Baity v. . Cranfill

91 N.C. 293
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 91 N.C. 293 (Baity v. . Cranfill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baity v. . Cranfill, 91 N.C. 293 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The defendant is a son by a former wife of the plaintiff’s intestate, who after her death intermarried with Mahala Triett, his niece, on the 26th day of November, 1869, and lived with her in the relation of husband and *294 wife until his own death, in the year 1873. The issue of their marriage were two children, of whom one died before and the other (bearing his father’s name) after the institution of the present suit.

After the grant of letters of administration to the plaintiff upon the intestate’s estate, the said Mahala, as his surviving widow made application and had assigned to her in due course of law her year’s allowance, almost entirely in specific articles, with a small sum to be paid in money for the deficiency which passed into her possession and absorbs the personal estate. She also instituted her action against the defendant Elkana and the son Levi, the lieirs-at-law of the deceased husband, under and pursuant to which her dower was allotted and assigned in his descended lands. The defendants made no resistance to the claim of dower or the assignment when made, and informed the probate judge when he made Ihe appointment of administrator that the said Mahala was the widow of the intestate and her child one of his next of kin.

The present action, non depending against the said El-kana alone as heir-at-law of the intestate, is to obtain an order of sale of .the descended lands for the payment of debts of the decedent, and is opposed upon the ground that the marriage with said Mahala, because of their near relationship, was and remained void, and the delivery of the articles to her for her year’s support under the assignment of the commissioners was a devastavit, for the value of which the plaintiff is personally responsible, and must account for and apply to the indebtedness before the lands can be sold for that purpose.

Two propositions are involved in the defence, and are necessary to its success, and these are :

1. The absolute and continued nullity of the marriage, and

*295 2. The liability of the administrator for the loss of the personal estate adjudged to the widow.

/The law in force at the time when the marriage was solemnized is found in the Revised Code, ch. 68, § 9, and is in these words:

“All marriages contracted after the twenty-seventh day of December, eighteen hundred and fifty-two, and all marriages in future between persons nearer of kin than first cousins, shall be void.”

These and marriages contracted between a white person and a free person of color to-the third generation, are the only marriages prohibited and made void by express statutory provisions, other causes of nullity being left to operate as at common law.

The legislation contained in this chapter is superseded by the enactment of February 12th, 1872, to be found in Bat. Rev., ch. 69, the second section of which defines the impediments in the way of a lawful and valid marriage, among them being a marriage “ between any two persons nearer of kin than first cousins,” and declares such to be void, subject to a proviso subjoined as follows :

Provided tlrat no marriage followed by cohabitation and the birth of issue shall be declared void after the death of either of the parties for any of the causes stated in this section, except for that one of the parties was a white person and the other a negro or Indian, or of negro or Indian descent to the third generation inclusive, and for bigamy.

Section 2 of chapter 37 of Bat. Rev., confers upon the superior courts jurisdiction in term time of marriages contracted contrary to the prohibition in section two of chapter 69, or therein declared void, to declare and adjudge such marriage void from the beginning subject nevertheless to the provision contained in said section,” and already recited.

The succeeding section declares that the marriages interdicted between a white person and one of negro or Indian *296 blood within the degree specified, “ shall be absolutely void to all intents and purposes and shall be so held and declared by every court at all times whether Muring the lives or after the death of the parties thereto.” Bat. Rev., ch. 37, §§ 2 and 3.

Again, the general assembly further amended the law by extending the inhibition arising from kinship to those of half blood, but with a proviso that this shall not invalidate a marriage theretofore contracted, and that the computation as to existing marriages shall be by counting relations of the half blood, as being only half so near kin as those of the same degree of the whole blood. Acts 1879, ch. 78.

These statutory provisions are referred to, as indicating, as in our opinion they clearly do, an intention to confine the power conferred upon the court to declare void,-or in a judicial proceeding to treat as void, except where the intermarriage is between the specified races or involves the offence of bigamy, to cases, whenever the power is exercised, during the lifetime of the parties., or after death, only when there has been no issue born to them. The structure and interdependence of these several sections are in harmony only when such an interpretation is put upon the proviso first quoted.

It speaks prospectively as to the exercise of the judicial authority bestowed, but it is an authority to be exercised upon all subsisting marriages before specified, when the relation may have been entered into, as well as. such as may thereafter be formed. The words are “ that no marriage followed by cohabitation and the birth of issue shall be declared void after the death of either of the parties for any of the causes stated in this section, except,” &c., thus imposing restraints after death, not attaching during life.

If this is not the intent, why was it necessary in the act of 1879 placing kinship of the half-blood upon the same footing as kinship of the full blood, that the authority to declare void the marriages between persons so related here *297 tofore contracted should not be exercised, unless in other cases of previous marriage it might be exercised ? It is indeed in the nature of a statute of limitation upon the delegated or recognized judicial power, confining its exercise with a single exception to the lifetime of the parties, and, if cohabitation and offspring followed, withholding it afterwards, so as not to operate as a posthumous bastardizing of children born to them. It is but saying to the parties, thus living together and assuming the marital relation, that it shall not be disturbed after death to the injury.of innocent offspring. This is in our opinion the manifest purpose expressed in the legislation.

2. Is this legislation, so interpreted and understood, effectual in its operation upon pre-existing marriage contracts, or is it ultra-constitutional?

The competency of the general assembly to impose, implies the right to remove the restraints and conditions incident to the formation of the marriage relation and the contract which creates it.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.C. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baity-v-cranfill-nc-1884.