L. v. L.
This text of 222 A.2d 297 (L. v. L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
L.
v.
L., ET AL.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.
Mr. Harold L. Jacobs for plaintiffs.
Mr. Theodore L. Van Winkle for defendant D.
Mr. George Warren, guardian ad litem for defendants F and E, infants.
*119 MATTHEWS, J.S.C.
This matter comes before me on cross motions for summary judgment. There is no factual dispute.
On November 11, 1928 G (now deceased) married plaintiff A. Two children, plaintiffs B and C were born of that marriage. On August 7, 1947 G obtained a Mexican mail order divorce. A had no participation in those proceedings. On October 29, 1947 G married defendant D in Connecticut before a justice of the peace. Prior to August 7, 1947 two children, concededly sired by G, were born to D. They are defendants E and F. G died intestate on October 18, 1962. On November 14, 1962 letters of administration were granted to D. They were subsequently revoked on application of A on March 8, 1963.
The single question presented for decision here is whether defendant children E and F, who were born out of wedlock, are to be deemed legitimate under the laws of descent and distribution. An answer to this question can only be given by resolution of an underlying question as to whether children born out of wedlock may be deemed legitimated by a subsequent ceremonial, void and bigamous marriage of the natural parents.
As a matter of statutory construction, the issue here presented is whether the word "marry," as used in the provisions of N.J.S. 3A:4-7, should be read to mean "valid marriage."[1] It is apparent that the Mexican mail order divorce of August 1947 was invalid, thereby rendering the marriage of G and D bigamous. Tonti v. Chadwick, 1 N.J. 531 (1949).
There are four statutes which relate to the question of legitimacy presented here. The first is N.J.S. 3A:4-7.[1] The *120 predecessor to this statute was R.S. 3:5-8 which provided as follows:
"3:5-8. If the father and mother of a child born out of lawful wedlock subsequently enter into the bonds of lawful wedlock and cohabit thereafter as husband and wife and such child shall have resided with and been recognized and treated by such parents as their child, such child shall be entitled to share in the estate of such father and mother equally with children born of a lawful marriage of the intestate. * * *" (Emphasis added)
R.S. 9:15-1 is a general legitimation statute which provides for legitimation "by the intermarriage of * * * natural parents," along with the requirement of recognition.[2] This statute became part of the law of our State by L. 1915, c. 173, §§ 1 and 2.
R.S. 9:15-2, the second statute found in the general legitimation chapter of Title 9, provides generally that children "born of a ceremonial marriage" are considered legitimate notwithstanding the subsequent declaration that such marriage is void.[3] This statute became law under L. 1924, c. 144, §§ 1 and 2.
Finally, N.J.S. 2A:34-20, found in the divorce and nullity statutes, provides that only a certain class of issue of void marriages are to be deemed illegitimate, that class being "where the marriage, not being a ceremonial one, is dissolved *121 because either party had another wife or husband living at the time of a second or other marriage."[4]
This is not a question of a first impression in this State. See In re Weeast, 72 N.J. Super. 325 (Cty. Ct. 1962). Weeast presented a set of facts practically identical with those presently before me. There the County Court gave an extremely narrow reading to N.J.S. 3A:4-7 and construed the word "marry" to mean "valid marriage." The opinion of the court, however, does not consider the change made in R.S. 3:5-8, presently contained in N.J.S. 3A:4-7, nor is there any discussion contained therein of the probable interrelation of N.J.S. 3A:4-7 with N.J.S. 2A:34-20 and R.S. 9:15-2.
Other New Jersey precedents on the legitimizing effect of valid marriages deal with marriages that predated birth, i.e., "children born of" such marriages. In Capraro v. Propati, 126 N.J. Eq. 67 (Ch. 1939), the court held that R.S. 9:15-2 did not legitimize the issue of a designedly bigamous marriage, and found that R.S. 9:15-1 requires a valid intermarriage. The Court of Errors and Appeals reversed in 127 N.J. Eq. 419 (E. & A. 1940), and, in doing so, read R.S. 9:15-2 in conjunction with R.S. 2:50-33 (the predecessor to N.J.S. 2A:34-20), stating:
"Evidently, it was the legislative purpose to clothe with the attribute of legitimacy the children of a ceremonial bigamous marriage. The act of 1931 distinguished between a ceremonial and non-ceremonial bigamous marriage, and explicitly granted legitimacy to the issue of the former. The design was to relieve the innocent children, where there was a ceremonial marriage, of the drastic pre-existing legal consequences of the parental transgression. That policy is outstanding; and it manifestly does not transcend the legislative province. The treatment of these provisions in the Revision is demonstrative *122 of a legislative sense of the subsistence of the act of 1924 from the time of its adoption until its incorporation in the Revision. Compare Crater v. County of Somerset, 123 N.J.L. 407. Under that provision, the children are of the same status in law as those born of a `valid marriage.'
The contention of respondent that the act of 1924 `does not protect the offspring of a marriage null in law, which needs no decree of court to declare such result,' makes a distinction that is not to be found in the statutes, viewed as a homogeneous whole one that is clearly illusory. * * *"
No mention was made in the opinion of R.S. 9:15-1. See also Endres v. Grove, 34 N.J. Super. 146 (Ch. Div. 1955).
A review of out-of-state decisions discloses a division of authorities on this question, with the majority favoring legitimation.
In Bates v. Mead, 192 S.W. 666, 671 (1917), the Kentucky Court of Appeals read various legitimizing sections of the Kentucky statutes together, and reached a conclusion as to a legitimizing scheme of legislation. It seems apparent from the opinion that § 2098 of the Kentucky statute therein considered parallels R.S. 9:15-2, and that § 1398 of the Kentucky law approximates N.J.S. 3A:4-7. In reaching its determination, the Kentucky court reasoned as follows:
"* * * If the issue of a void marriage are legitimate under section 2098, why should not the issue before the marriage be made legitimate under section 1398, although the marriage was void? The same reasons that would save the child of a void marriage from illegitimacy should save the child born before marriage and thus put the child of a void marriage on the same footing with the child born out of marriage, but whose parents subsequently married." (at p. 671)
See also, Stamper v. Lunsford, 215 S.W. 297 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).
The Supreme Court of Virginia relied heavily on Bates v. Mead, supra, in its decision in Goodman v. Goodman, 142 S.E. 412 (1928). As in Bates v. Mead,
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222 A.2d 297, 92 N.J. Super. 118, 1966 N.J. Super. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-v-l-njsuperctappdiv-1966.