165 N.E. 460 | NY | 1929
In this action for a separation the complaint alleges "that the parties hereto were duly married on the 24th day of October, 1925." The answer denies the allegation. Concededly, on the day named the parties to the action were on board the steamshipLeviathan, then on the high seas, bound from the port of New York to Southampton, England. When the ship was forty miles out from the port of New York, its captain *316 performed a marriage ceremony, wherein these parties were the principals. In the course of the ceremony the captain asked the plaintiff if she took the defendant for her husband; asked the defendant if he took the plaintiff for his wife; received an affirmative answer from each; and thereupon pronounced them man and wife. Cohabitation of the principals followed the ceremony. The ultimate question for decision here is this: Were the parties upon the occasion in question lawfully united in marriage?
It is elementary that marriage is a civil contract; that the law deals with it as it does with all other contracts; that it pronounces a marriage to be valid wherever a man and woman, able and willing to contract, do, per verba de presenti, promise to become husband and wife. (Black Com. Sharswood, vol. I, p. 432-441; Kent's Com. vol. 2, p. 57; Clayton v. Wardell,
The defendant, prior to the performance of the marriage *318
ceremony in question, was already a married man. His former wife had procured, in this jurisdiction, a decree of divorce against him, dissolving the marriage on the ground of adultery. According to the terms of the decree, and the laws of this State, the defendant was forbidden to remarry during the life of his then wife. The wife, who procured the decree, is still living. It is well settled that the provisions of our statute forbidding the remarriage of a party who has been divorced for adultery have no extraterritorial effect; that a subsequent marriage of the guilty party, during the life of the innocent party, in a sister State, if valid in that State, will be recognized here as a lawful marriage. (Moore v. Hegeman,
"The Steamship Leviathan of New York, N.Y." was registered in the port of New York. The certificate of registry specifies that the "United States of America represented by the United States Shipping Board is the only owner of the vessel called the Leviathan of New York, N.Y." On the high seas it flew the flag of the United States. A ship in the open sea is regarded by the law of nations as a part of the territory whose flag such ship carries. (Wharton, Conflict of Laws, sec. 356.) Wharton says: "As between the several states in the American Union, a ship at sea is presumed to belong to the state in which it is registered." For this statement the sole authority is Crapo v. Kelly (16 Wall. [U.S.] 610). We think that the learned author misconceived the decision in that case. The ship there considered was a vessel owned by residents of the State of Massachusetts. It was, likewise, registered at a port within the State of Massachusetts. As we read the case, the court decided that the vessel was a Massachusetts ship, not because it had a Massachusetts registry, but because its owners were citizens of Massachusetts. The court said: "Again, *319
the owners of this vessel and the assignees in insolvency were citizens of Massachusetts, and subject to her laws. It is not doubted that a sale of property between them of property on board of this vessel, or of the vessel itself, would be regulated by the laws of Massachusetts." In The Havana (64 Fed. Rep. 496) it was held that a vessel owned by a New Jersey corporation, although registered in New York, was a New Jersey vessel. InInternational Navigation Co. v. Lindstrom (123 Fed. Rep. 475) it was said: "It is plain that the New York statute did not reach the case, because, inasmuch as the steamship belonged to a citizen of New Jersey, it was a vessel of that state, notwithstanding its registry in New York." To the same effect areUnited States Shipping Board v. Greenwald
(
We have hitherto assumed that the marriage in question had not the positive sanction of any Federal statute, or of the common law of any State, territory or district of the United States, carried upon the high seas by the steamship Leviathan. We think the fact is otherwise. *320
Congress had provided that "every vessel making voyages from a port in the United States to any foreign port" should have an official log book; that every master of such a vessel should make entry therein of "Every marriage taking place on board, with the names and ages of the parties." (Mason's U.S. Code, vol. 3, title 46, sec. 201.) "Every marriage taking place on board" is certainly inclusive of marriages other than those sanctioned by the municipal laws of the State of the ship's ownership. We take it that Congress had thus recognized that on board a ship at sea, notwithstanding the absence of municipal laws so carried, there is nevertheless a law of marriage. That law can be none other than the law, common to all nations, which pronounces valid all consensual marriages between a man and woman who are, in the view of all civilized people, competent to marry. In this view, the marriage between the parties to this action, by force of a Federal statute, which Congress was fully empowered to enact (The Hamilton, supra), was a valid marriage.
If the Federal statute cannot thus be interpreted, then we think that the common law of the District of Columbia prevailed to give sanction to the marriage. We have thus far assumed that the title to the steamship Leviathan was in the United States. The certificate of registry so states, and the referee has so found. Moreover, the respondent does not appear to have disputed the point. However, we think that such was not the fact. An act of Congress of June 5, 1920, provided in part as follows: "All vessels * * * acquired by the President * * * in pursuance of the joint resolution entitled `Joint Resolution authorizing the President to take over for the United States the possession and title of any vessel within its jurisdiction, which at the time of coming therein was owned in whole or in part by any corporation, citizen, or subject of any nation with which the United States may be at war, or was under register of any such *321
nation, and for other purposes,' approved May 12, 1917, * * * are hereby transferred to the board * * *." (Mason's U.S. Code, vol. 3, title 46, chap. 24, sec. 863.) The "board" is the United States Shipping Board. The steamship Leviathan was a vessel of the class referred to by the joint resolution. In Sloan ShipYards Corp. v. U.S. Fleet Corp. (
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *322