4 Ind. 464 | Ind. | 1853
Lydia Riggsbee, by her next friend, sued Develin for breach of marriage contract. The declaration contains three counts: 1. A promise to marry when requested, and refusal. 2. A promise to marry on request, but that he married another. And, 3. To marry in a reasonable time, and refusal.
Develin filed four pleas. First, the general issue, which was afterwards withdrawn. The second and fourth pleas set up a release from Miss Riggsbee before suit, and after she had arrived at the age of eighteen years. The demurrers filed to these pleas were sustained. The third is the only plea leading to an issue of fact. This plea is similar to the second and fourth, with the additional allegation that the release was made with the consent of her father and next friend.
Trial by jury. Verdict and judgment for the defendant in error for 750 dollars.
The first question is on the validity of the second and fourth pleas.
The demurrers were special, assigning for cause that the pleas setup a release as a bar to the action, without making profert of it. If arelease always imports a seal, then the special demurrer was well taken. 1 Chitty Pl. 366.—1 Saund. R. 9, note d. The usual understanding of the word release is, that it is under seal; yet, in some cases, a discharge or release is as valid without a seal as with it. 1 Serg. and Rawle 312.—Delacroix v. Bulkley, 13 Wend.
Such is the case at bar. Neither of the pleas demurred to, as we understand them, allege a release under seal, in terms. The second plea calls it her certain release in writing.
The fourth plea does not allege it to be in writing even. It simply avers, that, in consideration of the notes, she did then and there release and discharge, &c. There is nothing, therefore, in the pleas to which the demurrer for want of proferí was applicable. For from the wording of the pleas and the nature of the promise alleged to be released, it is not to be presumed that the release was under seal. The special demurrer to the second and fourth pleas was, therefore, not well taken, and should have been overruled.
But as these demurrers had also the effect of a general demurrer, if the matter pleaded were insufficient to bar the action, the ruling of the Court was not erroneous. The defence set up in these pleas resolves itself into a single question: Can a female, over the age of eighteen and under twenty-one years, for a valuable consideration, viz., 200 dollars, make a valid release of a marriage contract? If she can, then the pleas are a bar to the action brought by her on such contract.
The general current of authorities is, that the acts of an infant are voidable only. A warrant of attorney to confess judgment is an exception—that is void. 6 Cowen 393. There are other exceptions not necessary to be noticed. Nor, admitting the release in question to be voidable, will we stop to inquire when it was competent for Miss Riggsbee to avoid it. In Roof v. Stafford, the Court
The Courts, in their anxiety to adhere rigidly to the rules in favor of infancy, should not be blind to the subject-matter of the suit. It is not to be denied that a young lady of the ripe age of eighteen or upwards, does not, in point of fact, need the aid of the courts to enable her to make and unmake marriage contracts. Infancy, on such a subject, is in name only, and not in reality. The courts may well be excused from over-nice distinctions in favor of mere nominal infancy.
So it seems to be regarded by the revised statutes of 1843. Thus, section ten of the marriage act reads—
“If either of the persons intending to marry is a male under the age of twenty-one years, or a female under the age of eighteen years, and shall not have had a former wife or husband, the clerk shall not issue a license to such person without the consent of the parent or guardian having the custody of such minor, if there be any in this state competent to act.”
The twelfth section speaks of the lawful age to marry without the consent of the parent or guardian, and provides substantially that the license may issue after the above ages without such consent.
It is not necessary to notice the meaning to be attached to “marriage contract.” These terms are applied both to the public ceremony of marriage, and to the prior contract to marry which that ceremony implies. Hence, the suit here brought is for breach of marriage contract.
The policy of the law in the protection of infants is wise and humane, and should be enforced. But it seems, from the foregoing sections, that the legislature justly concluded that as to the marriage contract, the rigor of the rule might be somewhat relaxed in favor of the fe
In England, it seems that the full age of male and female is twenty-one years. At this age the female may dispose of herself. 1 Black. Comm. 463. But this, says the commentator, is merely arbitrary, and fixed at different times in different countries. Thus, in Naples, the female is at full age at eighteen. Id. 464. We cannot find that the English statutes have changed the law in this respect since the time of Blackstone. So that no light is to be gleaned from that quarter. Nor have we been able to find any American case in point. We therefore place the decision upon the obvious policy flowing from a fair construction of our own statute.
If, at the age of eighteen, the female be an adult as to the marriage contract, it necessarily follows that she is competent to release such contract. Had the statute proceeded a step further, and declared that at the age of eighteen she might contract in relation to personal property, her power to buy, sell, receipt for, release, and do every thing incident to such contracts, could not be seriously doubted. Suppose, under such statute, she accordingly sell her gold watch on credit, her power to receive the price, and receipt to or release the pur-chaser, is necessarily implied in the power to sell. So with the marriage contract. We can see no good reason to distinguish the one case from the other. The power to contract being conferred, the incidents properly belonging to it follow.
We, therefore, conclude that a release of Develin, after
V.
Should the statute so expounded be found to operate injuriously, the legislature have only to impose such further restrictions as in their wisdom may be deemed expedient.
This view of the case renders it unnecessary to notice the instructions given and refused. It also leaves the settlement between the parties in full force—Miss Riggsbee being entitled to the notes given her by Develin in that settlement.
The, judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.