313 Ky. 367 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1950
Affirming.
William Jones and Josey Jones lived together from 1935 until 1942 when they were prosecuted and fined on account of the illicit relationship. They then procured a marriage license and lived together as husband and wife until December 27, 1947. On January 2,-1948, William Jones brought an action for divorce against Josey Jones on the grounds of adultery and habitual drunkenness. Josey Jones counterclaimed, and asked for a divorce on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment. After a large amount of proof had been taken, it developed that Josey Jones had married one Clay Mullins in 1925; that Mullins was still living, and the parties had never been divorced. It also developed that Josey had married Johnny Y. Mack in 1932, but it appears that Mack died before her bigamous marriage with Jones. She denied strenuously that she had ever married or lived with Mullins, but finally, when confronted with overwhelming proof of the marriage, admitted that she had lived with Mullins but said she had no recollection of the marriage and that if a marriage ceremony was performed she must have been drunk. After this development William Jones filed an amended petition setting out the facts and asking that he be adjudged the owner of a certain tract of land in Pike County, Kentucky, which had been conveyed to him and the defendant on June 19, 1943, by Walter P. Walters and wife, and that the defendant be directed to convey her interest in the land to him, and upon her failure to do so that the master commissioner be directed to execute and deliver a deed to the land to plaintiff. He alleged in the amended petition that the defendant falsely and fraudulently represented to him at the time of the marriage that she was an unmarried woman, and that he married her and lived with her in good faith until the date of their separation believing that she was his lawful wife; that he purchased and paid for the land and had it conveyed to him and the defendant believing at the time that he was lawfully married to her; that he filed a divorce and restoration of property action against the defendant believing that they were legally married, and continued to prosecute the action with this belief until March 20, 1948, when it developed that the defendant was still legally married to Clay Mullins. He alleged. that the conveyance was in consideration of the marriage, and that the defendant
The defendant has appealed, and her chief ground for reversal of the judgment is that there can be no restoration of property under KRS 403.060 and section 425 of the Civil Code of Practice, where the wife has obtained the title for a valuable consideration. The above sections of the Statutes and Civil Code of Practice provide, in substance, that upon final judgment of divorce each party shall be restored all the property, not disposed of at the beginning of the action, that he or she obtained from or through the other before or during the marriage and in consideration of the marriage. Appellant overlooks the fact that the court found her marriage to appellee was bigamous and void, -and no judgment of divorce
It would serve no useful purpose to analyze the great mass of testimony, much of it irrelevant, but in the main it supports the master commissioner’s finding of fact and the judgment of the court. It follows that the finding of the commissioner approved by the court should not be disturbed. Chenault v. Southern Trust Company, 245 Ky. 305, 53 S. W. 2d 369. In Williams v. Denny, 238 Ky. 662, 38 S. W. 2d 668, 670, the master commissioner made a finding of fact and his finding was confirmed by the circuit court. This court said: ‘ ‘ There was evidence to justify the finding. In such circumstances this court will not disturb the result reached by the commissioner and the court in the absence of a clear conviction that an error has been committed. ’ ’
Counsel for appellant seem to be of the opinion that appellant having lived with appellee for many years as his wife, though her marriage was bigamous, is entitled to some relief. A woman who enters into a bigamous
Judgment is affirmed.