Kruger v. Kruger

Greenbaum, J.

This is an undefended action for annulment of marriage upon the ground that plaintiff had not attained the age of eighteen years at the time of her marriage with the defendant. Plaintiff and defendant were married in the borough of Manhattan, city of ¡New York, on the 6th day of April, 1908. A marriage license was duly issued by the city clerk upon an application in which the plaintiff gave her age as seventeen years, and to which the written consent of both parents of plaintiff was annexed. Plaintiff and her father testify that she was seventeen years and seven months old when she married; that she and her husband lived together as husband and wife for about three months after their marriage and then separated. At the time of separation plaintiff claims she was still under the age of eighteen years, and that she attained eighteen years of age on August 14-, 1908, about eighteen days after her separation from defendant. Although it appears that the plaintiff was born in the city of ¡New York, no record, either public or private, was produced showing the date of her birth, nor was any explanation given why the public record or a certified copy thereof was not forthcoming. The statutes relative to annulment of marriages contracted under the age of legal consent are somewhat confusing. Section 1742 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that An action may be maintained, by the woman, to procure a judgment, declaring a marriage contract void,, and annulling the marriage, under the following circumstances: 1. Where the plaintiff had not attained the age of sixteen years at the time of the marriage. 2. Where the marriage took place without the consent of her father, mother, guardian or other person having the legal charge of her person. 3. Where it was not followed by con*384summation or cohabitation, and was not ratified by any mutual assent of the parties, after the plaintiff attained the age of sixteen years.” Section 1743 of the Code provides: “An action may also be maintained to procure a judgment, declaring a marriage contract void and annulling the marriage, for either of the following causes, existing at the time of the marriage: 1. That one or both of the parties had not attained the age of legal consent.” The remaining subdivisions of section 1743, have no application to the case at bar. The Domestic Delations Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 272, § 4; Consolidated Laws, chap. 14; Laws of 1909, chap. 19) declares the age of consent to marry to be eighteen years, but does not amend section 1742 of the Code. Chapter 742 of the Laws of 1907, in force at time of plaintiff’s marriage, amended the Domestic Delations Law by providing for marriage licenses, and in subdivision 10 thereof it was among other matters provided : “ If it shall appear upon an application of the applicant, as provided in this section, that the man is under twenty-one years of age, or that the woman is under the age of eighteen years, then the town or city clerk, before he shall issue a license, shall require' the written consent to the marriage from both parents of the minor or minors, or such as shall then be living, or if the parents of both are dead then the written consent of the guardian or guardians of such minor or minors.” Section 1742 of the Code, therefore, is available to a woman only, and under the circumstances therein enumerated, all of which must concur. The first is that the plaintiff “ had not attained the age of sixteen years at the time of the marriage,” and the second that the consent to the marriage had not been given by the parent or guardian. Clearly, the plaintiff cannot maintain her action under section 1742, inasmuch as she was upwards of seventeen years of age when she married with her parents’ consent. If any right to bring this action exists, it must be found in section 1743 of the Code, which simply declares that a person who “ had not attained the age of legal consent ” may maintain an action for annulment of marriage. The meager language of this section makes it obvious that it must be read in connection with section 1742 and other existing statutes. Sec*385tion 1743 is available to either a man or woman under the age of legal consent, and section 1742 only to a woman under sixteen years of age. If an annulment of marriage contracted by a girl under sixteen years of age may not be decreed where the marriage took place with the consent of the parents, it follows that the Legislature must have intended that an annulment may not be granted in the case of an infant above sixteen years of age and under eighteen years of age where the consent of parent or guardian of the infant to the marriage had been obtained. The legislative intent, as above indicated, is further evidenced by the provisions of the Domestic Relations Law relative to marriage licenses above quoted, expressly permitting the issuance of a license to marry to a woman under eighteen years of age where the consent of parents or guardians is obtained. It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff is not entitled to an annulment of her marriage. Independently of the foregoing conclusions, and in view of the apparently increasing number of suits for the annulment of marriages contracted under the -age of legal consent, I deem it proper to state that the proof of the age of the plaintiff in this case is unsatisfactory, resting as it does upon the uncorroborated testimony of the interested witnesses, and without any record evidence. The complaint is dismissed.

Complaint dismissed.