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Fodor v. Kunie

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Dec 9, 1920
112 A. 598 (Ch. Div. 1920)

Opinion

No. 48/13.

12-09-1920

FODOR v. KUNIE.

George Kemeny, of Perth Amboy, for petitioner.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Suit by Emmanuel Fodor against Julia Kunie to annul a marriage. On application to amend petition. Application denied, and petition dismissed.

George Kemeny, of Perth Amboy, for petitioner.

WALKER, Ch. The petition in this cause alleges that on January 24, 1920, a form or ceremony of marriage took place between the petitioner and the defendant at Perth Amboy, at which time the defendant was incapable of consenting thereto, being then an infant under the age of 16 years, and under the statute incapable of giving her consent to the marriage; that petitioner was ignorant of the defendant's incapacity at the time of the marriage, and was not made cognizant thereof until afterwards, namely, on February 18, 1920; that the defendant was never capable of ratifying the marriage by reason of her being under the age of 16; and that the incapacity continued and the marriage had not been in any wise ratified by the defendant. Petitioner prayed that the marriage be declared by decree of this court to be null and void for the cause mentioned, pursuant to the statute. The defendant was served with process of citation and a copy of the petition, but did not answer. Subsequently an order of reference to a special master was made in due form. Testimony was taken before the master, who reported that the defendant was capable of consenting to the marriage, being of the age of 14 years, and the suit not being brought by her, but by the husband, the petition could not be sustained, that the petitioner is not entitled to the relief prayed, and he recommended that the petition be dismissed.

Motion is now made for an order that the petitioner have leave to amend the petition as he may be advised, with provision for service of a copy of the amended petition including 20 days' time limited for the filing of an answer thereto after service. The character of the amended petition intended to be filed is indicated by a draft thereof submitted with the motion. It avers the performance of the ceremony of marriage, and then alleges that at the time of the marriage the defendant fraudulently represented herself to be 18 years of age, when in fact she was 13; that petitioner was ignorant of the defendant's true age at the time of the marriage, and was not cognizant thereof until February 18, 1920; that the alleged pretended marriage had never been consummated. The prayer is that the marriage may be decreed to be null and void for the cause mentioned "pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided." This last is evidently a mistake, because the statute gives no power to the court to annul a marriage for fraud inducing the contract. The case set up in the draft of proposed amended petition is an appeal to the general jurisdiction of equity dissociated from any statutory power. And plainly the pending motion is intended as an application to the court to change the case from the statutory one to one under the jurisdiction exemplified in the late cases of Davis v. Davis, 90 N. J. Eq. 158, 106 Atl. 644, Bolmer v. Edsall, 90 N. J. Eq. 299, 106 Atl. 646, and Ysern v. Horter, 110 Atl. 31.

Amendment in practice is the correction, by allowance of the court, of an error committed in the progress of a cause. Bouv. Law Diet. (Rawle's Rev.) vol. 1, p. 138. Amendments are allowed in equity with great liberality. Codington v. Mott, 14 n. J. Eq. 430, 82 Am. Dec. 258; Seymour v. Long Dock Co., 17 n. J. Eq. 169. But the doctrine has not been extended so far as to permit the substitution of an entirely different case from that made by the original bill. In Codington v. Mott, supra, at page 434 of 14 N. J. Eq. (82 Am. Dec. 258), Chancellor Green observed that Lord Redesdale, in Deniston v. Little, 2 Sch. & Lef. 11, note, said that heknew of no case which allows an amendment in order to enable the party to make a new case, and concludes by saying that the proper practice, where the complainant has mistaken his case, is to dismiss the bill without prejudice to a new one. In Berla v. Strauss, 74 N. J. Eq. 678, 75 Atl. 763, Vice Chancellor Howell held that a bill by a surviving partner in his own name to declare and enforce a resulting trust could not be changed by amendment to a bill for accounting exclusive of the theory of such trust; that that would require fundamental changes which should be asserted only by a new and original bill. This case was affirmed, 76 N. J. Eq. 275, 74 Atl. 518, on other ground, but without criticism of this one. It may not be out of place to observe that amendments in chancery differ from those at law, for, under the Practice Act, a court of law may by amendment, upon terms, permit the statement of a new or different cause of action in a complaint or counterclaim (Thompson v. Peppier, 91 N. J. Law, 160, 161, 102 Atl. 379), while the power of amendment in chancery has been evolved as a matter of practice, and is not regulated by statute, except to provide that amendments in that court may be made on terms (Comp. Stat. p. 438, § 77), which, by the way, is an Inherent power, and the statutory provision is merely declaratory.

Amendments must be germane; that is, akin or closely allied to the pleading amended. Now, this suit was evidently brought under the Divorce Act. P. L. 1907, p. 474, § 1, subd. 5. It could have been brought under none other, because neither at common law nor by statute, except the statute mentioned, could a suit have been instituted to annul this marriage because the girl was under 16, and that suit could be brought only by the wife, not by the husband. Clearly the case proposed to be made by the amendment, namely, an allegation that the girl fraudulently concealed from the petitioner the fact that she was only 13 years of age at the time of the marriage, is in no way related to the statutory proceeding unwarrantably instituted by the petitioner. This is not all. As at common law a girl is capable of consenting to marriage if of the age of 12 years (1 Bl. Com. 436), no suit will lie under the general jurisdiction of the court to annul the marriage of a girl over 12 even if she fraudulently concealed or misrepresented her exact age. In other words, as neither the common law nor the statute gives this petitioner any remedy to annul this marriage, it would be of no avail to him either to amend his present petition or dismiss it and commence a new suit under the general jurisdiction, which, under P. L. 1916, p. 109, would have to be instituted by petition.

A statute providing that a marriage may be declared void where the female is under a certain age has been held to leave the common-law rule otherwise unaltered. Bennett v. Smith, 21 Barb. (N. Y.) 439. Now, our statute (P. L. 1907, p. 474, § 1, subd. 5, supra) provides that a marriage may be annulled at the suit of the wife when she was under the age of 10 at the time, unless such marriage be confirmed by her after arriving at that age. In this state, therefore, the marriage of a girl over 12, but under 16 years of age, may be confirmed by her on arriving at 16, and, if so, it becomes indissoluble, unless for some other valid reason. Nor is the consent of a parent or guardian necessary to the validity of a minor's marriage, unless a statute expressly declares that a marriage contracted without it shall be a nullity. 26 Cyc. 834. And we have no such statutory provision. Formerly the person authorized to solemnize marriage, who married a minor without the requisite consent of parents or guardian, was liable to a penalty under the statute. Craft v. Jachetti, 47 N. J. Law, 205. But now persons cannot be married in this state without a license first had and obtained. P. L. 1912, p. 307, § 3; Comp. Stat. 1st Supp. p. 924, § 7. And a penalty is visited upon any person authorized to solemnize marriages who shall perform any marriage ceremony without the presentation of a license therefor (P. L. 1912, p. 311, § 10; Comp. Stat. 1st Supp. p. 926, § 14), except in certain cases of persons in the armed military or naval service of the United States (P. L. 1918, p. 519). And no such license shall be issued without the consent of parents or guardian to the marriage of a male under 21 or a female under 18, save in the instances excepted in the statute. P. L. 1912, p. 310, § 8; Comp. Stat. 1st Supp. p. 925, § 12.

I have no hesitation in pronouncing that, where a statutory remedy is given in chancery, the pleading which initiates it, whether bill or petition, cannot be amended so as to make an entirely different case under the general equity jurisdiction of the court, where, as in this case, the statute is not declaratory of the existing power of the court, as in Re Ungaro, 88 N. J. Eq. 25, 102 Atl. 244, but creates a new and theretofore un-afforded cause of action.

Besides the reason given by the master there is another one appearing in the record why the petition should be dismissed. It is that the defendant, being an infant under 16 years of age, should have had a guardian ad litem appointed for her by whom she might appear and answer and defend the suit. Lang v. Beloff, 53 N. J. Eq. 298, 31 Atl. 604; Bunting v. Bunting, 87 N. J. Eq. 20, 99 Atl. 840; Biddle's N. J. Div. Prac. (2d Ed.) 38. The reason I say that, being an infant under 16, a guardian should have been appointed for her, is because the Legislature has passed an act permitting a womanwho has attained that age to appear and prosecute or defend a suit for divorce or nullity of marriage. P. L. 1915, p. 539. Before the passage of that act an infant petitioner under 21 years of age was obliged to sue by next friend, and no decree could be made against an infant under that age unless such defendant was represented by a guardian ad litem. The defendant before me is now only in her fifteenth year, and, not being represented before the court by guardian, the petitioner is not entitled to proceed with his case. In these circumstances the order of reference was inadvertently made. The mere fact that the defendant is not represented by guardian ad litem does not in and of itself require the dismissal of the petition. That difficulty could be overcome by the appointment of a guardian, probably even after testimony taken as in the case before me, and the cause could be proceeded with de novo. Certainly no decree could be pronounced against her in the absence of a guardian, and, if on were, it would be a nullity. As amendments are allowed in the discretion of the court, doubtless in the present posture of this case the court, instead of vacating the order of reference and setting aside the master's report and appointing a guardian and permitting the cause to proceed de novo, can with equal propriety dismiss the petition for this defect.

For the foregoing reasons, the amendment applied for must be denied, and the petition will be dismissed.


Summaries of

Fodor v. Kunie

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Dec 9, 1920
112 A. 598 (Ch. Div. 1920)
Case details for

Fodor v. Kunie

Case Details

Full title:FODOR v. KUNIE.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Dec 9, 1920

Citations

112 A. 598 (Ch. Div. 1920)

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