined by the laws of the state in which it is obtained.
(Estate of Sanders,
By statute the law of Oregon provides that: “A decree declaring a marriage void or dissolved at the suit or claim of either party shall have the effect to terminate such marriage as to both parties,
except
that neither party shall be capable of contracting marriage with a third person, and if he or she does so contract, shall be liable therefor as if said decree had not
been given,
until the suit has been heard and
*83
determined on appeal; but in no ease until the expiration of six months from the date of said decree.” (Emphasis added.) (See
In re Ott’s Estate,
The effect of a statute requiring parties in a divorce proceeding to wait a stated period of time after rendition of the divorce decree before entering into marriage with another person, depending upon the language used therein, generally is either (1) to prohibit the subsequent marriage and invoke a prescribed penalty for violation without affecting its validity, or (2) to maintain the former marriage in force for the stated period and thus render void any subsequent marriage contracted within that time. The statute of another state which imposes only a prohibition upon a subsequent marriage within the designated waiting period constitutes the adoption of a policy which will not be enforced extra-territorially in this state.
(Estate of Wood,
In
McLennan
v.
McLennan,
“It is clear that a marriage in this state in violation of this section would be null and void, because, by its provisions, the parties are incapable of entering into such a relation within the time specified, for the reason that the decree does not to that extent terminate the former marriage. . . . Until the expiration of such time, the status of the parties, so far as the right to remarry is concerned, remains the same as if no decree had been rendered. . . . During that time the decree is suspended or inoperative to that extent, and both parties, without regard to their guilt, are utterly powerless to make a valid contract of marriage with a third person. It will be observed that the statute declares that neither party to the decree shall be capable of contracting marriage with a third person during the time such decree is subject to review by an appellate tribunal, and not merely that it shall not be lawful for them to do so. It goes directly to their ability or capacity to contract, and there is a distinction made in the books between the marriage of divorced parties declared by law incapable of remarrying and a marriage in violation of some statutory prohibition penal in its nature. In the one case the marriage is absolutely void, and in the other it is often held to be valid, although the party may be punished criminally for violating the prohibitory statute. . . . Indeed, it is not seriously contended that a marriage contracted in this state within the prohibited time would be valid; but the contention is that, as the marriage in question was solemnized in the state of Washington, the plaintiff was freed from the restraint imposed upon her by the decree of divorce. The general rule is unquestioned that a marriage between persons sui juris, valid where solemnized, is valid everywhere; but this plaintiff, having been previously married, and her former husband being alive, could not contract a second valid marriage anywhere, unless the incapacity arising from her previous marriage had been at the time effectively and completely removed by a decree of divorce, and this was not the case at the time of the solemnization of the marriage between plaintiff and defendant, because the statute under which the decree was obtained provided that the divorce did not completely sever the tie of marriage, so as to enable either to become a party to a new one, until the lapse of a specified time after the decree, and her marriage was contracted in violation of this statute. . . . The provision of *85 our statute is not imposed as a punishment, nor is it penal in its character, but applies to the innocent as well as the guilty. It goes to the capacity of either party to remarry within the prescribed time, ...” (McLennan v. McLennan,31 Ore. 480 [50 P. 802 , 803,38 L.R.A. 863 ,65 Am.St.Rep. 835 ].)
This decision was followed in the case of
Hooper
v.
Hooper,
“These authorities lead us to the conclusion that the highest court of Oregon has decided that that court has never held that the Oregon laws of divorce have any extraterritorial application to marriage contracted in some other state. We are entitled, therefore, to assume that the law of Oregon is the same as the law of the state of California.” (People v. Goddard,84 Cal.App. 382 , 386 [258 P. 447 ].)
However, the California court did not consider the case of
*86
Vnuk
v. Patterson,
Previously another California court, in considering the effect of the Oregon divorce statute, declared that the doctrine of the McLennan case
(McLennan
v.
McLennan, supra,
Since the Goddard ease
(People
v.
Goddard, supra,
“The first time the act in question was construed by the court was in 1897, by the able and illuminating opinion of Mr. Justice Robert Bean in McLennan v. McLennan, ... It was held that the marriage was absolutely void.
“The next ease in order directly attacking the validity of a premature marriage after divorce is Hooper v. Hooper,67 Ore. 187 [135 P. 205 , 525]. The Hooper case was a suit for the annulment of another Vancouver, Washington, marriage celebrated in that city within four months after the defendant had obtained a divorce in Washington county, Oregon. Predicated solely upon the rule laid down in the McLennan case, the Hooper alliance was declared void.
“The rule of the McLennan case has ever since been our guiding star and followed and applied without deviation except in the minor respect hereinafter referred to. As was well said by Mr. Justice Burnett in Vnuk v. Patterson,118 Ore. 602 [247 P. 766 , 769,47 A.L.R. 394 ], as late as 1926 the doctrine announced in the McLennan and Hooper cases *87 has ‘never been overturned or doubted. ’ We are compelled to reiterate the same conclusion 25 years later.
‘ ‘ The minor deviation from the tenor of the McLennan case above referred to is found in Wallace v. McDaniel, 59 Ore. 378, at page 383 [117 P. 314 , at page 315,L.R.A. 1916C, 744 ], where the court referring to Sec. 9-916, O.C.L.A., then See. 515, L.O.L., says: ‘This section is penal in character.’ This is directly contra to the holding in the McLennan case,31 Ore. 480 at page 486,50 P. at page 803 , where it is said: ‘The provisions of our statute is not imposed as a punishment, nor is it penal in character. , . .’ Insofar as the Wallace case so holds, it is now expressly overruled.
“The McLennan and Hooper cases have also controlled our judgment when marriages have been collaterally attacked as being void under Sec. 9-916. Twigger v. Twigger,110 Ore. 520 ,223 P. 934 ; Wallace v. McDaniel, supra. Both were suits involving the determination of title to real property.” (In re Ott’s Estate,193 Ore. 262 , 279 [238 P.2d 269 , 271].)
It appears that the basic determination of the McLennan case
(McLennan
v.
McLennan, supra,
The issue for determination in the case at bar does not concern the status in Oregon of the marriage of the parties to this action, but rather the status of the plaintiff at the time of the rendition of her Oregon divorce decree. The only Oregon decision which has spelled out the effect of a decree on the marriageable status of a party thereto, i.e., legal capacity to marry another, is in the ease of
McLennan
v.
McLennan, supra,
We conclude that the decree of divorce obtained by the plaintiff in Oregon did not terminate her marriage to Santry for the purpose of enabling her to marry another until the expiration of six months from the date of that decree. Therefore, the marriage of plaintiff and defendant in California was void under the provisions of section 61 of the Civil Code, and the determination of the trial court accordingly was proper.
The plaintiff further contends that her marriage to the defendant was validated by a curative statute passed by the Oregon legislature pending the appeal in this matter, i.e., on April 14, 1959. Under the authorities heretofore noted this statute would have no extraterritorial effect; would validate marriages under consideration by the courts of Oregon
(Twigger
v.
Twigger,
The judgment is affirmed.
Shepard, Acting P. J., and Shea, J. pro tem., * concurred.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
