136 P. 312 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1913
Defendant was convicted under the charge of having placed and permitted his wife, known as Pearl *675
White, to remain in a house of prostitution and he was sentenced to a term of five years in the penitentiary. It is not disputed that an essential element of the crime and necessary to be shown by the people beyond a reasonable doubt is that said female was in contemplation of law the wife of defendant, that they were, in other words, the parties to a valid marriage contract. (People v. Mock Yick Gar,
By reason of the fact that the said marriage to Pearl White, which we shall designate hereafter as marriage No. 2, occurred within six months of the entry of said decree of divorce, it is the contention of appellant that, under the law of the state of Washington and also of Oregon, said marriage No. 2 was and is invalid.
In his effort to establish his theory he sought to introduce the statute of Washington providing that neither party to a divorce proceeding shall be capable of contracting marriage within six months from the date of the entry of a decree therein and that all marriages contracted in violation of that law, whether contracted within or without the state, are void. The court sustained an objection to the offered proof.
Attention was also called by appellant to the decision of the supreme court of Washington (In re Smith's Estate,
An acceptation of that decision as a sound exposition of the Washington statute would necessarily lead to the conclusion that the declared marriage of defendant and the said Pearl White was in fact no marriage at all. This would follow for the reason that he had a wife living from whom he was not divorced. His status in the state of Washington being that of a married man it would continue the same wherever he went, and another attempted marriage in any state would be invalid unless that state permitted bigamy, which supposition, of course, is to be rejected.
But the Smith decision is not followed by subsequent cases in Washington and it is not in harmony with the declared views of the supreme court of this state, as we shall ultimately see.
In Willey v. Willey,
In State v. Fenn,
And, in Pierce v. Pierce,
Appellant, realizing, no doubt, that the declaration in the Smith estate as to the scope and effect of said Washington statute was probably too sweeping and that it did not invalidate a marriage in another jurisdiction, sought to prove the Oregon statute by offering the decision of the supreme court of that state in the case of McLennan v. McLennan,
The doctrine of this case, however, is impliedly, if not expressly, rejected in the subsequent decisions of the Oregon court.
In State v. Leasia,
In Wallace v. McDaniel,
It is quite apparent that the construction thus accorded to the Oregon statute is entirely inconsistent with that found in the McLennan case.
It may be well to notice how the question has been regarded in the other cases cited by counsel. *679
In the Inhabitants of Phillips v. Madrid,
"Nor does the prohibition upon the guilty party to remarry by the statute of this state attach to said Ella R. Our statute applies only to divorces granted by the courts of this state. It has no reference to a decree granted in another state. (Bullock v. Bullock,
The Louisiana supreme court decided, in the Succession ofHernandez, 46 La. Ann. 962, [24 L. R. A. 831, 15 So. 461], that "The prohibition of the statute of New York to the effect that no second or other subsequent marriage shall be contracted by any person, during the lifetime of the former husband or wife of such person, in case the former marriage be annulled or dissolved on the ground of adultery, has no extraterritorial effect, being a penal statute; and it cannot be given the effect of annulling a contract of marriage between *680 persons at the time residing abroad, notwithstanding it was solemnized in the city and state of New York, — the contracting parties announcing their intention to be to thereafter reside in Louisiana, and afterward actually residing there."
But, as far as this case is concerned, we must keep in mind that the validity of said marriage No. 2 is to be determined by the rule laid down by the supreme court of this state.
In Estate of Woods,
The same reasoning may be applied to the Washington statute. Indeed, the decree offered in evidence by appellant shows that the parties were divorced. No condition was attached to it. The decree was absolute and thereby appellant became an unmarried person but subject to the penalty of having his second marriage invalidated if he attempted to remarry a third person in the state of Washington within six months. *681
Again, in the Estate of Woods,
Under the rule thus announced, we must eliminate altogether from consideration the said statute of Washington.
It is equally sound that we must look to the law of Oregon to determine whether the said marriage No. 2 is valid. Our code itself (Civ. Code, sec.
Was the marriage, then, valid according to the laws of the state of Oregon where it was celebrated? The answer would undoubtedly be in the negative if the parties had been divorced in that state. But when the statutes of Oregon refer to a decree of divorce they contemplate a decree rendered by the courts of that state and not of a foreign jurisdiction.
As said, in State v. Shattuck,
The statute, in the absence of language extending its application extraterritorially, must be confined to domestic decrees of divorce and domestic marriages. It may be true that this construction makes an invidious distinction against those who are divorced and remarry in the same state and in favor of *682 those whose divorce and remarriage occur in separate states, but this is a matter entirely for legislative control. No doubt the Oregon statute might have covered the case of one divorced in another state but, as we conceive it, the legislature did not so provide.
Of course, if there had been in the state of Washington a statute like that of this state, found in section
Under sound principles of construction, we think it cannot be held that the said Pearl White was not the wife of appellant, and the judgment and order are affirmed.
Chipman, P. J., and Hart, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on November 14, 1913.