The evidence shows that Mary
Although this Court cannot grant divorces, it must of necessity, as incident to the proper discharge of its functions, in granting or revoking letters testamentary or of administration, and in the distribution of estates, pass upon the validity of marriage. The case of Spicer v. Spicer (16 Abb. Pr. N. S., 112), tried in the City Court of Brooklyn, is cited as an authority showing such second marriage to be void, if the first husband was actually living at that time, and the case of Brower v. Bowers (1 Abb. Ct. App. Dec., 214), holds the opposite to be the law.
It certainly must be conceded that such second marriage must be contracted in good faith, and if so contracted, the relations of the parties will .not be adulterous.
The difficulty now standing in the way of the administratrix is a judgment of the Superior Court of New York City, introduced by the petitioner in evidence, in an action wherein the said George Houghton was plaintiff and Mary Houghton (Mary Oram) was defendant, in which the plaintiff obtained a decree
If she saw proper to waive that right, she voluntarily placed herself without the protection of the statute she now invokes. The Court declared her relations with Stephen Oram adulterous, and as a penalty forbade her to again marry during her husband’s life. It may be said that her marriage with Oram was before this judgment of divorce. I must assume as against her present testimony, that she then, fully understood her- relations to him, and also to George Houghton, and then, if her marriage with the deceased, Stephen Oram, had been contracted in good faith, or under such circumstances as the statute protects, she would have asserted such fact then. The law concerning marriage in this State is sufficiently liberal to honestly-contracting parties, and needs no enlargement of construction in this Court.
Letters of administration were therefore revoked. .