2 Aik. 41 | Vt. | 1826
After solemn argument,, the opinion of the Court was pronounced by
This writ of error is sued, to reverse the judgment of the county court, in an action brought by the plaintiff
The first section of the statute prohibits intermarriages within certain degrees, and declares them null and void. The second section gives authority to solemnize marriages, to every ordained minister in the county in which .he is settled, and has his permanent residence, and to every justice of the peace within his proper sphere of jurisdiction. The third section provides, that previous to any marriage being solemnized, the intention thereof shall be published, in the manner therein prescribed; and it is made the duty of the person officiating in the publication, to make and deliver to the parties a certificate, that the intention of marriage between them has been published agreeably to law. Then follows the fourth section, which enacts, “that if any minister of the gospel, or justice of the peace, shall join any persons in marriage, without a certificate as aforesaid, or before such minister or justice is certified of the consent of the parents, guardians or masters, (if any there be,) if either party be a minor, or shall otherwise than is expressly allowed by this act, join any persons in marriage, they shall, severally, forfeit and pay, &c.” The argument on the part of the defendant is, that the statute must receive a strict construction, and that the word “or,” which connects the two first clauses, being taken in its appropriate disjunctive sense, the statute does not prohibit the joining of any persons in marriage', although one is a minor, without consent of parents, provided there has been a publication of the intention of the marriage; and that the concurrence of both circurm stances, publication and consent, which a copulative construction would require, is not necessary to authorize the act. One objection which at once arises to this construction is, that if it makes publication of the intention of marriage supersede the consent of parents, it must also make the consent of parents, in every case co.ming within the purview of the second clause of
The principle is recognized and distinctly admitted, and is by no means to be departed from in this case, that penal statutes are to be construed strictly, according to the intention of the legislature, as discovered by the import of the words used. It is a primary and leading rule, and at the same time a safe and salutary one, peculiarly adapted to the nature and genius of a free government, that a penal law is not to be construed by equity, so as to extend it to cases not within the correct and ordinary meaning of the expressions of the law. To determine that a case is within the law, the language must authorize the court to say so. If any of the words used, however, are in themselves ambiguous or equivocal, and the sense doubtful, they must of course be construed according as the context and subject matter require them to be, in order to make the whole consistent and sensible, and give them the effect which was intended. Where they are capable of different meanings, that meaning must be taken which will support the intention, and not that which will defeat it. The Court, however, are not to create ambiguity, or arbitrarily give the words a meaning different from their common acceptation. In the case before us, therefore, we are not to depart from the obvious import of the words of the statute, but are to give effect to the law, according to the intention as collected from the words employed. But on the plain sense of the words, and even adopting a strict grammatical construction, the meaning appears to be clear and consistent, and manifestly to bring the case within the statute. If the1 phraseology of the statute had been somewhat different from what it is, as for instance, if the words had been “shall join any persons in marriage without a certificate as aforesaid, or consent of parents, &c.,” the grammatical construction, probably, would have been as the defendant now contends it is; and both publication of the intention of marriage and the consent of parents might not have been necessary, but either might have been sufficient to authorize the marriage. In such case, the conjunction “or” would connect words only, and show the relation which the words so connected have to other parts of the same clause or sentence; in the statute as it stands, it con
Construing the act by itself, therefore, and without adverting to the policy of it, or the probable intention of the legislature, it plainly makes the fact of joining a minor in marriage, without the consent of parents, a distinct and substantive of-fence. It is solemnizing a marriage, unattended with one of several requisites, prescribed by the statute in a given cáse, and consequently is an act, constituted and declared to be an offence, which shall incur the penalty.
If it were allowable, in a case of this nature, to enter into the reason and policy of the law, it would be found, that the construction we have adopted is as clearly required by the reason and policy, as it is by the words, of the act. Marriage is a contract of the highest importance, not only to the parties, but to civil society ; and it is unquestionably both wise and fit, to subject it to such regulations, as will stop all private and clandestine marriages, and thus prevent those which are unwarrantable or illegal. To this end, and to guard against fraud and surprise, publication of the intention of the parties is a salutary regulation, and is wisely made indispensable in all cases; and in the case of minors, whose judgments are not supposed to be matured, and whose feelings and passions expose them to acts of rashness and indiscretion, it is peculiarly fit that the consent of parents should also be required, not only as an additional security against fraud and surprise, but to preserve the peace and tranquility of families. In those governments which have been most distinguished for a well regulated system of laws, the consent of parents has been made an indispensable requisition. The civil law made the consent of the parent or tutor necessa-sary at all ages, unless the children were emancipated, or out of the parent’s powerl The same provision appears to have been adopted in France and Holland, with this difference, as Blackstone says, that in France the sons could not marry without consent of parents, till thirty years of age, nor the daughters till twenty-five; and in Holland, the sons were at their own disposal at twenty-five, and the daughters at twenty. It is true, that by the common law, if the parties themselves were of the age of consent, which was fourteen in males, and twelve in females, there wanted no other concurrence to make the marriage valid. But as early as the reign of William III, penalties
Judgment for the plaintiff, accordingly.