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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 21-PR-0900
IN RE ESTATE OF ROSETTA JENKINS;
EDWARD JENKINS, APPELLANT.
Appeal from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(2008-ADM-000016)
(Hon. Craig Iscoe, Petition Judge)
(Argued December 15, 2022 Decided March 9, 2023)
Francesca Ugolini for appellant.
Jonathan D. Leo for appellee.
Before MCLEESE and HOWARD, Associate Judges, and THOMPSON, Senior
Judge.
THOMPSON, Senior Judge: Rosetta Jenkins passed away without a will. She
owned a house in Southwest Washington where she lived with Edward Jenkins, 1
the appellant, for eleven years. This case concerns who will inherit that house.
Edward argues that he is an heir to Rosetta’s estate as her common-law husband.
1
Edward Jenkins previously used the name Edward McKenzie, but legally
changed his name to Edward Jenkins in 2004. We refer to him and others in this
case using their first names to avoid confusion.
2
Rosetta’s only child, Tracey Johnson-Butler, the appellee, contends that she is
Rosetta’s sole heir because Edward and Rosetta never had a valid marriage. The
Probate Court found that Tracey was Rosetta’s only heir because no common-law
marriage existed between Edward and Rosetta. We conclude that Edward was
Rosetta’s husband by common-law marriage and, therefore, an heir to her estate.
We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Edward Jenkins married Rosa Lee Carr 2 in 1969 in Rochester, New York.
The couple moved to the District of Columbia around 1970, and their relationship
ended a few months later without a divorce. In 1972, Edward married Rosetta
Jenkins in a ceremony in the District of Columbia. Edward and Rosetta then lived
together for thirty-five years, until Rosetta died.
2
Rosa Lee Carr also used the name Rosa Lee McKenzie after her marriage
to Edward. We refer to her as Rosa Lee as she is no longer married to Edward and
to avoid confusion.
3
Rosetta had a daughter in 1969, Tracey Johnson-Butler, before she met
Edward. After Edward and Rosetta’s wedding in 1972, Tracey lived with Edward
and Rosetta until Tracey turned twenty-one years old in 1990. Edward and Tracey
maintained a father-daughter relationship throughout this time and after Rosetta’s
death. In 1996, Rosetta and Edward obtained a mortgage and bought a house.
Only Rosetta’s name appeared on the “Deed in Fee.” The next year, Rosa Lee
filed for divorce from Edward in the District of Columbia. The divorce became
final in December of 1997. After the divorce and until Rosetta’s death in 2007,
Edward and Rosetta continued to live together in the house they had bought.
After Rosetta’s passing, the Probate Court appointed Edward as the personal
representative of Rosetta’s estate following his petition for unsupervised probate.
His appointment ended by operation of statute in 2011.3 All the while, Edward
continued to live in the house he had bought with Rosetta. Eventually, Edward
wanted to sell the house. To that end, Tracey, who was helping Edward with his
affairs, hired an attorney in January 2021. In April 2021, the attorney, David C.
3
D.C. Code § 20-1301(c) states that “the appointment of the personal
representative shall terminate automatically on the date which is 3 years after the
appointment of the personal representative” if the personal representative does not
file a document with the court that would otherwise terminate the appointment.
D.C. Code § 20-1301(c).
4
Harty, filed a petition to reopen probate and reappoint Edward as personal
representative. The Probate Court eventually reopened probate and reappointed
Edward as personal representative in May 2021.
Around June 2021, Edward and Tracey’s relationship grew strained. During
this time, Edward spoke to Harty about Tracey’s claimed entitlement to a share of
Rosetta’s estate. Then, around June 16, 2021, Edward filed a pro se petition in the
Probate Court asking for “Removal of Attorney David C. Harty.” Edward also
sent Harty a letter of termination. Roughly one week later, Tracey filed a “Petition
to Request Supervised Administration of the Estate.” The Probate Court issued an
order on September 2, 2021, denying Edward’s petition to remove Harty and
explaining that the court lacked the power to do so. However, a docket entry from
the next day shows that Edward obtained new counsel.
A few weeks later, Tracey filed a petition to amend her earlier petition for
supervised administration of the estate to a petition seeking to remove Edward as
both the personal representative of and an heir to Rosetta’s estate. This petition
argued that Edward’s marriage to Rosetta was void due to his prior marriage to
Rosa Lee. On October 22, 2021, the Probate Court removed Edward as personal
5
representative. The court also barred Edward from taking any action to sell the
house.
On November 9, 2021, the Probate Court held a status hearing to address
whether Harty had represented Edward such that Harty (now representing Tracey)
had a conflict with a former client (Edward) that would merit disqualifying Harty
from representing Tracey. The next day, the court issued an order finding that
Harty had never served as Edward’s attorney. Accordingly, the court found no
conflict of interest and did not bar Harty from representing Tracey.
On December 7, 2021, the court held a hearing on the validity of Edward’s
marriage to Rosetta. The court heard testimony from Edward, Tracey, and
Tracey’s husband. Edward claimed his marriage to Rosetta was valid because (he
believed) he was too young to marry at the time he exchanged vows with Rosa
Lee, precluding a lawful marriage to Rosa Lee. Edward also told the court that, in
1997, Rosetta read him a letter from Rosa Lee in which Rosa Lee asked for a
divorce from him. The letter prompted Rosetta to tell Edward, “Me and you are
legally married,” to which he responded, “Yeah, you’re right. We are legally
married.” Thus, according to Edward, Rosetta knew about Edward’s first marriage
6
and his divorce when she continued to live with him after the divorce. Edward
added that he and Rosetta never discussed common-law marriage because the
couple “[t]hought [they] were already married.”
Tracey testified that she had a close relationship with her mother, Rosetta,
and that her mother never mentioned Edward’s previous marriage or divorce. To
Tracey’s knowledge, Rosetta never found out about that part of Edward’s life.
Tracey’s husband testified that he knew Edward and Rosetta beginning in 1998,
that he understood that Rosetta was Edward’s wife, and that Rosetta never told him
that she and Edward “were going to get married.”
Concluding that Edward was never married to Rosetta, neither via their
wedding nor by a common-law marriage after Edward’s first marriage ended, the
Probate Court issued an order finding that Edward is not an heir. 4 First, the court
found that Edward’s marriage to Rosa Lee in 1969 was valid. Because of this, the
court concluded that Edward and Rosetta’s 1972 marriage was void ab initio
because Edward was still married to Rosa Lee when Edward and Rosetta’s
wedding occurred. The court’s order then turned to whether a common-law
4
A Motions Division of this court stayed this order pending resolution of the
instant appeal.
7
marriage between Edward and Rosetta arose after Edward and Rosa Lee were
divorced in 1997.
The court identified the elements of common-law marriage as “(1)
cohabitation as husband and wife . . . (2) following an express mutual agreement,
which must be in words of the present tense.” Edward’s and Rosetta’s
cohabitation after Edward’s divorce was undisputed, so the court’s analysis
focused on the second element. The Probate Court framed the question as
“whether Edward Jenkins and Rosetta Jenkins entered into a mutual agreement to
be married, by using words of the present tense, on or after the date that [Edward]
Jenkins became divorced from Rosa Lee Carr” (second emphasis added). The
court identified, as a “central issue” to its analysis, whether Rosetta knew about
Edward’s marriage to Rosa Lee.
Applying this framework, the court determined that no common-law
marriage existed. The court did not credit Edward’s testimony that Rosetta knew
about his marriage to Rosa Lee because (1) the court considered Edward’s
testimony about his marriage to Rosa Lee “false and conflicting” and thus
damaging to his overall credibility; (2) Edward called no witnesses to support his
8
claim; and (3) Edward included a note in Rosetta’s funeral program that referred to
November 25, 1972, (not to his post-1997 relationship with Rosetta or to their
cohabitation as spouses during the years that followed) as when their marriage
began. By contrast, the court “fully credit[ed]” and found “no reason to doubt”
Tracey’s testimony about her close relationship with her mother and her testimony
that, to her knowledge, Rosetta did not know about Edward’s first marriage. The
court “infer[red] that [Rosetta] would have told her daughter about the divorce and
about learning that the marriage was not valid.” The court also made two
additional inferences based on the evidence that Rosetta was a member of a church
and that the same bishop officiated at her wedding and funeral: first, that Rosetta
would have told someone from church about the divorce and about any agreement
she had with Edward that the two were still married despite their void ab initio
ceremonial marriage; and second, that Rosetta “placed value on church weddings
and other formal church proceedings, and therefore, likely would not have agreed
to a common law marriage.”
Further, the court cited Edward’s testimony disavowing having a common-
law marriage and insisting that he and Rosetta had a “legal marriage” instead.
From this, the court concluded that Edward and Rosetta “never could have met the
requirements of ‘an express mutual agreement, which must be in words of the
9
present tense,’” and that Edward “presented no reason why he and [Rosetta would
have] entered a mutual agreement in the present tense in 1997, after the divorce.”
The court concluded that Rosetta was unaware of Edward’s first marriage and,
therefore, that there was no “express mutual agreement” between Rosetta and
Edward “to be married under the common law after [Edward’s] divorce in 1997.”
The court stated that without a marriage to Rosetta, Edward could not be an heir to
her estate. Edward timely appealed.
II.
On appeal, Edward argues that under binding case law (which the parties did
not cite to the Probate Court), the credited evidence showed all that was necessary
to establish that he and Rosetta had a valid common-law marriage and that he
therefore is an heir to Rosetta’s estate. See D.C. Code § 19-301. We agree and
therefore reverse the Probate Court’s ruling to the contrary.5
5
We have not been asked to review the Probate Court’s order removing
Edward as the estate’s personal representative.
10
A.
Whether a common-law marriage exists “is a mixed question of fact and
law.” Gill v. Nostrand, 206 A.3d 869, 877 (D.C. 2019). We therefore review the
Probate Court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal rulings de novo. See
Associated Ests. LLC v. BankAtlantic, 164 A.3d 932, 939 (D.C. 2017); Am. Univ.
Park Citizens Ass’n v. Burka, 400 A.2d 737, 741 (D.C. 1979). Here, Edward does
not contest the Probate Court’s specific factual findings. Instead, he asserts that
the Probate Court committed a legal error by overlooking binding, factually
analogous precedents that compel finding a common-law marriage.
The elements of common-law marriage are “cohabitation following an
express mutual agreement, which must be in words of the present tense, to be
permanent partners with the same degree of commitment as the spouses in a
Edward raises an additional argument that we need not and do not reach: the
contention that the Probate Court’s findings cannot stand because its reliance on
Tracey’s testimony violated the District’s “Dead Man’s Statute,” D.C. Code § 14-
302. We also do not reach Edward’s argument that Harty should be disqualified
from representing Tracey in ongoing proceedings because Harty violated D.C. R.
Prof. Conduct 1.9. We do not address this argument because Edward does not
contend that the Probate Court’s decision not to disqualify Harty is a basis for
reversal of the ruling that Edward was not married to Rosetta and is not an heir.
11
ceremonial marriage.” Gill, 206 A.3d at 875. Cohabitation is undisputed here, so
we focus on whether Edward and Rosetta made “an express mutual agreement,
which must be in words of the present tense, to be permanent partners with the
same degree of commitment as the spouses in a ceremonial marriage.” Id. In
doing so, we clarify when such express mutual agreement must occur in cases like
this one, in which (1) a couple expressly agreed to be married, (2) a legal
impediment (here, a prior marriage) made the couple’s ceremonial marriage void
ab initio, (3) the couple cohabited as spouses, and (4) the impediment was removed
and the couple continued to cohabit as spouses. Tracey argues, and the Probate
Court ruled, that the couple must agree anew after the impediment is removed.
Edward counters that if the couple continue to cohabit as spouses, the couple need
not repeat their express agreement to be married after the impediment is removed.
Under Thomas v. Murphy, 107 F.2d 268 (D.C. Cir. 1939), and its progeny,
Edward’s position is the correct one.
Our case law is not completely uniform in addressing how the removal of an
impediment to marriage affects the status of a couple who agreed to marry before
the impediment’s removal and cohabitated as spouses before and after the
12
impediment’s removal. In Thomas v. Murphy, the D.C. Circuit 6 adopted the rule
that, after a couple agrees to marry, “the removal of an impediment while parties
continue to live together as husband and wife gives rise to a common-law
marriage,” “though one or both of the parties knew of the impediment.” 107 F.2d
at 269; 7 accord Matthews v. Britton, 303 F.2d 408, 410 (D.C. Cir. 1962) (“If
Ernestine and Henry Matthews agreed to be married before the impediment [i.e.,
Ernestine’s 1919 marriage to Johnson] was removed [through Johnson’s obtaining
a divorce] and continued thereafter to cohabit and live together as husband and
wife, a commonlaw union between Ernestine and Henry was effected when
Johnson was awarded the divorce.”) (citing Thomas v. Murphy, 107 F.2d at 268);
id. at 409 (“It is not to be expected that parties once having agreed to be married
will deem it necessary to agree to do so again when an earlier marriage is
6
Cases decided by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit, and its predecessors, before February 1, 1971, are part of this
court’s case law. M.A.P. v. Ryan, 285 A.2d 310, 312 (D.C. 1971).
7
The facts of Thomas v. Murphy are that William M. Murphy and Elizabeth
Dixon agreed to become husband and wife and began to cohabit as spouses in 1904
even though William was already married to Harriet. 107 F.2d at 269. Harriett
obtained a divorce from William in 1918, and William and Elizabeth then
continued to live as husband and wife. Id. The court acknowledged that “[c]ases
where, as here, one or both of the parties knew of the impediment, have sometimes
been treated as exceptions to the general rule that the mere removal of the
impediment, with continued cohabitation, results in a common-law marriage[.]”
Id. But the court reasoned that the general rule, rather than such an exception, is
“socially sound” and “logical.” Id.
13
terminated or some other bar to union is eliminated.”); Taylor v. Taylor, 233 A.2d
43, 44 (D.C. 1967) (referring to the “settled” principle that “if parties agree to be
husband and wife in ignorance of, or with knowledge of, an impediment to lawful
matrimony, the removal of that impediment results in a common law marriage
between the parties if they continue to cohabit and live together as husband and
wife”) (citing Matthews, 303 F.2d at 408). 8 Thus, per Thomas v. Murphy and its
progeny, a common-law marriage is created even if the agreement to marry
predates the removal of an impediment to marriage, provided the couple cohabit as
spouses before the impediment’s removal and continue to cohabit as spouses after
the impediment is removed.
In a few post-1939 cases, the D.C. Circuit and this court applied a contrary
rule, but did so in language that may fairly be regarded as dicta, i.e., language not
necessary to the decision. See U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Britton, 269 F.2d 249, 251
(D.C. Cir. 1959); Coates v. Watts, 622 A.2d 25, 27 (D.C. 1993). In discussing
common-law marriage, United States Fidelity articulated a “rule” that “when a
8
By contrast, if a couple “ceased [their] relationship” as husband and wife
before the impediment to a marriage between them is removed, no common-law
marriage arises. Friedenwald v. Friedenwald, 16 F.2d 509, 510 (D.C. Cir. 1926);
see also Thomas v. Murphy, 107 F.2d at 269 n.2 (attributing this result in
Friedenwald to there having been “no cohabitation after the removal of the
impediment”).
14
man and woman who are legally capable of entering into the marriage relation
mutually agree, in words of the present tense, to be husband and wife, and
consummate their agreement by cohabiting as husband and wife, a common-law
marriage results.” 269 F.2d at 251 (emphasis added); 9 see also Toye v. Toye, 170
A.2d 778, 778 (D.C. 1961) (“It is essential to the validity of such a marriage that
parties, legally capable of entering into that relationship, mutually consent or
agree to do so, and that the agreement be consummated by cohabitation.”)
(emphasis added) (citing U.S. Fid., 269 F.2d at 249). The United States Fidelity
court also said that cohabitation “could not ripen into a common-law marriage
unless it was pursuant to a mutual consent or agreement to become husband and
wife made after the removal of . . . [a] supposed . . . barrier” to marriage. Id. at
254 (emphasis added). But it seems that the dispositive fact in United States
Fidelity was that the claimant (see note 9 supra) “did not testify there was mutual
consent or agreement [to be married] at any time.” Id. at 253 (emphasis added).
9
United States Fidelity involved a claim for death benefits brought by a
claimant who maintained that she had been in a common-law marriage with the
decedent. 269 F.2d at 250-51. The claimant had incorrectly believed that she was
married to a man other than the decedent, so she testified that she did not intend to
marry the decedent while her thought-to-be first husband lived. Id. at 253. The
claimant’s “first husband” died before the decedent, but even after this death, the
claimant did not agree to marry the decedent, per her testimony. Id. The court
therefore held that no common-law marriage arose because there was no evidence
of “a mutual agreement to be married.” Id.
15
A similar observation can be made about Coates. The case concerned a
couple, Mr. Coates and Ms. McCall, who started cohabitating around 1971, despite
the fact that Coates was married to someone else at the time. 622 A.2d at 26.
Coates obtained a divorce in 1976, and afterwards he asked McCall to marry him.
Id. She declined. Id. Eventually, in 1990, McCall agreed “to marry [Coates] the
following year,” but “she died before the marriage could take place.” Id. Coates
argued that he and McCall had a common-law marriage. Id. The court quoted
United States Fidelity and discussed whether there was evidence that “after
[Coates’s] divorce” — i.e., after the “remov[al] [of] the initial impediment” —
Coates and McCall had agreed to be married. Id. (footnote omitted) & n.1. But
just as important to the court’s analysis was its observation that Coates had offered
no evidence that he and McCall “had ever agreed, in words of the present tense, to
be married.” Id. (emphasis added).
In any event, neither United States Fidelity nor Coates could have overruled
Thomas v. Murphy. See LaShawn A. v. Barry, 87 F.3d 1389, 1395 (D.C. Cir. 1996)
(en banc) (“One three-judge panel [of the D.C. Circuit] . . . does not have the
authority to overrule another three-judge panel of the court. . . . That power may
be exercised only by the full court[.]”) (citations omitted); M.A.P. v. Ryan, 285
16
A.2d 310, 312 (D.C. 1971) (“With respect to decisions of the United States Court
of Appeals rendered prior to February 1, 1971, . . . they, like the decisions of this
court, constitute the case law of the District of Columbia. . . . [N]o division of this
court will overrule a prior decision of this court or refuse to follow a decision of
the United States Court of Appeals rendered prior to February 1, 1971[.] . . . [S]uch
result can only be accomplished by this court en banc.”) (footnote omitted); see
also Thomas v. United States, 731 A.2d 415, 420 n.6 (D.C. 1999) (“Where a
division of this court fails to adhere to earlier controlling authority, we are required
to follow the earlier decision rather than the later one.”).
Moreover, in Matthews, the D.C. Circuit explicitly rejected the notion that
United States Fidelity (which cited Thomas v. Murphy approvingly) effectively
overruled Thomas v. Murphy. See 303 F.2d at 410. The Matthews court
highlighted that in United States Fidelity, there was no evidence of any agreement
to marry and explained that “the holding of [United States Fidelity] is that if there
was no agreement to be married, either before or after the removal of an
impediment, no marriage can take place.” Id. In effect, Matthews resolved any
confusion or contradiction that United States Fidelity created in our jurisprudence
regarding whether parties must agree after an impediment is removed to form a
common-law marriage. We are bound to adhere to the rule that “the removal of an
17
impediment while parties continue to live together as husband and wife gives rise
to a common-law marriage.” Thomas v. Murphy, 107 F.2d at 269.
In light of the foregoing binding precedents, the Probate Court
misarticulated the rule governing the express-mutual-agreement element of
common-law marriage. The parties failed to cite these precedents, and the court’s
order relied on the mistaken proposition that the express mutual agreement must
come after the impediment to marriage is removed. However, as explained above,
the agreement element can predate the removal of an impediment if the parties
continue to cohabit after the impediment’s removal.
In sum, we confirm that where a couple makes an express mutual agreement
in words of the present tense to be married despite a known or unknown legal
impediment to marriage, and that agreement is followed by cohabitation, the
couple need not reaffirm their agreement after the impediment to marriage
dissolves; they need only continue to cohabit.
B.
18
When the above legal framework is applied to the instant case in light of the
undisputed facts, the conclusion is compelled that Edward and Rosetta formed a
common-law marriage when they continued to live together after Edward’s
divorce. 10 There is no dispute that in 1972, Edward and Rosetta shared a wedding
ceremony at which they expressed a mutual agreement to marry in words of the
present tense. Edward and Rosetta then cohabited for thirty-five years, spanning
years both before and after Edward’s divorce from Rosa Lee in 1997. Thus,
despite Edward’s past marriage, the couple established a common-law marriage
under Thomas v. Murphy and Matthews because of their agreement to marry, their
subsequent cohabitation, Edward’s divorce removing the impediment to their
marriage, and their continued cohabitation after Edward’s divorce.
Because Edward did not need to prove that he and Rosetta entered into an
express mutual agreement to marry after his divorce in 1997, the Probate Court’s
focus on Rosetta’s knowledge — of Edward’s first marriage in 1969, its voiding
effect on their 1972 marriage, and Edward’s divorce — was misplaced.
10
Cf. Friedenwald v. Friedenwald, 16 F.2d 509, 511 (D.C. Cir. 1926) (“[I]t
is to be presumed that the intent to be husband and wife, expressed in the
ceremonial marriage, continues, unless the contrary appears, and the continued
cohabitation after the removal of the impediment is to be considered as under such
an intent and declaration rather than with an unlawful intent. . .”). Here, there was
no contrary evidence.
19
Essentially, the Probate Court reasoned that Rosetta could not create a common-
law marriage with Edward unless she knew that her ceremonial marriage was void
because of Edward’s first marriage. But whether Rosetta knew about Edward’s
first marriage is immaterial. As explained above, in cases like this one, the
agreement to marry may be made “in ignorance of, or with knowledge of, an
impediment to lawful matrimony.” Taylor, 233 A.2d at 44.
Finally, we briefly address Tracey’s argument that Edward’s testimony that
his marriage to Rosetta was “no common-law marriage,” but a “legal marriage”
undercuts his argument that he had a common-law marriage. 11 This argument
cannot overcome the legal consequence under Thomas v. Murphy, Matthews, and
Taylor, that a common-law marriage existed between Edward and Rosetta after
Edward’s divorce and the couple’s continued cohabitation. 12 Moreover, this
11
Tracey also argues that, because of this testimony, Edward waived his
common-law marriage argument such that he cannot raise it on appeal. This
argument lacks force because, after Edward gave this testimony, Edward’s attorney
argued in closing that a common-law marriage existed.
12
Further, it is of no moment whether Rosetta and Edward agreed to form a
common-law marriage. Our cases uniformly state that the parties to a common-law
marriage need only agree to be spouses or “to be permanent partners with the same
degree of commitment as the spouses in a ceremonial marriage,” Gill, 206 A.3d at
875; see Hoage v. Murch Bros. Constr. Co., 50 F.2d 983, 985 (D.C. Cir. 1931)
(articulating the agreement element of common-law marriage as “an agreement
20
argument overlooks that many (perhaps most) lay people “are not likely to be
perceptive in respect to technicalities” surrounding whether they have a “common-
law” or “legal” marriage. Matthews, 303 F.2d at 411 (Prettyman, J., concurring in
part and dissenting in part).
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Probate Court’s ruling that Edward
and Rosetta had no common-law marriage and that Edward is not an heir, and we
remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered. 13
between a man and woman per verba de praesenti to be husband and wife”)
(emphasis added). The couple need not agree to form a “common-law” marriage.
13
The court thanks Ms. Ugolini for her pro bono publico representation of
Mr. Jenkins in this case.