41 S.E.2d 402 | Ga. | 1947
The petition in this case, which was filed in the superior court by a man against a woman seeking cancellation of a marriage record in the court of ordinary, on account of alleged fraud of the woman or some one acting for her in procuring a license without the knowledge or consent *810 of the man, which license was returned to the ordinary together with a forged certificate of marriage and duly recorded, but which petition did not make either the ordinary or the State Board of Health a party defendant, was insufficient as against demurrer to set forth a cause of action for the relief sought.
The defendant interposed separate demurrers to the petition on general and special grounds, and also filed an answer which denied material allegations of the petition, and averred that she and the petitioner had been married, and lived together as man and wife. Judge R. Earl Camp, in separate orders, overruled all of the above grounds of demurrer. Exceptions pendente lite, duly certified, were filed by the defendant.
A motion for continuance filed by the defendant was overruled. At the conclusion of the testimony of the witnesses for the plaintiff, the defendant declined to offer any evidence, whereupon the court, on motion, directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant's motion for a new trial as amended was overruled by Judge Eschol Graham, and the case comes to this court upon the defendant's exceptions to that judgment. In the bill of exceptions the defendant also assigned error on her exceptions pendente lite.
The exceptions pendente lite recite that the defendant renewed her demurrers, both general and special, to the petition as amended, whereas the transcript of the record as brought to this court does not contain such a renewal of the demurrers. See, in this connection, Johnson v. Sherrer,
A controlling question is whether the petition was subject to demurrer on the grounds, (1) that it failed to set out a cause of *812 action, and (2) that it shows on its face a collateral attack on a judicial act of the Ordinary of Johnson County without making him a party.
The following statutes are indicative of the importance that the State places upon keeping correct marriage records. "Such application [for marriage license] shall be filed in the office of the ordinary before a marriage license shall be issued, and shall remain in the permanent files in the office of the ordinary, and may be used as evidence in any court of law under the rules of evidence made and provided in similar cases." Code (Ann.), § 53-203. "When a marriage license shall be issued by the ordinary, it shall be returned to the ordinary by the officer or minister solemnizing the marriage and forwarded by the ordinary to the State Board of Health, to be permanently retained by said board." § 53-311.
Counsel do not cite a Georgia case where a party has sought to cancel a marriage license, nor has this court been able to find such case. Vanderbilt v. Mitchell,
Randazzo v. Roppolo (Sup.), 105 N.Y. Supp. 481, is a case where a woman went through the form of a marriage ceremony with a man who impersonated the plaintiff. This was done at the instance of the woman. The priest performing such marriage ceremony filed his certificate of a marriage between the woman and the *813
plaintiff with the bureau of vital statistics, and thereupon the woman obtained a transcript of such record, and caused the same to be lodged and filed with the authorities in the province of the plaintiff's birth in Italy. The purpose of the woman was to claim, at some time in the future, to be the plaintiff's wife, or his widow after his death. The plaintiff brought his action in equity, and made parties defendant the woman, Francesca Roppolo, and Thomas Darlington, as Commissioner of Health of the City of New York, who was, under the law of New York, the custodian of the records of marriages. The Supreme Court of New York held that the case was within the jurisdiction of a court of equity, and judicially determined and decreed that the plaintiff was not, as stated in the certificate filed, married to the defendant; that, as to the plaintiff, the pretended marriage was a nullity; and that the defendant, Francesca Roppolo, be perpetually restrained and enjoined from representing herself to be the wife of the plaintiff, or from claiming any right and interest in his property and estate. The defendant, Thomas Darlington, as Commissioner of Health of the City of New York, was directed to endorse upon the certificate of marriage a reference to the above decree. See also 45 Am. Jur., 424, § 11; Aimone v. Gerardi,
An equitable suit to annul a marriage is not maintainable in this State for causes recognized by the statute as grounds for total divorce. Baxter v. Rogers,
In Pope v. United States Fidelity c. Co.,
Applying the above principles to the pleadings in the instant case, the petition, which did not make either the ordinary or the State Board of Health a party defendant, was insufficient to set forth a cause of action for cancellation of the marriage record. Since the error in overruling the general demurrer rendered further rulings nugatory, it is not now necessary to determine and no decision is made on the question of whether the petitioner prayed for relief that would, in addition to destroying the evidential character of the marriage record, have forever precluded a trial on the question of marriage.
The present case is distinguished by its facts from Beavers
v. Williams,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur. *815