185 Iowa 930 | Iowa | 1919
I. But two questions are presented for decision upon this appeal: (a) Were defendant and plaintiff husband and wife at the time the decree of divorce was entered; and (b) does the proof sustain her claim of statutory desertion, the only ground alleged in her petition for a divorce?
Plaintiff alleges, and relies upon, a common-law marriage. Marriage, as defined by Section 3139 of the Code, “is a civil contract, requiring the consent of the parties capable of entering into other contracts, except as herein otherwise declared.” The marriage ib denied by the defendant, and the parties have not at any time lived together, in the usual sense, as husband and wife. Defendant, at the time of the alleged marriage, was 25 years of age, and employed by a railroad company as a switchman, and plaintiff was 23 years of age, and employed as a servant in a hotel at Sanborn, Iowa, where she claims the marriage took place in July or August, 1905.
“Marriage is a civil contract jure gentium,, to the validity of which the consent of parties able to contract is all that is required by natural or public law. If the contract is made per verba, de praesentti, and remains without cohabitation, or if made per verba, de futuro, and be followed by consummation, it amounts to a valid marriage, in tlte absence of any civil regulations to the contrary. 2 Kent, Comm., 87; 2 Greenl. Evv Sec. 460; 1 Bishop, Mar. & Div., Secs. 218, 227, 229. The maxim of the civil law was, ‘Consensus non eoncubUus faovt matrimonium,.’ The whole law on the subject is that, to render competent parties husband and wife, they must and need only agree in the present tense to be such, no time being contemplated to elapse before the assumption of the status. If cohabitation follows, it. adds nothing in law, although it may be evidence of marriage. It is mutual, present consent, lawfully expressed, which makes the marriage. 1 Bishop, Mar., Div. & Sep., Secs. 239, 313, 315, 317. See, also, the leading case of Dalrymple v. Dalrymple, 2 Hagg, Consist. 54, which is the foundation of much of the law on the subject. An agreement to keep the marriage secret does not invalidate it, although the fact of secrecy might be evidence that no maiuiage ever took place.”
This is in harmony with our holding in State v. McKay, 122 Iowa 658. See, also, Davis v. Stouffer, 132 Mo.
The record discloses a rather voluminous correspondence, though but few of plaintiff’s letters were introduced. He addressed her always as “My Dear Girl,” frequently mentioning Ruth, and closing the letter with “Love to both,” “Goodbye to both,” “Yours as ever,” etc. In none of them does he refer to her directly as his wife. In many of the letters, he inquires after Ruth’s health, and whether she can walk, and in 1909, wrote:
It appears that Ruth is, as the result of infantile paralysis, a cripple, and this perhaps explains his frequent inquiry regarding her health, and whether she was able to walk. The correspondence is wholly free from offensive or forbidding language, and in it there is no reference to immoral relations between the parties. Plaintiff frequently urged a public marriage ceremony, and testified that defendant constantly promised that they would go to housekeeping. She was a member of the Lutheran Church, and stated that she desired a marriage which conformed to the rules thereof, and a record that could not be denied, and that would protect herself and Ruth. She further testified that he did not desire their marriage to become known at Mason City, where he lived, but that he informed her that his parents knew about it. Plaintiff and defendant did not live together in the usual manner, and he seldom had opportunity to introduce her as his wife. She claims, however, that he did introduce her as his wife, to a druggist, whose name she did not recall, in 'Mason City. This he denies. He occasionally sent her small sums of money, frequently in his letters protesting his inability to send more.
While defendant, testifying in his own behalf, emphatically denies the marriage, the court below, who saw and heard the witnesses testify, sustained the allegations of plaintiff’s petition. With this finding, without further discussion, we are content. To hold otherwise, upon the record, would be a great injustice to the plaintiff, and illegiti
“Four elements are essential to a divorce because of desertion: (1) The cessation of the marriage relation; (2) the intent to desert; (3) the continuance of the desertion during the statutory period; and (4) the absence of consent or misconduct of the deserted party.”
It appears without dispute in the record that defendant frequently sent small sums of money to plaintiff, the aggregate amount of which is not shown. The correspondence between them continued at least until July 10, 1916, when defendant wrote plaintiff a letter of the same general character of those previously written to her since the marriage. In this letter, he requests plaintiff to “tell the little one I will be up to see her before the summer is over, if I have to ask Dad for more money.” The parties did not meet for two or three years prior thereto; but in August, 1915, they met at LaCrosse, Wisconsin, and effected a reconciliation, at