156 Wis. 517 | Wis. | 1914
Lead Opinion
In the consideration of the question involved in this case it will be well to refer briefly to the Statutes bearing upon the subject.
Sec. 2330, Stats., prohibiting marriage under certain circumstances, was amended by ch. 271, Laws of 1901, by adding thereto a provision to the effect -that it shall not be lawful for any person divorced to marry again within one year from the date of the entry of such judgment, and that the marriage of any divorced person within one year from the date of the entry of such judgment shall be null and void, but upon application of such divorced person the court granting the divorce may authorize the marriage of such person within the year. This statute was again amended by ch. 456, Laws of 1905, so as to provide, in effect, that it shall not be
“Sec. 2314. 1. When a judgment of divorce from the bonds of matrimony is granted in this state by a court, such judgment, so far as it determines the status of the parties, shall not be effective, except for the purpose of an appeal to. review the same, until the expiration of one year from the date of the entry of such judgment.
“2. So far as said judgment determines the status of the parties the court shall have power to vacate or modify the same, for sufficient cause shown, upon its own motion, or upon the application of either party to the action, at any time within one year from the entry of such judgment. But no such judgment shall be vacated or modified without the service of notice of motion, or order to show cause on the divorce counsel, and on the parties to the action, if they be found. If the judgment shall be vacated it shall restore the parties to the marital relation that existed before the entry of such judgment.
“3. It shall be the duty of every judge, who shall enter a judgment of divorce, to inform the parties appearing in court that the judgment, so far as it affects the status of the parties, will not become effective until one year from the date when such judgment is entered.
“4. Such judgment, or any provision of the same, may be reviewed by an appeal taken within one year from the date when such judgment wa's entered. At the expiration of such year, such judgment shall become final and conclusive without further proceedings, unless an appeal be pending, or the court, for sufficient cause shown, upon its own motion, or upon the application of a party to the action, shall otherwise order before the expiration of said period. If an appeal be pending at the expiration of said year, such judgment shall not become final and conclusive until said appeal shall have been finally determined.”
It will be seen that by the amendments made in 1911 the provision in ch. 323, Laws of 1909, respecting the entry of an interlocutory judgment was dropped out and other changes made.
, Now it is contended by appellant that the judgment here entered was not effectual to dissolve the bonds of matrimony until the expiration of one year from date of entry; therefore, at the time of the death of Martha Alice Rogers the appellant, Fred L. Rogers, was her husband. On the part of the respondents it is insisted that the judgment dissolved the marriage contract at the date of entry, subject to revision within one year, and conditions specified in the statute; and that in any event the appellant was not the husband of Martha Alice Rogers at the time of her death within the meaning of her will.
We need only consider the latter proposition in this, case, namely, whether Fred L. Rogers was the husband of Martha at the time of her death within the meaning of her will. While the divorce action had been commenced shortly before the will was executed, it is plain from the record that Martha was opposed to the divorce and desired a reconciliation; but
The history of legislation on the subject and the statute as left by ch. 239, Laws of 1911 (sec. 2314, Stats.), would seem to indicate that it was the intention of the legislature that the entry of judgment should dissolve the marriage contract, subject to the conditions prescribed by the statute, but this we do not decide. It follows that the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
By the Court. — The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). In harmony with what I have several times said, I think the court should now decide the question of whether under sec. 2374, Stats., the parties to a divorce action are man and wife during the waiting period after judgment, except as regards remarrying. That is a very important matter. The public interests require all uncertainty in respect to it to be set at rest at the earliest possible moment. Serious consequences to many innocent persons and to the social state, in general, are within reasonable probabilities so long as the ambiguity left in the statutes remains unsolved. There is opportunity to solve it now. The matter has been well presented by counsel. We are as able to decide upon it now as we ever will be. Judicial duty, from my viewpoint, requires action without hesitation. The one who speaks for the court inclines to that view, as will be clearly seen by the opinion closing the case.
What does the statute mean by the language: “Such judgment, so far as it determines the status of the parties, shall not be effective, except for the purpose of an appeal . . . until the expiration of one year from the date of the entry . . .” Looking at that, by itself, one would, unhesitatingly, say, that the legislative idea was a judgment in form only for a waiting period of one year; the parties to be nevertheless man and wife, in fact, the same as if no judgment had been entered.
The history of the legislation on the subject, as indicated by the opinion of the court, shows that the real purpose of the legislature has been to prevent remarriage until the expiration of one year after promulgation of the result of the divorce trial. The term “status” was used, which has a well known technical meaning in regard to the social relations. It stands, where used in respect to the condition of marriage, for a thing, not physical, but incorporeal; the existence of a
Words of a statute, baying a well known technical meaning in tbe law, are presumed to bave been used in that sense; but such presumption is by no means conclusive. If tbe statute, as a whole, shows, clearly, that some other reasonable meaning was intended, then it must be so treated; since, under all circumstances, tbe legislative will, if discoverable, should prevail.
So, as indicated, if we are to look no further than the language I bave quoted, there would be no escaping tbe conclusion that, though a divorce judgment, in form, in tbe most positive terms, as in this case, dissolves a marriage contract, such contract yet subsists as before for tbe period of one year. No event short of a vacation of tbe judgment could be said to, logically, restore tbe marriage state, because of tbe condition not having been created admitting of any such operations as that of restoration.
Now turning to tbe second subdivision of tbe statute we read: “If tbe judgment shall be vacated it shall restore the ;parties to the marital relation that existed "before the entry of such judgmentHow is that? How can tbe “marital relation that existed before tbe entry of such judgment” be restored if never displaced? Eestoration implies, necessarily, prior existence and an interim of nonexistence.
Are not tbe two parts of tbe statute, in tbeir literal sense, fatally contradictory ? It seems so. That tbe legislature did not intend any such absurd result, we must assume. If we can see-any reasonable way out of tbe dilemma, — tbe situation created by tbe crude work of those responsible for tbe manner of vitalizing tbe idea of tbe lawmakers, it is a judicial duty to adopt it.
Here we bave a good example of tbe difficulties cast upon
I see no way of minimizing or changing, in any way, the ordinary meaning of the words of sub. 2 of the section under consideration. Therefore the way out of the difficulty must be sought by minimizing the ordinary meaning of the language in the first part of the section, so that it will convey the idea of a termination of the state which the second subdivision declares a vacation of the judgment “shall restore.” There is no very great difficulty in so minimizing the term “so far as it determines the status of the parties shall not be effective.” It may be restrained to mere capacity to remarry, — the status of marriageability, — so restrained within the reasonable meaning of the word “status” or by reading words, as in place, which are there by necessary implication. Either is a perfectly legitimate method of judicial construction. Neacy v. Milwaukee Co. 144 Wis. 210, 217, 128 N. W. 1063.
Status with-reference to the marriage relations, in general, ipeans the entirety, the marriage state with all which the name implies; but, after all, it is the mere method of stating a condition. So it may be appropriately used with reference to the marriage state, or with explanatory context, a minor condition of it. A condition as to marriageability, is a status in a proper sense. Unless the word be so restrained, in this instance, there is an irreconcilable conflict in the statute which would require its condemnation as void for uncertainty. It seems that the legislature must have used the term “status” in the limited sense mentioned, and have had that in mind in declaring that a vacation of the judgment shall operate to restore the marital relations that existed before the entry of the judgment.
Upon the ground stated I concur in the judgment in this case.