36 Colo. 60 | Colo. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court:
Suit was brought by Annie M. Chaney against Emma Mock and other defendants for the purpose of having partition of certain lands situate in the county of Las Animas, of which Henry B. Chaney, late of said county, died seized. Henry Chaney died intestate about the 10th of June, 1900; and the complaint alleges that he left surviving him as his only heirs at law the plaintiff, Annie M. Chaney, and the defendants, Emma Mock and others, as children.
We shall not determine the question presented concerning the validity of' the marriage in New Mexico within one year from the granting of the divorce, for the reason that that question is not necessarily involved in a determination of this case. Very many intricate questions of law and of public policy are involved in a consideration of that question ; but we shall base our decision that the marriage between the plaintiff and Henry Chaney was valid in New Mexico*, upon the decision of the case of Poole v. The People, reported in 24th Colo., page 510. In that case it is held that where a man and woman in good faith attempted to get married, but because of a disability of one of the parties the marriage con- _ tract is a nullity, and the parties continue to live together as husband and wife after such disability was removed, they were, in law, husband and wife from the time the disability to enter into* the marriage contract was removed. So that, even though we were to assume that the marriage in New Mexico was void, still it appears, from the testimony, that Henry Chaney and the plaintiff herein in good faith entered into the marriage relation at Baton, New Mexico, in March, 1899; that the obstacle of the statute was removed on the 12th day of January, 1900; that Chaney did not die until June, 1900; and that from the time of the marriage until the day of his death, Chaney and the plaintiff lived together as husband and wife.
This woman was actually divorced from her husband in the year 1891. The court pronounced the judgment at that time, and, in the year 1901, he corrected his records so as to have them contain the judgment which he pronounced in the year 1891. The rights of the parties to the Minnesota suit were established at the time the judgment was pronounced. — Estate of Cook, 77 Cal. 220.
We are therefore of opinion that Henry Chaney and the plaintiff herein, at the time of Chaney’s death, were husband and wife, and that upon his death the plaintiff became the owner of the undivided half of the property of which he died seized. Such was the finding and judgment of the district court of Las Animas county, from which an appeal was taken to this court; and the judgment, being-in accordance with the law, is therefore' affirmed.
Affirmed.
The Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Campbell concur.