47 Wash. 561 | Wash. | 1907
An information was filed against the defendant in the court below accusing her of the crime of bigamy. A demurrer to the information was sustained, and the state refusing to plead further, judgment of dismissal was entered, from which the present appeal is prosecuted.
“Section 1. Whenever a judgment or decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony is granted by the courts in this state, neither party thereto shall be capable of contracting marriage with a third person until the period in which an appeal may be taken 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; and it shallJbe unlawful for any divorced person to intermarry with any third person within six months from the date of the entry of the judgment or decree granting the divorce, or in case an appeal is taken it shall be unlawful to contract such marriage until judgment be rendered on said appeal in the supreme court. All marriages contracted in violation of the provisions of this section, whether contracted within or without this state, shall be void.”
In support of its appeal the state relies upon the two general propositions that a marriage, valid where contracted, is valid everywhere, and that statutes declaring a second marriage unlawful, pending the time for appeal from divorce proceedings
The general doctrine that a marriage valid where contracted is valid everywhere, has so often been declared by the courts and reiterated by text writers that it has become a maxim of the law. But there are exceptions to the rule as well established as the rule itself, viz.: (1) incestuous and polygamous marriages prohibited by natural law; and (2) marriages prohibited by positive law. The Victoria marriage now under consideration may fall within the second exception. Willey v. Willey, 22 Wash. 115, 60 Pac. 145, 79 Am. St. 923; Putnam v. Putnam, 8 Pick. 433; People v. Chase, 28 Hun. 310; Van Voorhis v. Brintnall, 86 N. Y. 18, 40 Am. Rep. 505; Thorp v. Thorp, 90 N. Y. 602, 43 Am. Rep. 189, and other cases, cited by the appellant, to the effect that statutes declaring in general terms that certain marriages contracted in violation of their provisions shall be void have no extraterritorial effect, have no application here. The decisions were all based on the general language of the acts under consideration, the courts holding that it did not appear that the respective legislatures intended that the acts should apply to marriages contracted without the state. The statute of this state, however, admits of no such construction. It declares in direct and positive terms that all marriages contracted in violation of its provisions, “whether contracted within or without this state shall be void.”
The power of the state to declare void marriages contracted beyond its borders, at least where such marriages are contracted by its own citizens in violation of its laws, cannot be denied. Thus in Kinney v. Commonwealth, 30 Gratt. 858, a negro man and a white woman, domiciled in Virginia, went to the District of Columbia, and were there regularly married. About ten days thereafter they returned to Virginia, and were prosecuted for lewd and lascivious cohabitation. The Court of Appeals of that state ruled that the marriage in the District of Columbia was a.mere evasion of the laws of the Com
It will thus be seen that a state law regulating marriage may and does have an extraterritorial effect when the legislature so intends, at least where the parties to the marriage have their domicile within the state; and there is no escape from the conclusion that our legislature intended that all marriages contracted within the state, and all marriages contracted without the state by persons domiciled here, for the purpose of evading our laws, should be null and void. The statute is undoubtedly' broad enough to include all marriages contracted within the time specified, regardless. of the place where con
We are satisfied that the prohibition in question was directed solely against marriages within the state, or by persons domiciled within the state, but contracted in other states for the purpose of evading our laws, and that no other persons or marriages are included or contemplated. Within the above rule, the information before us does not contain matter which constitutes a defense, for it does not appear that the Victoria marriage was void. If the parties to the Victoria marriage had their domicile in this state at the time the marriage was contracted, and went to Victoria for the purpose of evading our laws and thereafter returning to this state, such marriage was null and void, and, much as we regret it, the prosecution must fail. If, on the other hand, the parties to the Victoria marriage were domiciled there at the time the marriage was contracted, such marriage does not fall within the prohibition of our statute and is valid.
The judgment of the court below is therefore reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Mount, Boot, Dunbar, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.
Hadley, C. J. and Crow, J., took no part.