DocketNumber: 8 Div. 125.
Judges: Thomas, Gardner, Bouldin, Brown, Foster, Livingston, JJ-
Filed Date: 6/5/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The case is not governed by the general rule announced in Smith v. Goldsmith et al.,
The state thus states the true contention:
"* * * that the law which governs this case is the provisions of Section 7425 of Code of 1923 [Code 1940, Tit. 34, § 38] and the interpretation placed thereon by the appellate courts of this State. Section 7425 of the Code reads as follows:
" '7425. Rights of parties to remarry after divorce. — When a decree has been rendered granting a divorce in this state, the court shall decree that neither party shall again marry except to each other until sixty days after decree rendered, and that if an appeal is taken within sixty days, neither party shall again marry except to each other during the pendency of said appeal.'
"In compliance with the provisions of the above section, the Law Equity Court of Franklin County, in the divorce decrees entered by it, decreed that the parties to the divorce could not again marry, except to each other, until sixty days after the rendition of the decree, and that if an appeal was taken from the decree within sixty days, then neither of the parties could again marry, except to each other, during the pendency of the appeal."
In disobedience to and in disregard of these decrees, the defendants on the day after the decrees were entered, for the purpose of evading the laws of the State of Alabama, went into the State of Mississippi and attempted to change husbands and wives by being married in that state.
In Vance v. State,
From the above case, divorce decrees entered by the courts of this state are held to be inoperative for a period of sixty days after they are rendered. If an appeal is taken, they are inoperative during pendency of appeal. The commonly-understood meaning of the word "inoperative" is that a thing is not in effect.
It is a well-known rule of law that the judgments and decrees of the courts of this state rest in the breasts of the courts for a period of thirty days, and at any time during this thirty-day period the court may set aside and vacate its judgments and decrees. This is what was done in the Law and Equity Court of Franklin County. On March 23, 1939, the judge of said court, on his own motion, set aside and held for naughtthe divorce decrees entered by him on February 22, 1939,affecting these defendants. There was a mandamus filed by Johnson against the judge seeking to have him set aside his decree vacating these divorce decrees; and in Ex parte Johnson,
The Court of Appeals, by its opinion in this case, apparently takes the position that this prosecution is for the purpose of prosecuting these parties for marrying in the State of Mississippi. Such is not the case. The prosecution in this case is for a man and woman cohabiting as man and wife within the State of Alabama when each has another living husband or wife. In this regard, it is apparent that the decision of the Court of Appeals in this case is in conflict with the decision of this court in Ex parte Johnson, supra. That case recognized and sustained the rule that decrees *Page 17 of the courts of this state may be set aside by the judge granting such decrees within thirty days after they are rendered, and did not recognize the marriage celebrated by these parties in Mississippi, as such action would not have upheld the action of the Law and Equity Court of Frankin County in setting aside the divorce decrees formerly entered.
In the Johnson case, supra, this court did not recognize the Mississippi marriage in question, as heretofore stated, but on the other hand, the Court of Appeals held that the marriage was legal in Mississippi and was likewise legal in Alabama, and that these parties were not guilty of bigamy when they returned to Alabama and cohabited as man and wife.
In First National Bank v. Garrison,
The Court of Appeals, as we take it, based its opinion on the case of Smith v. Goldsmith,
"The general rule is that the validity of a marriage is determined by the law of the place where it is contracted; if valid there it will be held valid everywhere, and conversely if invalid by the lex loci contractus, it will be held invalid wherever the question may arise. An exception to the general rule, however, is ordinarily made in the case of marriages repugnant to the public policy of the domicile of the parties, in respect of polygamy, incest, or miscegenation, or otherwise contrary to its positive laws.
"Evasion. The fact that the parties to the marriage left their domicile for the purpose of evading its laws does not alter the general rule, unless a statute expressly provides to the contrary." (Italics supplied.)
We have indicated the statute of this jurisdiction to the contrary. Code of 1923, § 7425.
We conclude with the observation that the opinion of the Court of Appeals in this case is not in accord with the decisions of this court in the case of Osoinach et al. v. Watkins et al.,
" 'The general rule is that validity of a marriage is determined by the law of the place where it was contracted; if valid there it will be held valid everywhere, and conversely if invalid by the lex loci contractus, it will be held invalid wherever the question may arise. An exception to the general rule, however, is ordinarily made in the case of marriages repugnant to the public policy of the domicile of the parties * * * or otherwise contrary to its positive laws.' * * *
"The Legislature is fully competent to declare what marriages shall be void in its own state, notwithstanding their validity in the state where celebrated, whether contracted between parties who were in good faith domiciled in the state where the ceremony was performed, or between parties who left the state of domicile for the purpose of avoiding its statute, when they come or return to the state. Pennegar and Haney v. State, supra. This right in the Legislature is generally conceded by all the courts which have pronounced upon the subject. Van Voorhis v. Brintnall,
"We conclude that the marriage of Dr. Watkins to Mrs. Viola Watkins, though consummated in the State of Georgia, and legal in that state, was prohibited by positive statutes of this state, sections 8991 and 4522, Code of 1923 [Code 1940, Tit. 34, § 1; tit. 14, § 325]; that their subsequent cohabitation in this state was unlawful, and subjected them to indictment, and conviction of a felony, punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary of this state for a period from one to seven years. We are also of the opinion and so conclude that said sections 8991 and 4522 express unmistakably the decided state policy not to sanction or give effect to a marriage between persons within the degree of relationship declared therein to be incestuous and void, no matter where such marriage may have been contracted. Such a marriage must be pronounced void ab initio."
The case at bar is on all fours with the Watkins case. The Legislature has provided by Section 7425, Code of 1923, that persons who are granted divorces by the courts of this state shall not again marry, except to each other, for a period of sixty days. It will be noted from the language of this section that it is mandatory for this inhibition to be in all divorce decrees. The courts of this State have repeatedly held thatmarriages within this state in disregard of this statutoryinhibition are void. Barfield v. Barfield,
It follows that the marriages between these parties, consummated in Mississippi, even if legal there, are prohibited by statute in Alabama by Code of 1923, § 7425; and the return of the parties and their cohabitation thereafter in Alabama was unlawful and subjected them to indictment, trial and conviction in this jurisdiction. Such was the effect of the decision in Osoinach v. Watkins,
Writ granted.
BOULDIN, BROWN, FOSTER, and LIVINGSTON, JJ., concur.
GARDNER, C. J., concurs specially.