Miller v. Miller
Miller v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff, being a minor under the age of twenty-one years, through her father, who was duly appointed her guardian ad litem, has instituted this action in the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, for alimony. In her complaint she alleges her marriage with the defendant on the 2d day of November, 1892, the birth of an infant, which is still alive, and that the defendant, since said marriage, has neglected the plaintiff and refuses to furnish her means of support, and, also, neglects and refuses to furnish the said infant with the necessaries of life and medical attention; that the plaintiff has discharged faithfully and fully her duty as a wife. In his answer, the defendant, after a denial of the material facts of the complaint, alleges that any supposed contract of marriage between himself and the plaintiff is invalid and void, and
Under an order therefor, duly passed, the testimony was all taken by Master Dingle and reported to the court. The action came on to be heard before his honor, Judge Izlar, who filed a most elaborate decree on the 15th September, 1893. He held as follows: “Under a review of the whole testimony, I find, as a matter of fact: (1) that the defendant Miller was not consenting to this marriage voluntarily, but was forced thereto under duress, and (2) that there was no consummation of the alleged marriage. The decree must, therefore, be against the plaintiff. The defendant, under the provisions of the General Statutes, prays affirmative relief. The provision is as follows: ‘Section 2028. The Court of Common Pleas shall have authority to hear and determine any issue affecting the validity of contracts of marriage, and to declare the same void for want of consent of contracting parties, or for any other cause going to show that at the time the supposed contract was made, it was not a contract: Provided, That such contract has not been consummated by the parties thereto.’ In pursuance of this provision, the defendant in his answer prays, ‘that the court will hear and determine any issue herein affecting the validity of any supposed contract of marriage between himself and the plaintiff, and will decree any such supposed contract void, and for his costs, &c.’ As we have concluded and adjudged that the defendant was not consenting to the alleged marriage, and that there was no consummation, and that there was not, therefore, a valid marriage contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, and that under the laws of Georgia, where the marriage was alleged to have taken place, the same is void, the defendant is entitled, under the statute, to the relief prayed for. It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the complaint in this case be dismissed with costs, and that the alleged contract of marriage therein set forth be, and is hereby, declared void.”
Although, in view of our duty under the law to these parties litigant, we have endeavored to study the case as made by their pleadings and testimony, yet we shall dispose of these several questions raised by the appeal in as brief manner as possible. We will not even lay bare the grounds here furnished for the indignation we feel at the foul wrong which has been done to the family of the plaintiff, the cruel deception practiced upon the mother of the plaintiff, in order to render possible the attack upon the plaintiff. Hard, indeed, would be the heart that would fail to respond in generous sympathy to this afflicted
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MILLER v. MILLER
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- I. Marriage — Consummation.—An allegation in a complaintfor alimony, that plaintiff and defendant were duly married, that plaintiff has done her duty as wife and mother faithfully, is not an allegation of consummation of marriage, or of cohabitation after marriage. And the testimony showing that immediately after the marriage ceremony in Georgia, the parties separated and have never been together since, and in the absence of any Georgia definition of “consummation of marriage,” this court declined to declare that'there had been consummation. This term defined. 2. Certificate — Abbreviations.—A certificate of marriage in another State signed “Michael Naughtin, J. P. C. Co., Ga.,” without further explanation, does not prove a marriage in fact.1 3. Copy Record of Another State — Recording—Marriage—-Duress.—A copy record of marriage of a non-resident in Georgia, as there recorded is not entitled to be received as a verity by the courts of this State, where the laws of Georgia do not require such marriage certificates to be recorded. And besides, it is a fact in this case that the said ceremony was submitted to by defendant when under duress, and has never been ratified by him. 4. Findings of Fact by the Circuit Judge, from testimony heard by him, approved.