Knecht v. Knecht

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

Plaintiff avers she is the common-la'w wife of defendant and sues in assumpsit to recover money she claims to have given defendant from time to time out of her earnings, under agreement to deposit in bank in their joint names that the fund so deposited might be drawn by plaintiff at her pleasure. Defendant denied such agreement, as well as the fact of marriage, and testified to an understanding that plaintiff should pay her expenses and that the money should be used for that purpose, she to receive only the balance of the fund. This version of the agreement was denied by plaintiff, who, to corroborate her testimony, and show liability on the part of defendant to support her without deduction from her earnings, offered evidence to establish a common-law marriage. The terms of the contract, if any, between the parties and whether a marriage actually took place were submitted to the jury who returned a verdict for plaintiff, and from judgment entered thereon defendant appealed.

No denial is made that a considerable sum of money was paid over to defendant by plaintiff. In fact, he admits receiving the sum of $1,283.55, but avers he paid out on plaintiff’s account more than the amount received and that there remained after deducting such payments a balance due him. The evidence as to the terms of the contract between the parties depended entirely upon their individual testimony which, being conflicting, was necessarily a question for the jury. The verdict indicates the jurors found the contract to be as testified to by plaintiff. Defendant denies a marriage between himself and plaintiff and sets off against plaintiff’s claim the amount of money expended by him on her behalf.' The case was tried by defendant, however, on the theory *414of an express contract whereby plaintiff agreed to pay her personal living expenses and upon a settlement of their account any balance remaining in his hands should be returned to .her. The verdict of the jury indicates the contract or understanding of the parties was as testified to by plaintiff and, the case having been tried on this assumption, this court cannot now be asked to review the action on a theory different from that upon which it was presented to the court below: Richardson v. Flower, 248 Pa. 35; Armstrong & Latta v. Philadelphia, 249 Pa. 39; Weiskircher v. Connelly, 256 Pa. 387.

The, contention of defendant is also refuted by the finding of the jury that a common-law marriage existed between the parties; if such finding is warranted by the fa!cts defendant’s set-off is invalid, for the reason he was liable for the maintenance and support of his wife and could not seek reimbursement for such expenditures as a set-off against her claim to recover her separate earnings entrusted to his care. There is little dispute in the testimony concerning the relations between the parties with the single exception as to what took place at the time the alleged marriage was contracted. Defendant and plaintiff first met in 1905 and it is not denied that from that time until August, 1908, there were frequent instances of improper intercourse between them. Plaintiff testified that at the request of defendant they came to Philadelphia in August, 1908, to be married. No actual ceremony, however, was performed by either a clergyman or magistrate; they remained at a hotel the night of their arrival in the city, and on the following day visited the home.of defendant’s sister where plaintiff was introduced by defendant as his wife. As to the agreement to marry, plaintiff testified: “After he told her [his sister] we were married we just had the ordinary conversation, after he had told her we were married and I was his wife. After that we left and coming up on the train to Reading we agreed to be married, and would live together as man and wife..... .Q. What else *415did he say if anything? A. He said we were mated by God and not by the people and that we were married just as well as if we were married by all the ministers in the world. Q. What did you say to that? A. I agreed to the same thing, we would live together as man and wife. Q. Was that on the train coming back? A.’ Yes, sir. Q. And you agreed to live together then? A. Yes, sir, and so did he.” Upon their return to Reading plaintiff went to her home and defendant to Ashland, Pa., where he was employed at the time and continued to work there until the following February, frequently visiting plaintiff at her boarding house in Reading where they were known as husband and wife. Defendant returned to Reading in February, 1909, and took up his residence with plaintiff and from that time until April, 1916, a period of seven years, with the exception of about a year when employed in other parts of the county, they lived and cohabited together as man and wife, were known as such to their relatives and friends and to the pastor of the church they attended and by whom their child was baptized, and when absent from home defendant frequently wrote to plaintiff addressing her as. Mrs. Elmer R. Knecht.

There is no doubt of the sufficiency of the evidence as, to cohabitation and reputation to raise a presumption of marriage and to show the agreement, if made, was fully carried out. Defendant contends, however, that the presumption arising from cohabitation and reputation is rebutted in this case by evidence showing.the relation between the parties was illicit in its commencement, and, consequently, such relation will be presumed to have continued until a change of the situation is actually proved, citing Hunt’s App., 86 Pa. 294; Tholey’s App., 93 Pa. 36; Reading Fire Ins. & Trust Co.’s App., 113 Pa. 204; Grimm’s Est., 131 Pa. 199. It does not appear, however, that this is a- case where the beginning of the cohabitation was meretricious. While it is ad-' mitted there was frequent illicit intercourse between the *416parties previous to the marriage agreement testified to by plaintiff, such relation took place, not under the guise of marriage, but before cohabitation as man and wife began and while they were living apart from each other. In this respect the case is distinguishable from the cases cited above. In Hunt’s App., cohabitation began while the man had a wife living from whom he had not been divorced, and for this reason a valid contract of marriage between the parties was impossible and the court found that during the period intervening between the date of the decree for divorce and his death, decedent continued to reside with the claimant without a marriage being solemnized, nor does the report of the case show evidence of an agreement to marry. In Tholey’s App., in place of an actual marriage there was merely evidence of a statement by deceased that he would claim plaintiff as his wife and take care of her and the child. In Reading Fire Ins. & Trust Co.’s App., the relation between the parties was illicit in its inception, and, as this court points out in the opinion, the plaintiff did not testify she was married, or that there was an agreement between herself and deceased under which , they lived together as husband and wife. In Grimm’s Est., the evidence was to the effect that the parties cohabited as man and wife and the marriage ceremony which they intended to have performed in the future was prevented by the man’s death.

Admitting the cohabitation was meretricious in the beginning, that situation will not help appellant. It can hardly be contended a man and woman living together in illicit relations cannot subsequently marry. In McCausland’s Est., 213 Pa. 189, this court held, where the father and mother of a child, who had been living together, agreed, six weeks after the birth of the child, to become husband and wife and thereafter continued to live together as man and wife, holding themselves out to the world as such, the contract of marriage was valid. The rule of presumption has no force in the *417face of positive evidence of marriage, except that the evidence shall be sufficient to overcome the presumption. In Thewlis’s Est., 217 Pa. 307, it was held a presumption of continuance of an illicit relation gives way to a superior presumption in favor of compliance with the law under the following circumstances: A husband who deserted his wife in England came to this country and remarried here, which marriage Was void by reason of the fact that his first Avife Avas living at the time, and, after the decease .of the latter, the person whom he had married in this country was recognized as his wife until the time of his death. There Avas, however, no repetition of the marriage ceremony or evidence of a formal contract or understanding betAveen them. It Avas said in an opinion of the lower court, affirmed by this court, (page 309) : “That marriage may be established by long continued cohabitation and reputation is too Avell settled to require citation of authority. See Richard v. Brehm, 73 Pa. 140. And while there is a presumption of continuance as to a relation illicit in its inception, under such circumstances as. existed in Hunt’s App., 86 Pa. 294, where the interval during Avhich it might have become lawful was but two months (December 13, 1873, to February 16, 1874,) or in Grimm’s Est., 131 Pa. 199, where it was but one week, the doctrine of those cases is not to be extended to one like the present, where in good faith the parties continue to live together as husband and wife, after the complete removal of the only obstacle in the way of a valid marriage, and so for many years continuously proclaim themselves to the public until the relation ceases by the husband’s death. The presumption of continuance of an illicit relation, under such circumstances, gives away to the superior presumption in favor of compliance with the requirements of the law, of morality, - and of common decency. See Greenleaf on Evidence, Sec. 41; Bergdoll’s Est., 7 Pa. Dist. Rep. 137.”

The agreement, as testified to by the plaintiff in this case and believed by the jury, was sufficient (under the *418above cases) to constitute a valid agreement to live together as man and wife and, when carried out by the parties for a period of over seven years, the court cannot say, as matter of law, that no valid contract of marriage in fact existed.

The judgment is affirmed.