Filed Date: 11/16/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Memorandum: In order to establish the existence of a common-law marriage, it is essential to show that there was an agreement between the parties to live together as husband and wife. The burden of proving the marriage is upon the one seeking to establish it. If acknowledgment of marriage and cohabitation are established as facts, a presumption of marriage is raised but such facts are only evidence. In this case, if there was an agreement and consent to marry per verba de praesenti, such agreement and consent must necessarily be presumed from facts duly established, for there is no direct evidence of such agreement. There is evidence that these parties were friendly and intimate over a period of years and that on occasions, there was acknowledgment of marriage. The record, however, is barren of evidence which would prove a bona fide matrimonial cohabitation and cohabitation other than matrimonial is insufficient to raise a presumption that the relationship was that of husband and wife. But even if a prima facie presumption of a common-law marriage could be made out of the respondent’s evidence, such presumption has been abundantly overcome by the evidence of the appellant.