Lead Opinion
1. A wife cannot maintain against her husband who is a minor, without a guardian ad litem, although of sufficient age to contract marriage under the statute, a proceeding under the Civil Code (1910), § 2986, providing for the allowance of alimony to the wife where she and her husband are living separate, or are bona fide in a state of separation, and where no suit for divorce 'is pending. Groce v. Field, 13 Ga. 24; Nicholson v. Wilborn, 13 Ga. 467; Oliver v. McDuffie, 28 Ga. 522; Jack v. Davis, 29 Ga. 219; Hill v. Printup, 48 Ga. 453; Kilpatrick v. Strozier, 67 Ga. 247; Harvey v. Cubbedge, 75 Ga. 792; Welch v. Agar, 84 Ga. 583 (11 S. E. 149, 20 Am. St. R. 380); Burnett v. Summerlin, 110 Ga. 349 (35 S. E. 655); Maryland Casualty Co. v. Lanham, 124 Ga. 859 (53 S. E. 395); Douglas v. Johnson, 130 Ga. 472 (60 S. E. 1041); Miller v. Luckey, 132 Ga. 581 (64 S. E. 658); Thomas v. Thomas, 145 Ga. 111 (88 S. E. 584); Spooner v. Spooner, 148 Ga. 612 (97 S. E. 670); 22 Cyc. 627, 633, 634; 14 R. C. L. 49, 52, 54.
2. “ An action for or against an infant should be prosecuted or defended
Judgment reversed.
Considering the relation of the parties, the rights of the wife in the property of the husband upon separation or the granting of a divorce, and the responsibilities which the law permits minors to assume in contracting marriage, and the status which the parties have when such relationship is established, this proceeding could be maintained against the husband without the appointment of a guardian ad litem. I do not think that the eases cited by the majority of the court are controlling.
Dissenting Opinion
I also dissent from the decision of the majority, for the following reasons: In addition to what the writer said in the. case of Bentley v. Bentley, 149 Ga. 707 (supra), as to a suit for divorce being maintainable against a minor without a guardian ad litem being appointed. The general rule it that a minor can not contract. Civil Code (1910), § 4232. But the statute makes an exception to this rule in the case of a minor contracting marriage and making “settlements.” The Civil Code (1910), § 4236, provides: “Marriage contracts and settlement made by infants, but of lawful age to marry, are binding as if made by adults.” This statute authorizes not only marriages but “ settlements” as if made by adults. In contracting marriage minors stand upon the same footing as adults; and the cases of Besore and Bentley are predicated upon that fact — that the general rule does not apply as to minors bringing or defending divorce suits. In such cases they are in law sui juris; and that being
