49 A.2d 346 | Pa. | 1946
Argued October 1, 1946. Joseph E. Pierce, also known as Joseph O. Pearce, appellee, filed this Bill in Equity against Mamie Pierce, also known as Mabel M. Martin, appellant, for partition of real estate situate in Hempfield Township, Westmoreland County, held in their names as husband and wife. This appeal is from the decree of the court below holding that no valid common law marriage had been proved and directing partition.
Where a relationship, meretricious at its inception, is shown to have continued for eight years, a formal marriage ceremony is then performed — void, however, for the reason that the spouse of the woman was living and not divorced, and, subsequent thereto, this disability is removed by a divorce secured by said spouse, is cohabitation and reputation for 17 years thereafter legally sufficient to establish a common law marriage where the terms of the putative marriage contract do not contain words in præsenti? (See last par. p. 181)
Mamie Pierce, appellant, was married to Roy Martin on July 6, 1912, in Erie, Pennsylvania. Three children were born of this marriage. In the latter part of 1917, Joseph E. Pierce, appellee, then 17 years of age, began boarding at the home of the Martins. Appellant at this time was 29 years of age. Shortly thereafter, appellant and appellee began a meretricious relationship. Roy Martin left appellant about August 1, 1918, and his whereabouts remained unknown to either party for many years. On or about August 3, 1918, appellant and appellee moved to New Alexandria, Westmoreland County, where they lived together.
The parties entered a formal marriage contract before the Clerk of the Orphans' Court of Fayette County, on *178 November 9, 1925. She falsely stated at that time that she had been married only once and that her husband had died in 1923. She had no information regarding his death, nor had there been any false rumor of his death. The only evidence in that regard was that she had been interested in having a support order complied with and had inquired of the Erie police whether they knew the whereabouts of Roy Martin. She was informed they did not. Subsequent to said ceremony, the parties to this action resided at divers places in Westmoreland County; purchased the tract of land in question on October 2, 1936, as husband and wife, and for the entire period each held out the other as his or her spouse.
Appellee testified that in July, 1944, while on a trip to Erie, he learned that Roy Martin was living and not divorced at the time of the ceremony of 1925, and that said Martin had obtained an Ohio divorce on April 5, 1927. Pierce thereupon consulted his attorney, left appellant, and filed this Bill in Equity for partition and for an accounting. Appellant testified that on March 23, 1931, Pierce returned home from a trip to Erie about 1:30 A.M. and informed her that he had learned of the invalidity of their marriage of 1925, and thereupon said, "I will take you for my wife," to which she replied, "If that is the case, I will take you for my husband." The court disbelieved her testimony regarding the conversation, accepted appellee's denial thereof, concluded that no valid common law marriage had been effected, and directed partition, but refused an accounting.
Appellant contends that (1) the presumption of a continued illicit relationship is rebutted by the admitted facts; (2) the intended marriage was reaffirmed and declared after her disability had been removed by divorce; and (3) the court erred in disbelieving the testimony regarding the ceremony of March 23, 1931. Appellee contends that the relationship having been meretricious at its inception was presumed to continue and *179 said presumption could not be overcome by proof of cohabitation and reputation where the putative common law ceremony was legally insufficient to establish a valid marriage contract.
Cohabitation and reputation of marriage are insufficient to create a lawful marriage where either party is legally incompetent to marry: Clark's Estate,
A meretricious relationship once established, is presumed to continue. ". . . it can be converted into a valid and legal marriage, after the obstacle to their marriage is removed, only by the consent of both parties, established by clear and convincing evidence": Wagner v. Wagner,
Where a common law marriage is asserted, any presumption which might otherwise be indulged in, becomes immaterial when the one asserting the validity of the relationship relies upon a putative contract which is legally insufficient to establish the fact of marriage. See McDevitt's Estate,
In Estate of Mary F. Hughes,
The burden of establishing a lawful marriage after the disability has been removed, was upon the appellant. "The change may be established by circumstantial evidence, but the circumstances must be such as to exclude *181
the presumption that the original relation continued, and to prove satisfactorily that it was changed to matrimonial union by mutual consent": Edwards v. Enterprise Manufacturing Co.,
The learned Chancellor, before whom the parties testified, and who could best determine the truthfulness of the witnesses, did not believe appellant's testimony regarding the alleged common law ceremony. His findings, approved by the court enbanc, will be disturbed only when arbitrarily and capriciously made: In re: Stevenson's Estate,
Assuming appellant's testimony, regarding their conversation in 1931, to be credible, she has, nevertheless, failed to establish a common law marriage contract. The words used werein futuro, not in præsenti: Craig's Estate,
Appellant relies upon Estate of John M. Holben, Deceased,
The opinion in Thewlis's Estate, supra, may readily be distinguished for the reason that there was no abortive attempt to prove a common law marriage contract. This factual difference eliminates the necessity for further consideration of that case.
The decree of the court below is affirmed. Costs to be paid by appellant. *183