56 Me. 22 | Me. | 1868
It is admitted that John Salter, the husband óf Martha E., the pauper, never had a legal settlement
It is contended that a minor cannot be emancipated even by marriage without the consent of the fattier either express or implied, and the case of White v. Henry & al., 24 Maine, 531, is relied upon, where it was held that a minor son is not emancipated by a marriage without the consent and contrary to the directions of his father.
That case differs materially from the one now under consideration ; there .the marriage was consummated out of the State, here within the State, and within the vicinity of the parent, and it may fairly be presumed that the statute of the State was complied with, requiring the publication of the intentions of marriage a specified time before such intentions could be solemnized. During that period the parent could object if he had cause, and the proceeding be arrested. But here, for aught that appears, no objection was made, or ever has been made by the parent. Nor is that all. The pauper and her husband, for the year after the marriage, lived in the house of her father, as the evidence tends to show, where they were married. The father, too, speaks of the marriage without disapproval. Hence, an implied consent is clearly manifest, which, by all the authorities under the circumstances would constitute emancipation. Consequently, according to the agreement of the parties the defendants are to be defaulted, and damages assessed for the sum of $44,62, with interest from the date of the writ.