Arthur v. Israel

Chiee Justice Helm

delivered the opinion of the court.

The present controversy has been once before submitted to this court for adjudication. There was then, however, nothing in the record to show that Mrs. Israel, after deserting Arthur, and prior to the divorce decrees, had been guilty of immoral conduct; neither was there anything, aside from these decrees, to indicate that she had not, up to the commencement of proceedings therefor, conducted herself as a good, true and affectionate wife; or that subsequent to the entry thereof, and with knowledge of the same, she had, during Arthur’s life-time, remarried, and lived and cohabited with another man as his wife. The single question then presented, wholly unembarrassed by any of these con*151siderations, was whether or not the decrees, which , were void because the records showed affirmatively that there was no jurisdiction over the person, should have been received in evidence and given the same force and effect as if valid and binding. The court held that they should not; and, for error in their admission, reversed the judgment.

The record now before us, on the contrary, discloses a voluntary acceptance by petitioner of the privileges resulting from the divorce decrees, as well as antecedent conduct on her part, that is highly reprehensible from both a legal and a moral standpoint. That petitioner’s purpose was to secure the estate of deceased was known then as now; but the question as to whether she may accomplish this purpose obviously rests at the present time upon very different considerations from those formerly brought to our attention.

We cannot accept the assertion of counsel for defendant in error that the decision of the court upon the former case is decisive of the present review. We still adhere to the opinion that the decrees in question were void, and not merely voidable; but assuming such invalidity, and giving to the declaration of this court reciting that fact all the force and effect of a final adjudication thereof, we feel warranted in holding that petitioner’s right to the estate of Arthur may still be inquired of.

It is to be hoped, for her sake, that the conduct of petitioner is not correctly set forth in the supplemental answer ; but the averments of this pleading in that behalf are, by the demurrer, temporarily confessed, and for the purposes of the present decision must be treated as true.

The question, therefore, now presented for determination may be stated as follows: When the wife, without cause, deserts her husband and home, and for years lives in adultery with another man, and afterwards, upon learning that a divorce has been obtained by her deserted husband, causes a marriage ceremony with her paramour to be solemnized, and continuously lives and cohabits with him as his wife, may she, upon the subsequent decease of her abandoned *152husband, take advantage of the fact that the divorce decree is void for want of proper service ■ of process, and successfully assert against other heirs her right, under the statute of descents and distriDutions, to the deceased’s estate as his widow? An affirmative answer to this question would be so shocking to good morals, to sound public policy and to the simplest principles of justice, that we shall decline to give it unless coerced into doing so by cogent and firmly established rules of law.

As a matter of law, petitioner must, under the circumstances, be presumed to have known before Arthur’s death that the divorce decrees were invalid; and it is fair to assume that such in fact was the case, as, besides the grounds upon which the legal presumption rests, she, so promptly after that event asserted their invalidity. Had she properly challenged those decrees during the life-time of Arthur she would have incurred the hazard of a restoration of conjugal relationship, or of his procurement of a binding divorce. Either of these results was evidently objectionable to her, and both were carefully avoided. She voluntarily elected to postpone action until such time as she might secure all the benefits of the marriage contract without discharging any of its burdens. Abandoning for years the performance of every marital obligation and duty, she' awaited until death had rendered such performance impossible, and then boldly hastened to seize all the pecuniary advantages conferred by law upon the faithful wife and bereaved widow. Under these circumstances, petitioner cannot complain if we insist upon treating the present controversy as one relating solely to property rights, unaffected by those legal considerations which give to marriage and the family their peculiar status, with accompanying special privileges and protection. Zoellner v. Zoellner, 46 Mich. 511.

But if the divorce decrees receive the same treatment as judgments, or decrees in ordinary controversies relating to damages or property, petitioner’s action must fail; for one who accepts and retains the fruits of a void judgment can*153not afterwards repudiate his action and take advantage of its invalidity. Water Co. v. Middaugh, 12 Colo. 434, and cases cited; Duff v. Wyncoop, 74 Pa. St. 300.

The foregoing principle has numerous other salutary applications ; as, for instance, that one, having accepted the benefits of an unconstitutional law, cannot, as a general rule, rely upon such unconstitutionality as a defense, even though the invalidity has been adjudicated in another suit. Daniels v. Tearney, 102 U. S. 415, and cases. Also, that a corporation, having exercised the privileges of its franchise, when sued for its negligent or malicious tort, shall'not successfully invoke, as a defense, the plea of ultra vires. Bank v. Graham, 100 U. S. 699. And in many cases the same inhibition applies after the benefits of otherwise binding corporate contracts have been enjoyed. Railway Co. v. McCarthy, 96 U. S. 258.

We discover, upon principle, no sufficient reason why petitioner’s conduct in the premises should not produce just as effective an estoppel as if she had received the proceeds of a void judgment for money. By her subsequent marriage with Israel during Arthur’s life-time, she accepted, so far as was within her power, the benefits or privileges of the divorce decrees. The fact that she did not then know that those decrees were void is a matter of no more consequence than is the ignorance in this respect of one who, knowingly in all other particulars, receives the fruits of an ordinary void judgment at law. That, at the time of her marriage with Israel, she understood the decrees to be valid, is, if true, only an additional earnest of her acquiescence in the result, and sincerity in accepting and taking advantage of the benefits supposed to follow. Besides, had she believed them void, her obliquity would be even deeper than it is; because to her other alleged offenses would be added that of intentional fraud upon Israel, who may have thought that he was contracting a valid marriage.

We are not umnindful of the fact that the analogy between accepting the fruits of void judgments at law and *154accepting the pecuniary benefits, if any there he, together with the privileges of void divorce decrees, is not perfect in all respects. But the importance and justice of recognizing an estoppel in the latter case may be far more weighty than in the former. The immediate parties are not. alone concerned. The public is always, and other individuals are usually, profoundly interested. Public policy, as well as private interest, requires that, so far as may be consistent with fundamental principles of law, one who has attempted to profit by a supposed divorce, and has exercised the resulting privilege of remarriage, shall not, for the mere purpose of obtaining property, be permitted to repudiate his election and thus demonstrate the invalidity of his second marriage, together with the unconscious adultery of his second wife, and the illegitimacy of her children, if any she have by him.

Were petitioner attempting, in the light of the present record, to have the divorce decrees held void, her attempt would be futile. And the fact that upon another and different record this court was induced to declare such nullity is, as already suggested, not conclusive of her right to the property in question. It clearly appears from the admitted averments of the supplemental answer that petitioner herself is responsible for the failure of defendant to sooner plead in bar the facts which operate in the nature of an estoppel by conduct; and since, if these matters had been known in the first instance, petitioner would not, for the purpose of securing Arthur’s estate, have been permitted to show the invalidity of the divorce decrees, we unhesitatingly conclude that she should not now be allowed to take advantage of such invalidity, in order to accomplish the same result.

The application of a doctrine analogous to that of equitable estoppels to cases which, in essential particulars, strongly resemble the one at bar, is by no means a novelty. Ellis v. White, 61 Iowa, 644; Garner v. Garner, 38 Ind. 139; Prater v. Prater, 87 Tenn. 78; Duke v. Reed, 64 Tex. 705; *155Odiorne’s Appeal, 54 Pa. St. 175; Bourne v. Simpson, 9 B. Mon. 454; Baily v. Baily, 44 Pa. St. 274; Richeson v. Simmons, 47 Mo. 20; Yorston v. Yorston, 32 N. J. Eq. 495; Sedlak v. Sedlak, 14 Or. 540; Nichols v. Nichols, 25 N. J. Eq. 60.

In two or three of the foregoing cases the principle of estoppel was applied where wives had. abandoned their husbands and formed adulterous relations with other men, or had simply renounced the marriage tie and forsaken the marital obligations, but where in fact no divorce proceedings were instituted. In at least two of the others the learned judges who prepared the opinions dwell upon laches as well as acquiescence. These decisions are, in the main, well considered, and we have no disposition to reject the particular reasons, so far as applicable, given in support thereof, but we prefer to rest our conclusion especially upon the specific grounds hereinbefore considered. '

Petitioner’s demurrer to the supplemental answer should have been overruled. The judgment of the court below is accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

Reversed.