Dunbarton v. Franklin

19 N.H. 257
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 N.H. 257 (Dunbarton v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunbarton v. Franklin, 19 N.H. 257 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1848).

Opinion

Gilchrist, C. J.

It appears from the case that the parties made a contract of marriage, lived together as husband and wife, and were reputed to be married.

The question is, whether these things are sufficient to constitute a marriage.

These events all happened before the passage of the Revised Statutes. Section 15 of chapter 147 of the Revised Statutes provides that no marriage, solemnized before any person professing to be a justice of the peace or minister of the gospel, shall be void on account of any want of jurisdiction in the justice or minister, or on account of any omission or informality in the publication of the intention of marriage, if the marriage is in other respects lawful, and consummated with the belief, on the part of either of the parties, that they have been lawfully married.

Section 11 of chapter 149 provides that any persons cohabiting and acknowledging each other as husband and wife, and generally reputed to be such, for the period of three years, and until the decease of one of them, shall be deemed after such decease to have been legally married.

All the facts constituting the alleged marriage in the present case happened before the passage of the Revised Statutes. If section 11 of chapter 149 can enable acts [262]*262which happened before its passage to constitute a valid marriage, it will give the effect of including all past as well as future cases. Evidence which did not prove a marriage before the passage of the act, and which was incompetent for that purpose, is made competent by the act, and facts which at the time they happened did not constitute a marriage, would, if the act should be applied to them, have a validity they did not originally possess. Marriage is a civil contract, and if it be not valid at the time it is to be attempted to be entered into, it cannot be made so by any subsequent law. The application of the statute would make a new rule for the exposition of the contract, and would apply this rule to the construction of past contracts. This would be unequivocally retrospective, and would come within the prohibition of the twenty-third article of the Bill of Rights. In the case of The Society, &. v. Wheeler, 2 Gall. 139, Mr. Justice Story says: Upon principle every statute which takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under existing laws, or creates a new obligation, imposes a new duty, or attaches a new disability in respect to transactions or considerations already past, must be deemed retrospective, and this doctrine seems fully supported by authorities.” In the case of Dash v. Van Kleeck, 7 Johns. 502, Mr. Chief Justice Kent says : “ The very essence of a new law is a rule for future cases. * * * "We are to presume, out of respect to the lawgiver, that the statute was not meant to operate retrospectively, and if we call to our attention the general sense of mankind on the subject of retrospective laws,, it will afford us the best reason to conclude that the Legislature did not intend, in this case, to set so pernicious a precedent. * * * It is a principle in the English common law as ancient as the law itself, that a statute, even of its omnipotent Parliament, is not to have a retrospective effect.”

The invalidity of retrospective laws results no more from the express prohibition in the Bill of Rights than from the [263]*263circumstance that from their nature and effect they are not within the legitimate exercise of legislative power. For though under the name of ex post facto laws, when made for the punishment of offences, they have long been severely reprobated, because more common in times of commotion, and because they endanger the character and person as well as the property; yet laws for the decision of civil causes, made after the facts upon which they operate “ ex jure post facto,” are alike retrospective, and rest on reasons alike fallacious. Woodbury, J., in Merrill v. Sherburne, 1 N. H. Rep. 199. A law operating retrospectively upon an existing cause of action, where no suit is pending, is as much to be deemed a .retrospective law for the decision of a civil cause, and as much within the prohibition of the constitution, as a law establishing a new mode of decision for an existing action. Dow v. Norris, 4 N. H. Rep. 19.

We cannot, therefore, give the statute such a construction as would cause it to impart any validity to acts that happened before its passage, nor do we think that such was the intent of the Legislature. The words of the law do not necessarily or upon a reasonable construction of them extend to past cases. The act is prospective, applying to future cases that should subsequently arrive, and not to those which were past, and which must be determined upon the law as it existed when the acts were done. It does not include the present case.

The case of Londonderry v. Chester does not decide that a contract of marriage between the parties and subsequent cohabitation, accompanied by reputation that the parties were husband and wife, constitute a marriage. The remarks of Mr. Justice Woodbury, in that case, although relevant to the general question, were not called for by the particular matter to be decided by the court. It was not the question in that case whether mere cohabitation, reputation and acknowledgment that the parties were married, actually constituted a marriage. In that case, the marriage cere[264]*264mony was performed by a person acting as a minister of the gospel, and the simple question was whether the clergyman, owing to the peculiar circumstances of the case, was an ordained minister, qualified to solemnize marriages, and the remarks of the learned judge do not indicate his opinion that the parties, by acts of cohabitation and reputation, or by an agreement between themselves, could call into existence the marriage relation. He says that the attestation of the contract by the magistrate or minister seems to be the essence of the ceremony. Ib. 280.

It is very evident that the facts found in this case are competent to be received and considered by the jury as evidence of marriage. In a case where these facts exist, it is a reasonable inference that the parties are married, and the jury may well enough believe that they were married. "Whether they were or were not, is a matter of fact to be found by the jury. But we are asked to decide that these facts in themselves constituted a marriage. Woodbury, J. says in the case cited that the attestation of the contract “ proves a guard against imposition or force, gives publicity to the contract, prevents illicit intercourse under the guise of matrimony, and by the record of the acting officer and of the town clerk, perpetuates evidence of a fact which is often so important in disputes concerning inheritances and the settlement of paupers.”

If it be important to give publicity to the contract, to guard against deception, to provide that there shall be accessible evidence of the solemnization of the contract, there is a sufficient reason for .the passage of the law. All civilized nations agree that these are weighty considerations, and in all such nations, even in Scotland, where it is a sufficient solemnization of the contract to acknowledge it before witnesses, some attestation is requisite. It is singular that the most important of all human contracts, on which the rights and duties of the whole community depend, requires less formality for its validity than a conveyance of an

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Simpson v. City Savings Bank
56 N.H. 466 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 N.H. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbarton-v-franklin-nhsuperct-1848.