167 S.E. 623 | W. Va. | 1933
Will Trent was killed May 12, 1931, in the course of his employment for Douglas Coal Company, and Minnie Trent claimed compensation as his dependent widow. Her claim was denied by the compensation commissioner, a hearing was had and the same result arrived at, the commissioner stating that she "is not the dependent widow within the meaning of the compensation law", and Minnie Trent appeals from that finding.
The case turns upon the sufficiency of the proof of marriage. The other elements of claimant's right to an award do not seem to be controverted.
There can be no question but that claimant has clearly proven matrimonial habit and repute since the time of her alleged ceremonial marriage to Will Trent. Under the authority ofSuter, Guardian, v. Suter,
It will be observed that Mrs. Dushkoff asked to see "the original records of the applications for marriage licenses or returns made for the years 1919, 1920 and 1921", thus not covering the year 1918, when the alleged ceremony may have taken place, and, perhaps, not examining the record required by statute to be kept by the clerk; also that the examination of the clerk of "our marriage records", not specifically describing them, was confined to the year 1918 whereas it is claimed that the ceremony may have taken place in either 1919 or 1921.
It will be seen from the foregoing that the question of the issuance of a marriage license and also the question of the performance of a ceremonial marriage are both very much beclouded by the state of the proof.
It is settled law in West Virginia that where the presumption raised from proof of matrimonial habit and repute is attacked and "it is shown that no license was ever issued authorizing the marriage of the parties in any of the counties in which they have lived, and such reputed widow fails to testify upon the question of her marriage, although offered an opportunity to do so, the presumption arising from such marital habit or reputation is sufficiently rebutted to warrant the county court's refusal to appoint such reputed widow, or one named by her, to administer upon such estate." In the *266
Matter of Meade's Estate,
The value of proof showing the absence of a record in order to prove its non-existence is based upon the presumption that the law has been complied with and that the official in question has done his full duty in the manner prescribed by *267 law. If the duty had been fully performed, then, of course, the record would exist, and proof of the non-existence of the record of a marriage license in the county where the alleged ceremonial marriage took place would raise the presumption that no such license issued. Such presumption, however, is rebuttable.
Since the proof before the compensation commissioner is not in such form as will enable this court satisfactorily to follow the effect of shifting burdens of proof; since it no where appears in this record just exactly what records in the office of the clerk of the county court of Mercer County have been examined; since the periods examined do not exhaust the dates assigned for the alleged ceremony; since the minister who allegedly performed the ceremony has made only an ex parte statement in which he makes contradictory statements, and since there has been no effort to prove the handwriting of O. O. Karnes, justice of the peace, whose purported signature as witness is upon the alleged marriage certificate, we do not believe that the compensation commissioner was justified in the state of the record and proof before him, and without further investigation and development of the case, in finding that claimant's marriage to the deceased was not valid.
We therefore reverse the finding and remand the cause for further development along the lines herein indicated.
Reversed and remanded.