20 Ga. 702 | Ga. | 1856
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
James Barron having been the party whose improper or criminal conduct authorized the divorce, was prohibited from
But what is the status of the issue of this last marriage ? Are they legitimate or illegitimate ?
The offspring, in a contest for their civil rights, are not estopped from showing the dissolution of the first marriage.. They do not occupy the position of their criminal parent.. They may prove the dissolution of the first marriage, and if it is of any advantage to them, they may claim it. The Act, for the violation of which their father might have been punished, does not declare this second marriage void; and independent of the light thrown upon the subject by subsequent legislation, it might be well maintained, perhaps, that the taint of bastardy does not attach to them.
By the divorce, the first marriage was totally dissolved; the husband was, in fact, left without a wife; he was of full age and able to contract; he was not deficient in mental capacity ; and is it not a fair inference that the Legislature did not intend to involve in his difficulty a confiding woman and innocent offspring, by declaring a marriage void which hfr might subsequently enter into? By Statutes of England,.
The first marriage Act in England was the Act of 26 George 2d. That Act was never of force in this country; It expressly provides that it shall not extend to marriages solemnized beyond seas. There is a marked difference between that -Statute and our own, as respects the solemnization of marriages. That Act not only inflicts a most severe penalty on persons’who solemnize marriages contrary to its provisions, but it also declares all marriages thus solemnized void. Our Statutes inflict a penalty, but do not declare the ■ marriage void. (Cobb’s New Dig. 282, 818, 819.)
But if we should hold the marriage to be void, which we do not, we should be bound, in deference to the unmistakeable policy of our Legislature, to hold that the issue are not bastards, when no criminal prosecution was instituted against the offending parent during his lifetime.. Our law goes farther, and shows most clearly the legislative intent, that the blameless offspring of an acknowledged meretricious marriage,, or marriage declared void by Statute, shall not be bastardized and subjected to the civil consequences which fall upon the fruits of such an unlawful union in England. Even
We decide that the judgment of the Court below must be ..affirmed.