285 N.W. 83 | Minn. | 1939
"If any person intending to marry shall be under age, and shall not have had a former husband or wife, such license shall not be issued unless the consent of the parents or guardians shall be personally given before the clerk, or certified under the hand of such parents or guardians, attested by two witnesses, one of whom shall appear before such clerk and make oath that he saw said parents or guardians subscribe, or heard them acknowledge, the same."
Defendant Mample, a male of the age of 21 years, applied to petitioner as clerk of court to issue a license for a marriage to Eleanor M. Fischer, a female of the age of 20 years. Neither of the parties intending to marry had had a former spouse. Miss Fischer's parents are alive and have not consented to the issuance of a marriage license. The clerk's reason for not issuing a license was that the word "age" as used in § 8569,supra, means legal age, which is 21 years for both males and females under 3 Mason Minn. St. 1938 Supp. § 8992-185, Vlasak v. Vlasak,
When considered alone, the meaning of the word "age" in the marriage license statute is ambiguous due to lack of definition of the word as there used, and the argument implied from permitting minors to marry at the ages mentioned in § 8563 that if they are old enough to marry they should be entitled to a marriage license. When considered in the light of the purpose and history of the marriage license statute it appears that age was used as meaning legal age. The statutes in nearly every state in the Union require the consent of the parents or guardian before the issuance of a marriage license to a minor. In most states the ages are specified as 21 for males and 18 for females. Browning v. Browning,
"In forbidding the issuance of a license for the marriage of a minor without the consent of the parent or guardian the legislature is to be regarded, * * * as intending to prevent minors from the improvident exercise of the power to enter the marriage relation, rather than to deprive them of the capacity to do so."
These views are in accord with what we said in State ex rel. Scott v. Lowell,
It is to be remembered that minors having capacity to marry at the ages mentioned are still children subject to parental control and discipline. The parental control continues until marriage. After marriage they are deemed to be emancipated from parental control not by virtue of their age but by the marriage relation, which is inconsistent with subjection to the control of the parent. State ex rel. Scott v. Lowell, supra. The intention of the statute is that the parent may exercise control and discipline over his *96 child until marriage and to that end advise him and prevent him if possible from contracting an ill-advised marriage.
Reversed.2
MR. JUSTICE HILTON, incapacitated by illness, took no part.