The plaintiff, in her bill, which was filed in the Court of Equity for the county of Wake, alleged that on 30 April, 1861, the marriage ceremony was performed in the city of Raleigh between her and the defendant, James T. Morehead; that she had been, ever since her birth, and was still, a resident of the city of Raleigh, in the county of Wake, and the defendant was a resident of the county of Guilford; (361) that after cohabiting with the defendant some two or three weeks, she found him to be, and she averred that he was, utterly and incurably impotent; that in consequence of such impotency, the pretended marriage between her and the defendant was null and void; and she prayed that it might, by a decree of the Court, be declared null and void; and further, that she might have a decree divorcing her from the bonds of matrimony.
The defendant demurred to the bill, for the want of jurisdiction in the Court of Equity for the county of Wake. The cause was set for hearing on the demurrer, and by consent was removed to the Supreme Court.
Our opinion being in favor of the defendant upon the question of jurisdiction, we have deemed it proper to state only the facts which are necessary to raise it.
That, as a general rule, an objection to the jurisdiction of the Court of Equity may be taken on a demurrer, when the facts appear upon the record, is settled. Indeed, it is said by Mr. Adams that want of jurisdiction is one of the most ordinary grounds of a demurrer in equity; Adams' Eq., 333. The principle of the defence by demurrer is, that on the plaintiff's own showing, his claim can not be supported, and that therefore it is needless for the defendant to answer the bill. If the *281
plaintiff show that the Court can not entertain jurisdiction of his cause, there seems to us as much reason for permitting the defendant to urge that objection, as to insist upon any other, which is disclosed by the facts stated in the bill. The plaintiff's counsel does not deny this; but insists that when the want of jurisdiction arises from the fact that the suit is brought in the wrong county, the objection can only be taken by a plea in abatement, under an express provision to that effect in the Revised Code, chapter 32, section 3, rule 14. The last clause of that rule does say, indeed, that if the suit be brought in any other county than is therein prescribed, it "may be abated on plea"; so it may, and so it must, if the fact that the suit is in the wrong county do not appear on the record; but if the objection appear in the bill itself, a plea is unnecessary, and a demurrer is proper to be used. It is well known that in (362) equity the statute of limitations is generally used as a defence by a plea, but it is now held that if, by the plaintiff's own showing, his equity is barred by the statute of limitation, no plea is necessary; seeWhitfield v. Hill,
We come now to the question whether the suit was brought in the wrong county, and the solution of that depends upon the enquiry whether a valid marriage was contracted by the performance of the marriage ceremony between the plaintiff and defendant, and if it were, what effect did it have upon the domicil of the parties. The counsel for the plaintiff contends that there was no marriage; that by reason of the defendant's impotency, the performance of the marriage ceremony between the parties had no legal effect, and that therefore what passed between them was a mere nullity. This, we think, is a great mistake. Impotency is a good cause for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, but it does not, like the idiocy or lunacy in one or both parties, make the alleged marriage a nullity ab initio. Mr. Blackstone, after stating that marriage is regarded by the law as a civil contract, and that to be valid it must be between parties willing and able to contract, and who do contract in proper forms and solemnities, says that, in general, all persons are able to contract themselves in marriage unless they labor under some particular disabilities and incapacities. These disabilities are of two sorts; first, such as are canonical, and therefore sufficient by the ecclesiastical laws to avoid the marriage in the spiritual court; but these, in our law, only make the marriage voidable, and not ipso facto void, until sentence of nullity be obtained. Of this nature are precontract, consanguinity or relation by blood and affinity, or relation by marriage, and some particular corporal infirmities; 1 Bla. Com., 434. After some other remarks about the nature of these disabilities, the great commentator adds: "But such marriages not being void ab initio, but voidable only by sentence of separation, they are deemed valid to all civil purposes, unless such separation *282 is actually made during the life of the parties." See, also, Elliott(363) v. Gurr, 2 Phil. Ec. Cases, 16; 1 Moore, 223; Noy, 29; Cro. Car., 352; 1 Roper on H. and W., 333. Among these disabilities it is seen that "some particular corporal infirmities" are mentioned. Thus, the impotency of the husband at the time of the marriage, to consummate it, and still continuing, is a good ground for annulling it; 2 Phil. Ec. Ca., 10. But until a sentence of divorce is obtained, the marriage is regarded as valid and subsisting. Mr. Shelford says expressly that "canonical disabilities, such as consanguinity, affinity, and certain corporal infirmities, only make the marriage voidable, and not ipso facto void, until sentence of nullity be obtained, and for this he cites 2 Phil. Ecc. Cases, 19, 25." If this were not so, the triennial cohabitation required by the ecclesiastical courts (and which we presume our Courts would be bound to insist upon), before they will entertain a suit for divorce on account of impotency, would seem to be a strange requisition; see Shelf. on Mar. and Div., 203 (33 Law Lib., 171).
The second kind of disabilities mentioned by Mr. Blackstone are what he calls civil, that is, such as are enforced by the municipal laws. Among these are incapacities of a former subsisting marriage, and that of a want of reason. These make the marriage absolutely null and voidab initio, and the pretended marriage may be so treated without any sentence pronounced by a court; though in the case of a want of reason in one of the parties when the marriage was contracted, the Court will entertain a suit for a nullity of the marriage. This was done in Johnsonv. Kincaid,
This being so, the only remaining enquiry is, what effect the marriage had upon the domicil of the parties. Upon this question we think the law is well settled; in Warrender v. Warrender, 9 Bligh., 89, before the House of Lords, it was laid down in the strongest terms that the domicil of the husband drew to it, in law, that of the wife. That was the case of a suit for a divorce, and it was followed by another suit of the same kind, before the Consistory Court of London, in which Dr. Lushington held the same doctrine, 22 Curtis' 35, (7 Eng. Ecc., 139). It is unnecessary to multiply authorities upon this point, for the general *283
rule seems to have been assumed to be as we now state it in the very case of Schonwald v. Schonwald,
It follows that as soon as the parties in this case were married, the plaintiff became, in law, a resident of the county of Guilford, and according to the fourteenth rule of the third section of the thirty-second chapter of the Revised Code, her suit ought to have been (365) instituted in the Court of Equity of that county.
The demurrer to the bill, for the want of jurisdiction in the Court of Equity of Wake, is sustained, and the bill
PER CURIAM. Dismissed.
Cited: Hicks v. Skinner,