137 Ga. 159 | Ga. | 1911
The action was by E. Lewis Hill against M. D. Luke, Mrs. Ellen Luke, Warren J. Luke, W. Z. Luke, and Jim Johnson, to recover of them damages for a malicious prosecution and for abduction and alienation of the affections of his wife, Nora Hill, nee Luke, the daughter of the defendants M. D. and Mrs. Ellen Luke. According to the evidence of the plaintiff he married Nora Luke on the night of the 6th or 7th of December, 1907. Agreeably to a previous arrangement she met the plaintiff at an ap
The defendants denied liability, and also denied that they were actuated by any other motive than to find the minor daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Luke and restore her to her parents. They asserted, that in the suing out of the warrant they acted under the advice of counsel; that the alleged marriage of Nora Luke to the plaintiff was illegal, because at the time the marriage ceremony was performed she was less than fourteen years of age; and that the marriage had subsequently been annulled by a decree of court. There was a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendants made a motion for new trial, which was overruled by the court, and they excepted.
It is a general universal rule that estoppels must be mutual. Strangers can neither take advantage of, nor be bound by, an estoppel. Harris v. Amoskeag Lumber Company, 101 Ga. 643 (29 S. E. 302). A decree in a matrimonial suit fixing the status of the parties, in distinction from the specific findings therein, is to be regarded as a judgment quasi in rem. So far as the adjudication fixes the status of the parties, the judgment concludes both parties and strangers; but, beyond the adjudication of the status, the decree does not conclude strangers. Bigelow on Estoppel, 227. Our statute fixes the age of consent to marry in the female at fourteen years; and while the ceremonial marriage performed between the female who has not reached this age and the man competent to contract marriage may be said to be void, yet the female, after reaching the consentable age, may affirm the marriage, and it is thereafter binding, and no new marriage is required. 1 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, 577. Such marriages partake more of the nature of voidable than void marriages; they are imperfect .marriages which the party may affirm or disaffirm after reaching the age of consent. Hence, upon reason, a decree in a nullity suit because of the non-age of one of the parties should be treated as a decree of dissolution of a voidable marriage, so far as it affects strangers. The adjudication of the status is conclusive upon strangers, but does not bind them upon causes of action springing from the marital relation prior to the decree. A divorce decree will not estop a party thereto from contesting with a stranger the truth of the grounds as affecting his liability in another suit upon a cause of action arising pending the divorce suit but before the
Judgment affirmed.