105 Misc. 492 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
The action is to annul a marriage contracted in the state of Pennsylvania, on the ground that the plaintiff was not twenty-one years of age at the time of the marriage.
The parties lived in the city of Cortland, N. Y. They had been acquainted for about one year. The plaintiff was a chauffeur, residing with his parents, owning an automobile, and apparently engaged in independent employment. He was twenty years of age on the 21st of July, 1916, and was a mature, intelligent young man. The defendant was thirty years of age, and employed in domestic service. She had met the parents of the plaintiff, had been riding with them in plaintiff’s automobile on several occasions, and so far as the evidence discloses there had been no objection on their part to his courtship.
On the 29th of August, 1916, the parties left Cortland in an automobile early in the morning and went to Towanda, Penn. In that state it is provided by the LaAvs of 1895 (No. 123), as amended by the Laws of 1903 (No. 75), that “ No person within this Commonwealth shall be joined in marriage, until a license shall have been obtained for that purpose from the clerk of the orphans court in the county wherein either .of the contracting parties resides, or in the county where the marriage is performed,” etc.; and by the amending statute last cited, “ The clerk of the court shall inquire of the parties applying * * * " for marriage license * * * relative to the legality of the contemplated marriage, the age of the parties, the consent of parents or guardians of such as are under the full age of twenty-one years, etc., and if there be no legal objection thereto, then he shall grant such marriage license. If any of the persons intending to marry by AÚrtue of such license shall be under twenty-one years of age, the consent of their parents or guardians shall be per
After having thus obtained the license, the parties were married at Towanda by a clergyman, and returned the same day to the home of plaintiff’s parents. To them he introduced the defendant as his wife and no objection was made to the marriage. There the marriage was consummated and the marriage status fixed; and there the parties continued, to reside from the 29th of August, 1916, until the 20th of February, 1917. At that time, for some reason not disclosed to the court, but not on the ground that he desired to withdraw from the contract because of his non-age, plaintiff became dissatisfied and the parties separated, and have not since cohabited. There has been no issue, of the marriage.
Section 1744 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “An action to annul a marriage heretofore or hereafter contracted, on the ground that one of the parties
The Pennsylvania statutes I have quoted from were offered in evidence by the plaintiff’s attorney, and were received without objection. No other statute fixing any different age of consent in the state of Pennsylvania has been called to my attention, so that I must assume that by requiring the contracting parties to be twenty-one years of age in order to obtain a license, and requiring the consent of their parents or guardian if they are under twenty-one, in order that a license may be obtained, and forbidding the solemnization of the marriage otherwise, the age of legal consent must be twenty-one years.
The marriage would undoubtedly be valid by the laws of this state if contracted here under the same circumstances. The parties were both beyond the age of legal consent (Dom. Rel. Law, § 7) though by an incongruity of the law the license may not issue if it appears from the application that the man is under the age of twenty-one and has not the written consent of his parents. Dom. Rel. Law, § 15. But if he makes and verifies the statement giving his age as twenty-one, as the plaintiff did in this case, the license must issue, the parties may be married, and although the party making the false statement may be punished (Id. § 16), the marriage is valid. Greenberg v. Greenberg, 97 Misc. Rep. 153; Kruger v. Kruger, 137 App. Div. 289.
It seems to me that the intent of the legislature in making the amendment to section 1744 of the Code of Civil Procedure in 1916, was to provide a remedy in
The plaintiff’s counsel has assumed in his argument and on his brief that the marriage was void because the Pennsylvania statute forbade the performance of a marriage ceremony without the issuance of a license based on proper consent of the parents of the party under twenty-one years of age. The statute does not declare such a marriage void. By the Laws of 1885 (No. 115) a minister, justice or other officer solemnizing the marriage ceremony, or the attesting witnesses thereto, where the parties have not obtained the proper license “ shall forfeit and pay the sum of one hundred dollars to and for the use'of the county in which said marriage was solemnized. ’ ’ This fine or forfeiture may be recovered in an action of debt with costs. The parties also apparently became liable to punishment for false swearing. Public Laws of 1895, p. 32. These appear to be the only penalties for a violation of the law, and none of the statutes regulating the issuance of licenses and the solemnization of the marriage expressly stated that a marriage contracted without a license is invalid. My attention has been called to no decision óf the courts of the state of Pennsylvania since the adoption of the statute cited, declaring such marriages void, and I must assume that the rule pre
I do not regard the provisions of section 1744 of the Code of Civil Procedure mandatory in this case. The marriage was not invalid where contracted. It may. have been voidable in the state of Pennsylvania if made between citizens of that state, because one of the parties was under the age of legal consent by the laws of the state where the contract was formally made. But in determining whether the courts of this state will grant relief to the plaintiff, we may inquire into the residence or citizenship of the parties, the place where the parties intended the contract should take effect, and where their status was to be established.
When the parties were married they were, as already stated, residents of this state, and it was their apparent intent to return to the state of New York immediately, which they did, and to here establish their marriage status and matrimonial domicile, and here to enter into and perform the contract they had formally made elsewhere.
In Kinnier v. Kinnier, 45 N. Y. 535, 544, Church, Ch. J., says: “ It is now well settled that the lex loci which is to govern married persons, and by which the contract is to be annulled, is not the law of the place where the contract was made, but where it exists for the time, where the parties have their domicil, and where they are amenable for any violation of their duties in that relation.”
In Cunningham v. Cunningham, 206 N. Y. 341, the plaintiff resided in New York city and was under the age of eighteen years. The defendant was about forty years of age, and had been a boarder at the house of plaintiff’s parents. On the day of the marriage, the defendant took the plaintiff to the City Hall in the
In Mitchell v. Mitchell, 63 Misc. Rep. 580, Wheeler, J., citing strong authority, says: “ It is a fundamental principle of law that each state has the right to determine the marital status of its own citizens.”
The marriage would have been valid if contracted here; neither party could then have maintained an action for its annulment. There is no evidence that the parties went outside the state to evade the laws of this state. What their purpose was in having the ceremony performed in Pennsylvania does not appear, but it is clear that their intent was to return immediately to this state where they were residents and here establish their matrimonial domicile. Shall we assume that they went to another state to contract a voidable marriage? Is it to be presumed that the parties went into Pennsylvania to go through a meaningless ceremony and enter into a contract to be of no legal effect, and then returned to New York to live together in an illicit and illegal relation terminable at will? It seems to me, rather, that knowing the law of this state they intended to enter into a contract which would be legal where it would be consummated, and the solemn ceremony had the significance to them of establishing a marriage relation which would be valid in this state where they were citizens. It was here that their
The plaintiff has resorted to the courts of this state to determine his rights, and I shall hold that under the laws of this state he has contracted a valid marriage.
There is still another reason why, it seems to me, the plaintiff should be denied relief, to wit, he is seeking to take advantage of his own wrong.
The question as to whether courts sitting in matrimonial cases may apply equitable principles in giving
In passing on the question of allowance of alimony and costs to the defendant in an annulment action, Rapallo, J., says in Griffin v. Griffin, 47 N. Y. 134, 137: “ Yet it has been the constant practice of the Court of Chancery, both before and since the Revised Statutes, to make equitable provision for all these matters; and in so doing, it has been guided by the decisions of the ecclesiastical courts of England in similar cases.
“ This has not been done upon the theory that the Court of Chancery of this State was vested with jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts of England in mat
There seems to have been a long period in which the courts were not called upon to exercise, or did not assert, equitable jurisdiction in such cases, but in Taylor v. Taylor, 63 App. Div. 231, it was held that the husband was not entitled to a decree dissolving his marriage on the ground that the plaintiff’s first husband was living at the time of such marriage, where it appears that he had lived with the plaintiff for more than ten years after obtaining knowledge that her former husband was not dead at the time of her second marriage. While it is not expressly so stated, it is evident that the husband was denied relief on equitable grounds.
In Stokes v. Stokes, 128 App. Div. 838, we first find the principle fairly and plainly stated, that in a matrimonial action the plaintiff may be refused relief where he does not come into court with clean hands. The facts, in brief, were that the defendant had remarried after her husband had absented himself for more than five years, and she claimed she did not know he was living and contracted the second marriage in good faith. Her husband having discovered that her former husband was living, promised to defend the second
In 1909, shortly after the Stokes case had been decided by the Appellate Division of the second department, the Appellate Division in the first department decided a somewhat similar case, Berry v. Berry, 130 App. Div. 53. The action was brought by the husband to annul a marriage upon the ground that at the time of the marriage he had a legal wife living, to whom he was previously married, and who was still living. The plaintiff having contracted a marriage in England in 1885 and lived with his wife in that country for about a year, came to New York, promising to send for her at some future time. The wife continued to live at Leeds, Eng., until 1907, and her whereabouts were well known to the plaintiff, or could have been easily ascertained. In 1897 the plaintiff received a letter speaking of his wife’s death, and shortly after receiv
The question was again before the Appellate Division of the first department in Brown v. Brown, 153 App. Div. 645. This was after the Court of Appeals had made the decision in Stokes v. Stokes. In the Brown case it was held that although a woman married a man with the knowledge that he was already bound by a valid and subsisting marriage, she is entitled, nevertheless, to a decree annulling the marriage for it is absolutely void, and that the court of its own motion could not deny such relief upon equitable
Such is the status of the law in this state at present relative to the application of equitable principles in matrimonial actions. The doctrine is recognized in other states. Rooney v. Rooney, 54 N. J. Eq. 231; Donnelly v. Strong, 175 Mass. 157; 26 Cyc. 911.
In the case at bar the plaintiff induced the defendant to enter into the marriage contract with him by making a false affidavit as to his age, to obtain a license, and by representing to her that he had a written consent to the marriage by his father, but which it was not necessary to use. He now seeks to take advantage of his own wrongdoing, and asks aid of the court to relieve him from the contract which he regards burdensome or inconvenient. The defendant has answered and sufficient facts have been set up in the answer and established upon the trial so that we may say the equitable question is fairly presented to the court. Here, then, it seems we may find one of those “ extreme cases ” referred to by Judge Vann in Stokes v. Stokes, supra, “ where the position of the party seeking relief of the kind sought here is so inequitable that a court of equity will refuse to interfere.”
I, therefore, conclude that the plaintiff has not come
The defendant may have judgment upon the findings made, dismissing the complaint on the merits, with costs.
Ordered accordingly.