22 Md. 468 | Md. | 1864
delivered tbe opinion of tbis Court. Bartol, J., dissenting.
Few questions are more interesting, or more important to society, than those presented by this appeal, — viz:—the validity of marriages between persons within the prohibited degrees, and the power of the Legislature, by retroactive enactments, to restore an inheritable quality to persons, otherwise incapable of taking. For the first time since its passage, as far as the records of this Court inform us, the interpretation of the Act of February 1777, ch. 12, entitled, “An Act concerning Marriages,” is brought in question. The counsel, with an ability and earnestness worthy of the magnitude of the subject, have exhausted the resources of research and argument, to illustrate their views, and contributed much to enable us to arrive at satisfactory conclusions. The leading propositions discussed were:
1st. Was the marriage’ between Robert and Martha Harrison, absolutely void, or only voidable?
2nd. If avoidable, did the Act of 1860, ch. 271, cure the incapacity of the contracting parties, and impart to the issue of the marriage, the faculty of taking as dis-tributees and heirs at law?
In the first proposition is included the minor one, whether the marriage beiug celebrated in the District of Columbia, was within the operation of the first section of the Act. The sections important to the consideration of this case, are as follows:
“An Act concerning Marriages.”
“1. If any person within- this State shall hereafter marry with any person related within any of the degrees of kindred or affinity expressed in the following table, such marriage shall be void.” ■
“2. That if any person shall hereafter marry with any person related within the three degrees of lineal direct consanguinity, or within the first degree of collateral
“6. If any person shall go out of this State and there marry with any person belonging to this State, contrary to this Act, each of said parties shall be liable to the same punishment or penalty, as if the offence had been committed within this State.”
14. That the Chancellor shall and may hear and determine all claims for alimony, in as full and ample manner, as such causes could be heard by the laws of England, in the Ecclesiastical Courts there. ■
“15. That the General Court may inquire into, hear and determine, either on indictment, or petition of either of the parties, the validity of any marriage, and may declare any marriage contrary to the table in this Act, or any second marriage, the first subsisting, null and void; and on appeal, the depositions and evidence given in the cause, shall be transmitted with the record to the Court of Appeals, and thereupon such cause shall be heard, determined and adjudged de novo.” The sections .not quoted relate to the celebration of marriages, the persons by whom celebrated, and the places, churches, or chapels where celebrated, and the banns and licenses — and penalties for violating the same.
1st Point. — The Canon and Civil Law, regulating marriages, was a part of the Common Law, administered by ecclesiastical and civil tribunals in England, and.transplanted to the colonies by our ancestors, without introducing corresponding Courts to enforce them. In the first year ’ of the organization of the State Government, 1 TIT, ch. 12, the General Assembly passed the Act entitled “An Act concerning Marriages.” This Act was
The intention of the Statutes of 25 Hen. 8, ch. 22, 28; Hen. 8, ch. 7 and 32; Hen. 8, ch. 38, was to restore the Levitical computation, and prevent the impeaching of marriages for consanguinity or affinity, without the Levitical degrees. Shelford, 162, 165. The Statute 26 Geo. 2, ch. 33, called the Marriage Act, was founded on the great mischiefs and inconveniences which had arisen from clandestine marriages, and to prevent them in future; hence this Act prescribed the place and modes of solemnizing marriages in England; all marriages solemnized after the 25th of March 1754, without publication of
The Statute of 5 and 6 William 4, ch. 54, recites — That all marriages between persons within the prohibited degrees, are voidable only by sentence of the Ecclesiastical Court, pronounced during the lifetime of the parties thereto, and it is unreasonable that the state and condition of the children of marriages between persons within the prohibited degrees of affinity, should remain unsettled during so long a period, and it is fitting that all marriages which may hereafter be celebrated between persons within the prohibited degrees of consanguinity or affinity, be ipso facto void, and not merely voidable. Shelford, ch. 3, p. 156. It therefore enacts that all marriages thereafter celebrated between persons within the prohibited degrees,'shall be absolutely null and void to all intents and purposes whatsoever. The provisions of this Statute, are in marked contrast with the Act of 1777. It recites the indissoluble character of marriages, for canonical disabilities in Ecclesiastical. Courts, except by sentence pronounced during the lifetime of the parties thereto. The inconvenience and unreasonableness of suspending the state and condition of the children of marriages between persons within the prohibited degrees of affinity, during so long a period; and to cure this evil, and prevent all marriages in future between persons within the prohibited degrees, in emphatic language, declares such marriages shall be absolutely null and void, to all intents and purposes whatever, not voidable. The British Statute, shows an intelligent, deliberate purpose to destroy the distinction between canonical and civil disabilities to this extent.
The Maryland Act indicates no such purpose. No Ecclesiastical Court existed here; and instead of destroying, it erected a jurisdiction with power upon petition of either of the parties, or on indictment, to inquire into,
/ ‘ ‘It is not to be presumed that the legislature intended to make any innovation upon the Common Law, further than the case absolutely required. The law rather infers that the Act did not intend to make any alteration other than what is specified, and besides what has been plainly pronounced; for if the Parliament had had that design, it is naturally said they would have expressed it.” * * *
The Act of l'l'J'l, ch. 12, being penal in its character, must be taken strictly “in the point of defining and setting down the fact and the punishment.” The Statute 5 Elia., ch. 4, sec. 41, says all indentures of apprenticeship, made otherwise than is by that Act directed, shall be clearly void in law to all intents and purposes whatsoever.” C. J. Mansfield observed: '“The words of the 41st section certainly at first startle one. Yet there have been many cases cited which say that indentures which do not conform to the Act shall be only voidable and not void. If the word voidable were applied to adults it would be extremely strange; with respect to infants, if applied to them, one can understand it. In all those cases the question arose with respect to the rights of infant apprentices; hut there has been no case cited, when the doctrine that the contract is voidable not void, is applied to the case of a master, and it would be very wonderful if there were.” The acts of the infants under the Act of Elizabeth, are incomparably less important than those of the issue under the Marriage Act; and if words of stronger import were relaxed to shield and preserve the former, words of less force may be restricted by the general provisions of the Act, and those in pari materia to save the latter from disseisin and bastardy.
“There is in our books, great looseness, and no little confusion in the use of the terms void and voidable, growing perhaps in some degree out of the imperfection of language. There are at least some kinds of defects which
“1st. Proceedings may be wholly void, without force or effect as to all persons and for all purposes, and incapable of being or being made otherwise. 2nd. Things may be void as to some person and for some purposes, and as to them, incapable of being otherwise, which are yet valid as to other persons, and effectual for other purposes. 3rd. Things may be void as to all persons, and for all purposes, or as to some persons and for some purposes, though not so as to others, until they are confirmed; but though said to be void, they are not so in the broadest sense of that term, because they have a capacity of being confirmed, and after such confirmation, they are binding. For this kind of defect, our language affords no distinctive term. They are strictly neither void, that is mere nullities, nor voidable, because they do not require to be avoided; but until confirmed, they are without validity. They are usually spoken of as void, and as usage is the only law of language, they are so called correctly. It is therefore always to be considered an open question, to be decided by the connexion and otherwise, whether the term void is used in a given instance in one or the other of these, in some respects dissimilar senses.” State vs. Richmond, 6 Foster, (N. H.,) 238.
By the 26 Geo. 2, ch. 33, sec. 8, all marriages solemnized contrary to that Act “shall be null and void to all intents and purposes whatsoever.” — “In the case of Crompton vs. Bearcroft, Bul. N. P., 113, cited in Bac. Ahr. 459, note a, (December 1st 1768,) — the appellant and respondent both being English subjects, and the appellant under age, ran away without the consent of her guardian, and were married in Scotland, and in a suit brought in the Spiritual Court to annul the marriage, it was holden, that the marriage was good.” The anno
When it is considered that the table of prohibited degrees, adopted by the Marriage Act, embraced both lineal and collateral relations, those .by consanguinity, as well as affinity, and pronounced them alike void, without regard to the degree of consanguinity or affinity; it is impossible to presume that the word “void” was used in its most absolute and unrestricted sense. The 14th section recognizes the existence of the Ecclesiastical Courts in England, and confers upon the Chancellor, in all causes for alimony, power to hear and determine in as ample a manner as such causes could be heard in the Ecclesiastical Courts there. Is it a forced construction to say, that when in the 15th section it authorizes the General Court to inquire into, hear and determine either on indictment or petition of either of the parties, the validity of any marriage, and to declare any marriage contrary to the table, null and void, it was intended that the same rules which prevailed in the Ecclesiastical Courts in such cases, should prevail in the General Court, and until such decree or judgment of the General Court, the marriage should not he void but voidable.
The Act evidently imports there should be action in the lifetime of the parties, and requires upon appeal, that “the depositions and evidence given in the cause, shall be transmitted with the record to the Court of Appeals, and
2nd Point. — A series of decisions of this Court, upon the constitutionality of laws, enacted by the General Assembly, has established these principles of construction. A Legislative Act should not be pronounced unconstitutional or invalid in a doubtful case, where the doubt is !‘bona fide” and well founded. It is the exercise of a judicial power of a grave and delicate nature, which can only be warranted in a clear case. Begent’s Case, 9 G. & J., 383. Doyle vs. Comm’rs, &c., 12 G. & J., 438. Comm’rs of Public Schools of A. Co. vs. The County Commr’s, 20 Md. Rep., 439.
“A power exercised by the General Assembly from the adoption of the Constitution to the present time, ought to be deemed almost conclusive evidence of its possession by that body.” A cotemporaneous construction of the Constitution of such duration, continually practised under, and through which many rights have been acquired, ought not to be shaken but upon the ground of manifest error and cogent necessity. State vs. Mayhew, 2 Gill, 468.
The Act of 1860, ch. 211, enacts: “That all marriages heretofore made and celebrated in or out of this State, by and between persons related within the following degrees of affinity, to wit: a man and his niece, or a woman and her nephew, be and the same are hereby confirmed and made valid to every intent and purpose, from the time of the celebration of such marriages respectively; and every such marriage shall be held and taken by all Courts of
The right to confirm, is the necessary corollary of a power to dissolve marriage by divorce. The consequence of which is, incidentally, authority to determine the status of the issue of the marriage.- In this State the Legislature has exercised for three-fóuríhs of a century the most plenary power over the marriage contract. It cannot be predicated of such legislation, because it incidentally affects the rights of property, that it conflicts with indefeasible or vested rights. Heirship and succession are incidents of marriage, and follow its regulation. Where the parties contracting marriage labor under legal disabilities, the contract is liable to be dissolved by the Courts or affirmed by the Legislature. All standing in any degree of relationship are subject to be affected by anything which operates on those they are related to. Their rights are inchoate not vested. The exercise of similar powers by the General Assembly for various pur
The Regent’s case, 9 G. &J., 365, relied on by the appel-lees to sustain their position, that the Act of 1860 was opposed to the fundamental principles of right and justice inherent in the nature and spirit of the social compact, bears no analogy to the present in any of its features. That was an attempt to abolish a private corporation, and invest another with all the franchises and property of the corporation to be abolished. It was a legislative ouster affecting that particular body, in the nature of a sentence,
It follows from the preceding views, that the prayer granted by the Court below, assuming that the marriage between Robert and Martha Harrison was void ab initio, and not made valid by the Act of 1860, ch. 2*71, was in our judgment improperly granted, and the judgment below must be reversed. This conclusion being decisive of the action, it is unnecessary to discuss the minor points mooted in the argument of the cause.
Judgment reversed.