Of the voluminously stated grounds for striking the petition, only one appears of sufficient merit to warrant consideration. That ground is the fact, appearing by the petition itself, that the petitioner has been adjudicated to be a lunatic and is prosecuting this action by his guardian. The right of the guardian to prosecute a suit for annulment of the marriage, on the ground that his ward was insane when the marriage contract was made, is challenged. While cases where a lunatic, by his guardian, defends a suit for nullity on the ground of his insanity at the time of the marriage contract are not infrequent (Buffum v. Buffum,
"No third party or parties have any standing to bring a suit to annul a marriage. Such a suit may only be brought by one of the parties thereto. * * * The remedy of divorce (and equally of nullity) and the right to seek it belong exclusively to one or the other of the spouses," citing 19 Corp. Jur. 98. No New Jersey citation of this case appears in Shephard's Citations, but it is cited by the supreme court of Florida in Kuehmsted v.Turnwall, 138 So. Rep. 776, and the rule above quoted disapproved.
It is, I think, clearly distinguishable from the instant case. There the petitioners were not acting for or in the right of their minor child; nor were they seeking to protect their own property rights. In the instant case, while the suit is brought by the guardian, it is brought in the name of the lunatic, for his benefit, and in the protection of his property rights.
The Kern Case was not referred to by Chancellor Walker in theNiland Case, but has been cited without comment on the standing of the parties to the suit as late as Naylor v. Naylor,
