Cram v. Burnham

Weston J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In order to sustain this action, it is incumbent on the plaintiff to prove that he is the husband of the woman, who, in the note declared on, is called Maria Cram. It is in evidence that they have cohabited together, and that they claim to stand to each other in the relation of husband and.wife.

In most cases, cohabitation, as husband and wife, is evidence from which tire law presumes a lawful marriage. So also where the presumption may be repelled, it will fix upon the party, who thus holds *215himself out to the world in the character of a husband, liabilities as it respects others, which attach to this relation.

There is another class of cases, where the parties, without an} imputation upon their innocence or purity, live together in the fullest belief that they are lawfully married ; although in fact the marriage may not be lawful, from a want of authority in the person by whom it may have been solemnized, or from some other legal defect in point of form. These have often been recognised as marriages de facto ; from which, to a certain extent, rights and duties nmy arise, as it respects both the parties themselves and their children. lithe plaintiff had relied upon cohabitation alone, as evidence of a legal marriage, it might have justified the presumption that a lawful marriage had taken place, when he might lawfully enter into that con-nexion. He however introduces and relies upon proof of the solemnization of his marriage, al a certain period. It fully appears that, at that time, he being the husband of another woman, then in full life, this pretended marriage was clearly void.

Until the death of the lawful wife, their cohabitation was lewd and lascivious ; and would have subjected him to severe punishment, and Maria Adams also, if conusant of the first marriage, and that his lawful wife was still alive. After her death, their cohabitation, although not attended with a breach of marriage vows, was still an of-fence against decency and good morals, for which they would have been liable to a legal prosecution. It is in proof, that the nature and circumstances of their connexion were known to the neighborhood : and that neither party made any secret of the facts, by which its criminality was made apparent. If the plaintiff can predicate rights upon a course of conduct thus flagrant, as well might he do it if his lawful wife had resided in the same town. If she had been unfaithful, and that fact had been verified before the proper tribunal, ho might have been legally absolved from the obligation he had assumed. But a mere pretence of this sort, which he appears to have set up, and which might have been altogether without foundation, afforded him no justification whatever. Having neglected the duties of a husband, towards her to whom they were rightfully due, having violated his marriage vows, and openly lived in an adulterous connexion with *216another woman ; in the face of these facts, he now claims, in relation to her, the rights and prerogatives of a husband 3 in consequence of a pretended solemnization of marriage, which he knew to be void.' To sustain a claim of this sort, would comport neither with public policy, with good morals, nor with law. The plaintiff might, be liable to others, as the husband of Maria Adams; but it is one thing to incur liabilities, and another to establish rights.

In the case of Fenton v. Reed, cited in the argument, the right of the original plaintiff was not predicated upon an unlawful connexion then continuing, like the case before us ; but upon one believed to be innocent in its commencement, and, under the circumstances, not liable to be prosecuted as an offence, and which had ceased by the death of him, whom the plaintiff regarded as her second husband. Even there, the court pronounced the second marriage void 5 but sustained her demand, which they probably deemed equitable upon the merits, upon the ground that subsequent to the death of the first husband, another marriage might be presumed. In the case before us, no such presumption can arise. The plaintiff does not depend upon presumption. The marriage upon which he relies, and of which he furnished formal proof, is that solemnized before the death of his lawful wife, and which is therefore inoperative and void. The court in New York say that a contract of marriage, made per verba de presentí, amounts to an actual marriage, without any formal solemnization. They cite the case of McAdam and Walker, in the house of Lords, 1 Row, 148, which was an appeal from the Court of Sessions in Scotland, where Lord Eldon states the law in the same manner; which he says is warranted by the law of Scotland, and by the canon law. It might deserve great consideration, whether a doctrine thus broad would be sanctioned in this State.

In Cunninghams and Cunninghams, also in the house of Lords, on an appeal from the court of Session in Scotland, 2 Dow, 482, which is to be found in a note to 4 John 53, Lord Eldon and Lord Redesdale held that in cases of cohabitation, the presumption was in favor of its legality 5 but where it was known to have been illicit in its origin, that presumption could not be made.” And such is the case now under consideration.

*217As to the argument that the defendant’s intestate, by giving the note to the woman by the name of Maria Cram, recognized her as the wife of the plaintiff, he might not have known the circumstances of their connexion ; and his administratrix is well justified in requiring proof of the plaintiff’s legal title to the note in question.

Xew trial granted~