Harrison v. State ex rel. Harrison

22 Md. 468, 1864 Md. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 3, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 22 Md. 468 (Harrison v. State ex rel. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. State ex rel. Harrison, 22 Md. 468, 1864 Md. LEXIS 90 (Md. 1864).

Opinion

Bowie, O. J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbis Court. Bartol, J., dissenting.

Few questions are more interesting, or more important to society, than those presented by this appeal, — viz:—the validity of marriages between persons within the prohibited degrees, and the power of the Legislature, by retroactive enactments, to restore an inheritable quality to persons, otherwise incapable of taking. For the first time since its passage, as far as the records of this Court inform us, the interpretation of the Act of February 1777, ch. 12, entitled, “An Act concerning Marriages,” is brought in question. The counsel, with an ability and earnestness worthy of the magnitude of the subject, have exhausted the resources of research and argument, to illustrate their views, and contributed much to enable us to arrive at satisfactory conclusions. The leading propositions discussed were:

1st. Was the marriage’ between Robert and Martha Harrison, absolutely void, or only voidable?

2nd. If avoidable, did the Act of 1860, ch. 271, cure the incapacity of the contracting parties, and impart to the issue of the marriage, the faculty of taking as dis-tributees and heirs at law?

In the first proposition is included the minor one, whether the marriage beiug celebrated in the District of Columbia, was within the operation of the first section of the Act. The sections important to the consideration of this case, are as follows:

“An Act concerning Marriages.”

“1. If any person within- this State shall hereafter marry with any person related within any of the degrees of kindred or affinity expressed in the following table, such marriage shall be void.” ■

“2. That if any person shall hereafter marry with any person related within the three degrees of lineal direct consanguinity, or within the first degree of collateral [483]*483consanguinity, eacb of tbe parties on conviction thereof in the General Court shall forfeit and pay £500, or be banished this State for ever; and if any person shall hereafter marry with any person related within any other of the degrees of kindred, or within any of the degrees of affinity, each shall forfeit £200.”

“6. If any person shall go out of this State and there marry with any person belonging to this State, contrary to this Act, each of said parties shall be liable to the same punishment or penalty, as if the offence had been committed within this State.”

14. That the Chancellor shall and may hear and determine all claims for alimony, in as full and ample manner, as such causes could be heard by the laws of England, in the Ecclesiastical Courts there. ■

“15. That the General Court may inquire into, hear and determine, either on indictment, or petition of either of the parties, the validity of any marriage, and may declare any marriage contrary to the table in this Act, or any second marriage, the first subsisting, null and void; and on appeal, the depositions and evidence given in the cause, shall be transmitted with the record to the Court of Appeals, and thereupon such cause shall be heard, determined and adjudged de novo.” The sections .not quoted relate to the celebration of marriages, the persons by whom celebrated, and the places, churches, or chapels where celebrated, and the banns and licenses — and penalties for violating the same.

1st Point. — The Canon and Civil Law, regulating marriages, was a part of the Common Law, administered by ecclesiastical and civil tribunals in England, and.transplanted to the colonies by our ancestors, without introducing corresponding Courts to enforce them. In the first year ’ of the organization of the State Government, 1 TIT, ch. 12, the General Assembly passed the Act entitled “An Act concerning Marriages.” This Act was [484]*484declaratory of the Canon as a part of the Common Law, prohibiting marriages between persons related in such degrees of consanguinity and affinity as previously prevented their lawfully joining in matrimony. The disabilities enumerated, are all canonical disabilities, and not those known to the law as civil disabilities. Canonical disabilities were such as rendered the marriage voidable and not void. They require the judgment of an Ecclesiastical Court, during the lives of the parties, to make them effective, as causes of a divorce. On the other hand civil disabilities, such as arose “pro defect'd concensus,” for want of a capacity to contract, or physical infirmity, ipso facto avoided the marriage without the action of the Courts. When the Legislature declared by Statute, that persons laboring under canonical disabilities should not marry under certain penalties, but such marriages should be void, and gave jurisdiction to the General Court to hear and determine upon such marriages, it is to be supposed they designed to put persons laboring under such disabilities, in the same position they were at Common Law, viz: they should be void, when'established by the judgment of a Court, in the life of the parties to the marriage, not to confound canonical and civil disabilities, and destroy the distinction between them. Ecclesiastical judgments were pronounced “pro salute animce,” to vindicate the divine law, not to assert the rights of property, and therefore were limited to the lives of the parties. The illicit union being dissolved by. death, no subsequent proceedings could afterwards affect the rights of the issue. If it was the purpose of the Act of 1177, to convert canonical disabilities into civil disabilities, and make such marriages null and void absolutely, the provisions of section fifteen were superfluous and useless. All the objects which the law would accomplish consistently with equity and justice, are obtained by interpreting these sections collectively, in consonance with the effect [485]*485of sucb disabilities, when established by tbeir prope^ tribunals; and consequences degrading to society and unjust to innocent persons, are avoided by this construction. The Legislature, by the Acts of 1785, ch. 35, and 1730, ch. 20, ratified and confirmed retrospectively, the marriages which the Act of 1777, ch. 12, had declared void, and this, as was urged in argument, without any reservation of vested rights. These Acts being in “pari materia,” are to be construed together, as parts of one system. The distinction between void and voidable, was not unknown to the legislators of that day. Such enactments would not have been made, if their provisions were deemed nugatory. Cotemporaneous legislation is the best standard of the meaning of laws, f When a marriage is declared to be void, it does not necessarily mean void “ah initioReason and justice would imply, it was void from the time its nullity should be pronounced by a Court of competent jurisdiction, not that it should be so construed whenever brought incidentally in question. This view of the subject is confirmed in our opinion by the course of legislation in England. There, the legal validity of marriages previous to the first Marriage Act, (26 Geo. 2nd., c. 33,) depended upon the doctrine of the Ecclesiastical Courts. Shelford on Marriage and Divorce, ch. 2nd., p. 26.

The intention of the Statutes of 25 Hen. 8, ch. 22, 28; Hen. 8, ch. 7 and 32; Hen. 8, ch. 38, was to restore the Levitical computation, and prevent the impeaching of marriages for consanguinity or affinity, without the Levitical degrees. Shelford, 162, 165. The Statute 26 Geo. 2, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Md. 468, 1864 Md. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-state-ex-rel-harrison-md-1864.