148 Ga. 625 | Ga. | 1918
(After stating the foregoing facts.) We are of the opinion that the court properly refused to allow alimony in this case. The defendant in the cross-petition was under seventeen years of age at the time of the marriage, and is still under that age. He could not, therefore, contract marriage, and has not yet reached an age where he can by his acts or declarations ratify and make perfect the inchoate marriage. Civil Code, § 2931; Americus Gas &c. Co. v. Coleman, 16 Ga. App. 17 (84 S. E. 493); Crapps v. Smith, 9 Ga. App. 400 (71 S. E. 501); Smith v. Smith, 84 Ga. 440 (11 S. E. 496, 8 L. R. A. 362). It is urged by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the libellant avers in his petition that he and the defendant intermarried, and that this is a solemn admission' in judicio and can not be contradicted. We are of the opinion, however, that this allegation should be construed in .the light of the other pleadings filed by the plaintiff, which, while referred to as a response to the defendant’s cross-petition, can also be regarded as an amendment to the petition. And construing the allegation that the plaintiff is under the age of seventeen years (an allegation supported at the hearing by uncontroverted evidence) with the original allegation that the plaintiff and the defendant intermarried, the latter allegation means merely that they went through the ceremony of marriage and became man and wife so far as such a ceremony would make them man and wife. If a pleader in a case like this alleges that he is sixteen years of age and that at the age of fifteen he and a woman were intermarried, the allegations, considered together, can only have the meaning which we have indicated above; that is, that there was a ceremony of marriage. If the plaintiff and the defendant had continued to live together,until the plaintiff was seventeen years of age, and had then expressly ratified the marriage, there would have been a valid contract of marriage; or if they had continued to cohabit and live together as man and wife, there would have been an im
Judgment affirmed.