The question presented by this appeal is whether an action for annulment of a marriage based upon a claim of lack of mental capacity of the husband may be maintained after his death. We conclude that it cannot because under our statutory scheme, such marriages are voidable, rather than void ab initio, and their nullity can be declared only from the date of the decree. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s order granting appellee’s amended motion to dismiss.
I.
Factual and Procedural Background
Appellant, Wallace Randall, as next friend of his father, Darrell Randall (Dr. Randall), filed a complaint for annulment of his father’s marriage to appellee, Marietta Selavonova Keene, on the ground that Dr. Randall lacked the capacity to enter into a marriage. According to the allegations in the complaint, the marriage ceremony, originally set for June 2, 2007, took place on April 7, 2007, without appellant’s knowledge. On May 30, 2007, appellant’s wife, Kathryn E. Randall, had filed a Petition for General Proceeding in the Probate Division of the Superior Court
Appellee moved to dismiss the annulment action, but Dr. Randall died before the motion was decided. Appellee then filed an amended motion to dismiss in which she argued that the action could not be maintained after Dr. Randall’s death. The case was transferred to the Probate Division of Superior Court. Concluding that a cause of action for annulment cannot be maintained after the death of one of the parties to the marriage, the Probate Court granted appellee’s amended motion to dismiss.
II.
Our local statutes specify and treat differently those marriages that are considered to be void ab initio and those that are designated voidable upon decree. The significance of this distinction is that “a marriage void ab initio is subject to collateral attack at any time whereas a marriage merely voidable cannot be annulled after the death of either spouse.” Andrade v. Jackson,
Appellant argues that there is precedent for treating marriages like the one challenged here as void rather than voidable. He contends that one who lacks the mental capacity to marry cannot form a marital union, and therefore, the marriage should be considered void and open to collateral attack in a proceeding to determine the lawful heirs of the incapacitated person’s estate. In support of his argument, appellant relies upon this court’s opinion in An-drade, supra. The case does not support appellant’s position. In Andrade, this court considered whether the Family Division of Superior Court had jurisdiction to annul a marriage of a deceased person, determine the existence of a common law marriage between decedent and another, and declare paternity after the death of the putative spouse/parent. Andrade,
The other authority cited by appellant is a case from the state of New Jersey, In re Estate of Santolino,
So ordered.
Notes
. See generally D.C.Code §§ 21-2001 to -2085 (2001) (the District of Columbia Guardianship, Protective Proceedings, and Durable Power of Attorney Act of 1986) which provides a system of limited and general guard-ianships for incapacitated individuals and protective proceedings concerned with management of their estates. See also Super. Ct. Prob. R. 301-334 (governing intervention proceedings).
. D.C.Code § 46-404 provides that proceedings to annul a marriage on behalf of a lunatic and certain others may be instituted by a next friend.
.Appellant sought to amend his complaint to preclude appellee from making a claim against the decedent's estate because of the terms of a prenuptial agreement. However, the court held that leave of court was not required to amend the complaint because no responsive pleading had been filed. See Wilson v. Wilson,
. The "Marriage Amendment Act of 2008,” D.C. Law 17-222, embodying the above-described provision of D.C.Code § 46-403 (2001 as amended), became effective September 11, 2008, prior to the date that the trial court decided this case (February 4, 2009). This amendment rewrote subparagraph 1 which previously listed as illegal the marriage of "an idiot” or "a person adjudged to be a lunatic” and substituted in lieu thereof “a person ... unable by reason of mental incapacity to give valid consent to the marriage.” See D.C.Code § 46-403 (2001). It also repealed a provision (subparagraph 3) listing as voidable a marriage where either party for physical causes was incapable of marrying. Id. The changes do not affect the disposition of the case, and the parties do not argue otherwise.
. The case was decided under the provisions of D.C.Code § 30-103 (1967) which listed as void only from the date of decree the marriage of a person adjudged to be a lunatic, marriages procured by force or fraud, marriages by someone physically incapable or too young to consent {i.e., 16 years).
. In Loughran, the Supreme Court considered whether a widow could be denied a share in her deceased husband’s estate because her marriage was in contravention of a statute prohibiting the remarriage of a person divorced on the ground of adultery. The Supreme Court concluded that the statute had no extraterritorial effect that prohibited her remarriage outside of the District. Particularly relevant to the present case, the Supreme Court noted that the statute did not purport to make such marriages void ab ini-tio, but at most voidable, which meant that a cause of action for annulment abated upon the death of either spouse. Id.,
. Pub.L. No. 91-358, 84 Stat. 473 (1970).
. In Nunley, supra, this court held that the Domestic Relations Branch of the D.C. Court of General Sessions, the predecessor to the Family Division of Superior Court, did not have jurisdiction to annul a marriage where the primary object of the suit was to bar decedent's putative wife from participation in the decedent's estate.
. In Ramshardt, the plaintiff sought an annulment pursuant to a New Jersey statute (N.J.S.A.2A:34-l(d)) on the grounds of "a lack of mutual assent to the marital relationship.”
. In Santolino, several grounds were asserted for the posthumous annulment of the marriage of an eighty-one and one-half year old man to a forty-six year old woman less than one month before he died, including lack of capacity to consent to the marriage due to mental condition.
. We agree with the trial court's observation that there may be sound reasons for allowing heirs and legatees to attack the marriages of incapacitated persons posthumously for the purpose of determining the rightful distribution of their estates, but that is a matter for legislative determination and not the courts, given current statutory law.
