The practical application of this doctrine appears in the two cases of divorce and inheritance. Here the temporal courts tried indirectly to put a check upon clandestine marriages, to remedy the evils resulting from the scholastic dogma that mere consent secretly expressed in words of the present tense constitutes a valid marriage, by making the acquisition of certain property rights depend upon the publicity of the espousals.[1133] The widow could not receive her dower unless it had been publicly assigned at the nuptials before the church door.[1134] "The result is curious, for at first sight the lay tribunal seems to be rigidly requiring a religious ceremony which in the eyes of the church is unessential.... We soon see, however, that what our justices are demanding is, not a religious rite nor 'the presence of an ordained clergyman,' but publicity.... Marriages contracted elsewhere may be valid enough, but only at the church door can a bride be endowed. There is a special reason for this requirement. The common-law contrast to the church-door marriage is the death-bed marriage.[1135] At the instance of the priest and with the fear of death before him, the sinner 'makes an honest woman' of his mistress. This may do well enough for the church, and may, one hopes, profit his soul in another world, but it must give no rights in English soil."[1136] So also with regard to inheritance, in certain cases,[1137] the lay court made the rights of children depend upon public solemnization of the nuptials, thus adopting the canonical theory of "putative marriages."[1138] Although there may be no valid marriage on account of the existence of certain impediments, such as too near kinship, the children are nevertheless legitimate if the nuptials were publicly celebrated at the church door, and if at least one of the parents, at the time the children were begotten, was "ignorant of the fact which constituted the impediment." They are entitled to inheritance, though the parents are not really husband and wife. On this point in the thirteenth century church and state were at one;[1139] but later a less liberal doctrine was adopted by the secular tribunals. "The ultimate theory of the English lawyers took no heed of good or bad faith, and made the legitimacy of the children depend on the fact that their parents while living were never divorced."[1140]

The refusal of the church to prescribe a proper age condition for those entering matrimony led, as might be expected, to child marriages; and in this case the rules of the English common law only tended to magnify the evil. By the canonists the age of consent to marriage was fixed at seven years.[1141] Thereafter a marriage formed without consent of parent or guardian, and even in opposition to it, was held to be legal; but it was "voidable so long as either of the parties to it was below the age at which it could be consummated. A presumption fixed this age at fourteen years for boys and twelve years for girls. In case only one of the parties was below that age, the marriage could be avoided by that party but was binding on the other. So far as we can see, this doctrine was accepted by our temporal courts."[1142] By the teaching of the common lawyers a widow of nine years of age at her husband's death could claim dower, though the marriage would have been voidable by her at the age of puberty.[1143] The English temporal courts appear to have disregarded the canonical rule that a marriage is absolutely void when formed below the age of seven. "Coke tells us that the nine years old widow shall have her dower 'of what age soever her husband be, albeit he were but four years old,' and certain it is that the betrothal of babies was not consistently treated as a nullity. In Henry III.'s day marriage between a boy of four or five years and a girl who was no older seems capable of ratification, and as a matter of fact parents and guardians often betrothed, or attempted to betroth, children who were less than seven years old. Even the church could say no more than that babies in the cradle were not to be given in marriage, except under the pressure of some urgent need."[1144] For such infant marriages, however, there were two practical motives during the Middle Ages. In England, just as in India and often among lower races,[1145] the betrothal or espousal of very young children was a means of peaceful treaty or alliance; and the "rigour" of the feudal law was also in this way avoided.[1146] "As deaths were early in those days, and wardship frequent, a father sought by early marriage of his son or daughter to dispose of their hands in his lifetime, instead of leaving them to be dealt out to hungry courtiers who only sought to make as large a profit as they could from the marriage of the wards they had bought for that purpose;"[1147] and the lord's right of marriage might in like manner be defeated by conferring knighthood upon a son in tender years.[1148] Even as late as the age of the Tudors "much immorality resulted from the child marriages which were common in fashionable life."[1149]

IV. PUBLICITY SOUGHT THROUGH BANNS AND REGISTRATION

Without doubt the wrong and confusion arising in the ecclesiastical theory and definition of marriage were manifold,h3 and they were patent to every observer. At the Council of Trent it was asserted that some action to put a check upon clandestine marriages was demanded by all the temporal powers;[1150] and the provincial church councils, aided by state legislation, had done what they could by imposing; penalties to remedy the abuse.[1151] Nevertheless, strange as it may seem to one not acquainted with the devious logic of scholastic theology, many members of the Council of Trent, on dogmatic grounds, were stubbornly opposed to the only reform which experience showed could be effective. They affirmed that severer discipline would suffice. They apologized for clandestine marriages on the pretext that they are sometimes useful, even necessary; or they denied that to declare them null would prove an efficient remedy.[1152]

Hence we are better able to appreciate at its true value the significance for the Catholic world of the victory gained by the common-sense of the majority. It was a victory in favor of that publicity which the state demanded. Indeed, the church had already done something, in spite of dogma, to change marriage from a private to a public transaction. Her collision with the state, her anomalous position with respect to social order, was involuntary. She was caught, as it were, in the meshes of her own philosophy. Yet in the interest of morality she strove to secure publicity. The priest at the nuptials, declares Sohm, "appears first of all as a public person."[1153] In particular the church tried to gain publicity for marriage by the institution of banns. The custom of publishing banns seems first to have made its appearance in France, probably as early as the fifth century.[1154] It is enforced by the capitulary of 802, which gains its real significance from this fact, and not from the mention of the priestly benediction.[1155] From France it gradually made its way into other countries of Europe. Thus in the year 1200, as already noted, banns were enforced by Archbishop Walter; and they were first made a general requirement by Innocent III. at the fourth Lateran council in 1215.[1156] Later the English archbishops found it necessary from time to time to impose more stringent penalties for neglect of the proper publication of banns;[1157] and they were enforced, without making the publication essential to a valid marriage, by the Council of Trent. From the twelfth century onward the marriage rituals contain directions for the asking and publication of banns;[1158] while the punishment of persons guilty of violating the canons in this regard gave much employment to the spiritual courts during the Middle Ages.[1159]

The institution of banns has a special historical interest as being in some sense the mediæval substitute for the modern registration and official license to wed. The practice was to announce the marriage, usually on three successive Sundays preceding the nuptials, that any objection on the ground of relationship or other disability might be brought forward. But the decrees of the church were not carefully enforced. Dispensation from the obligation to publish banns was the right of the bishop, but his license was usually granted only in favor of the nobility and higher classes; and the right constituted an important source of revenue.[1160]

The year 1538 marks an important epoch in the administration of English matrimonial law. It was then, according to the researches of Burn, that parish registers of births, deaths, and marriages were first introduced; although before this time it had been customary in some places to inscribe such records in the missals and psalters of the church.[1161] The first article of the injunctions issued by Thomas Cromwell, vice-regent under Henry VIII., provided: "Item, That you and every parson, vicar, or curate within this Diocese, for every Church keep one Book or Register, wherein he shall write the day and year of every Wedding, Christening, and Burial, made within your parish for your time, and so every man succeeding you likewise, and also there insert every person's name, that shall be so wedded, christened, and buried. And for the safe keeping of the same Book the parish shall be bound to provide of their common charges one sure coffer, with two locks and keys, whereof the one to remain with you, and the other with the Wardens of every parish wherein the said Book shall be laid up, which Book ye shall every Sunday take forth, and in the presence of the said Wardens or one of them, write and record in the same, all the Weddings, Christenings, and Burials made the whole week afore, and that done, to lay up the Book in the said coffer as afore; and for every time that the same shall be omitted, the party that shall be in the fault thereof, shall forfeit to the said Church iijs. iiijd. to be employed on the reparation of the said Church."[1162]

Thus in this, the most ancient English registration act, the parson or incumbent appears as the original registrar; and that the importance of keeping such record was keenly appreciated is shown by the anxious, almost painful, minuteness with which his duties are defined. The order of Henry VIII. was enforced or supplemented under Edward VI., Elizabeth, William III., and other monarchs; but, save during the Commonwealth, no material change was made in the mode of registration until in 1836 the present system was introduced.[1163]