delivered the opinion of the Court.
It appears from the facts in the case that the mother of the paupers, prior to the passage of the Resolve of March 19, 1821, had her legal settlement in North Yarmouth; that the mother was married in 1802, supposed by the parties legally, but the person who performed the marriage ceremony was not legally authorized to solemnize marriages ; that the mother continued ever after to live with her husband, until his decease, and that the paupers whose settlement is contested were the fruit of their union. It further appears that the father of the paupers, the husband de facto, had his settlement in Lewiston. The question therefore presented in this case, for the decision of the Court, is whether the Resolve already mentioned is constitutional and valid, so far as to render the marriage a valid marriage, for all the purposes of the settlement act.
Every statute and resolve passed by the legislature is presumed to be Constitutional. To justify - a court in declaring an act to be
