4 Wash. 702 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This proceeding is based upon the petition of the appellant for letters of administration upon the estate of Frank E. Smith, deceased, which petition was made by her as his widow. ' Respondent, as. the guardian of the persons and property of Harriet Annie Smith and Mary Frances Smith, minor children of the deceased, opposed the appointment of the petitioner upon the grounds that the deceased and petitionerwerenever lawfully married to each other. The admitted facts upon which the matter stands are as follows: The deceased had previously been married to another woman, and the children aforesaid are the issue
“Neither party shall be capable of contracting marriage with a third person until theperiodin which an appeal may*704 be taken under the provisions of the civil practice act has expired, and, in case an appeal is taken, then neither party shall intermarry with a third person until the cause has been fully determined.”
Some difficulty arises in consequence of a seeming conflict between the first part of the section and the provision therein contained. The first part of the section directs that in granting a divorce the court shall order a complete and full dissolution of the marriage as to both parties. The provision, however, if given force, must place some limitation upon this, in that a decree of divorce could not be full and complete if the parties are not allowed to contract marriage with other persons until the time for an appeal shall have expired, or, in case of appeal, until the same shall have been determined. If the provision is to have any forc\ it seems to us it must limit the preceding part of the section, and the divorce cannot be held to be full and complete until the time mentioned in the provision has expired. It is full and complete for all purposes, excepting neither party shall enter into a marriage with any other person during the time specified, and it must be a limitation upon it in that respect. During this time, for this purpose, the decree of divorce is suspended and inoperative to that extent. The first part of said section, declaring that all divorces shall be full and complete as to both parties, may have been intended to prevent the granting of the partial divorce — a mensa et thoro — known to the common law; or, perhaps, to clearly' prohibit the granting of divorces which would leave one of them capable of marrying another person than the former spouse and the other incapable of so doing. So construed there is no conflict with the provision prohibiting the parties from marrying as therein specified.
Having decided that there could be no marriage under the common law between these persons, it follows that
The judgment of the superior court is affirmed.
Anders, C. J., and Dunbar, Stiles and Hoyt, JJ., concur.