delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action of debt, brought by Outright against Adams, as county clerk of Coles county, to recover the statutory penalty for wrongfully issuing a marriage license to his daughter, who was under eighteen years of age. The defendant demurred to the declaration. The court held the declaration good, and the defendant abided by his demurrer.
It is objected, first, that the suit should have been brought in the name of the people. To this it is a sufficient answer, that the statute provides the delinquent clerk shall forfeit and pay the sum of three hundred dollars to the use of the father. This must be construed as giving the father a right to sue in his own name.
It is also objected that the declaration should have averred the banns had not been published, and that the father was capable of consenting to the issuance of the license, and that the clerk omitted to swear the parties. But if publication would relieve the clerk of the penalty imposed for issuing a license without the consent of the father, or if the father was incapable of consenting, or if the clerk was deceived by. false swearing, he should have made these defenses by- plea. It was sufficient for the plaintiff to make out a prima fade case, under the section giving the penalty, and not necessary to controvert, in advance, every possible defense. This is not the case of an action given by statute, with an exception in the same clause giving the right of action, as in Whitecraft v. Vanderver, 12 Ill. 238, and Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. Co. v. Carter, 20 Ill. 391.
It is further objected, that the declaration shows the' name of plaintiff’s daughter to be Martha Outright, and that license was issued to Mattie Outright. But the declaration, in several of its counts, describes the daughter’s name as Mattie, and in the other counts as Martha or Mattie, and avers the license was issued to her under the name of Mattie, by virtue of which she was married to A. J. Newson, the other party named in the license. This is sufficient.
The last objection is that the statute, by its terms, applies to the clerk of the county commissioners’ court, and not to the clerk of the county court. But under the decision in The People v. Thurber, 13 Ill. 566, we must hold this objection not well taken. The clerk of the county court, in succeeding to the powers and emoluments of the clerk of the superseded court, accepted, also, his responsibilities.
Judgment affirmed.