In the month of August, 1859, Reuben Setzer was married to Sophronia Morcus by a justice of the peace, upon a due observance of all the formalities prescribed by law for entering into that relation. They lived together as husband and wife until the spring of 1862, when, having entered the military service of the Confederate States, the said Reuben lost his life at the battle of New Berne, in this-State. The only offspring of the union was the plaintiff,, who brings this action as relator upon the bond executed by the defendant, Daniel Setzer, who administered on the estate of the deceased, and the other defendant, one of his sureties, to recover his distributive share of the personal estate in the hands of the administrator. The action was begun by suing out a summons on the 13th day of August, 1883.
The answer sets up as a defence, (and this is the only matter necessary to be considered,) that the intestate was of imbecile mind from his youth up, and had not capacity to understand and enter into the marriage contract, and that, this being absolutely void, the plaintiff, their only child, was not born in lawful wedlock, and could not claim any part of the estate.
The only issue passed on by the jury, was as to the intestate’s mental capacity to make an effectual marriage contract at the time of its solemnization, and the response was that he did not have such capacity.
We do not propose to examine the exceptions to’the evidence offered, among which was an inquisition taken in 1855, finding the intestate to be a lunatic, and an order appointing a guardian, since the appeal must be disposed of upon the single finding of the intestate’s mental incompetency, and its effect upon the relator’s right as a distributee.
In
Johnson
v.
Kincade,
The same doctrine is re-affirmed in
Crump
v.
Morgan,
In
Williamson
v.
Williams,
The Court declined to try the issue thus made, and retained the cause “ for further directions, to the end that the plaintiff, if so advised, may institute proceedings in the proper Court to obtain a decree of nullity of marriage, after which they will be at liberty to move in this cause.”
*255
Delivering the opinion, Pearson, J., after quoting and approving the language used in
Johnson
v.
Kineade,
that it was “convenient and fit in respect to the decent order of society,
the condition of parties, and the succession of estates,
that the validity of such a marriage should be directly the subject of judicial sentence, says: “And as the Legislature has conferred sole original jurisdiction in all applications for divorce upon the Superior Courts of Law and Courts of Equity— (Rev. Code, ch. 89, §1) — -and pointed out the mode of proceeding. and the rules and regulations to be observed (§5), and required that the material facts charged in the bill or libel shall be submitted
to a jury,
upon whose verdict and
not otherwise,
the Court shall decree, (§0,) and authorize a decree from the bonds of matrimony, or that the
marriage is null and void,”
(the italics in the above are in the opinion,) and after a sentence nullifying or dissolving the marriage, all and every, the duties, &c., in virtue of such marriage, shall cease and determine, with a proviso as to the legitimacy of the children, (§11), we do not feel at liberty to decide a question of such grave importance, as a thing collateral or incidental to an ordinary bill for an account, where the trial will be made, without the intervention of a jury, upon depositions which are usually taken in a defective and unsatisfactory manner.” He adds: “ The propriety of requiring that fact to be established by the judgment or sentence of a tribunal having sole original jurisdiction, is too manifest to require any further observation.” See
Brooks
v.
Brooks,
Now it is expressly provided in the Rev. Stat., ch. 39, §9, where it is decreed that “ the marriage is null and void,” or for cause not affecting its original validity, as follows: That nothing herein contained shall be construed to extend to, affect, or render illegitimate, any child or children born of the body of the wife during the coverture.”
*256 A proviso in words essentially the same is found in the Rev. Code, ch. 39, §11, and again in Bat. Rev., ch. 37, §15.
Now if it is conceded that the validity of a marriage can he questioned in the collateral manner attempted, and when neither of the parties to it is before the Court so that it is not a judgment changing their status, it can have no greater effect upon the right of offspring than such a judicial sentence, rendered in a direct proceeding, and as those rights are protected in the one case, so must they be in the other.
The present law is more explicit and clear, and as we have had occasion to inquire into its operation in the recent case of
Baity
v.
Cranfill,
There is error, and there must be a new trial involving the other matters of defence, and to that end this must b& certified.
Error. Reversed.
