[Bibliographical Note XVI.—For this chapter all the statutes relating to marriage enacted in fifty-two states and territories since the Revolution have been examined and compared, Hawaii not being included. The session laws and various compilations of statutes consulted are described in the Bibliographical Index, V, and need not here be named in detail.
Hitherto a history of matrimonial legislation in the United States has not appeared; but summaries of the laws of the various states have been made for particular periods. Of these the most important is the accurate digest for 1887-88—the time of compilation—contained in Wright's Report on Marriage and Divorce (Washington, 1889; reprinted without change, 1897). There is also a summary in Stimson, American Statute Law (Boston, 1886), I, 664 ff.; and for the sake of completeness may also be mentioned Vanness, A Digest of the Laws of New York and New England, on Marriage, Dower, Divorce, etc. (Hartford, 1877); Noble, A Compendium and Comparative View of the Thirty-Eight State Laws of Marriage and Divorce (New York, 1882); with the discussion of Cook, "Reform in the Celebration of Marriage," in Atlantic Monthly, LXI (Boston, 1888); Convers, Marriage and Divorce in the United States (Philadelphia, 1889); Snyder, The Geography of Marriage or the Legal Perplexities of Wedlock in the United States (New York, 1889); Ernst, The Law of Married Women in Massachusetts (2d ed., Boston, 1897); and Whitney, Marriage and Divorce (Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Chicago, 1894). Consult the parliamentary return of Marriage Law and Divorce Law in foreign countries and the colonies (London, 1894); and see also Bibliographical Note XVIII.]
I. THE NEW ENGLAND STATES
The foundation of the marriage law of the United States was laid long before the War of Independence. Some features have since been pruned away, and others have been changed or added; but the existing forms of celebration, the modes of registration, and the leading principles of matrimonial jurisprudence had already been developed. The century has produced a great mass of legislation; but so far as it is new it is concerned largely with administrative details, often of very great importance as determining the effective character of the law.
a) The solemnization.—In New England before the end of the colonial period the religious ceremony had long since been made optional with the lay celebration before a magistrate, which was the only form allowed in the beginning. This system is continued after the Revolution. As elsewhere in the country, the minister and the justice of the peace now share the business between them. The earlier statutes are generally more strict than the later regarding the place of residence and the territorial jurisdiction of the persons authorized to celebrate matrimony. For example, by the Massachusetts act of 1786 any justice of the peace may solemnize lawful wedlock within his own county; while a minister of the gospel, if "stated and ordained," may act only in the "town, district, parish, or plantation where he resides," provided one of the persons lives there too. If a place be destitute of a minister of any denomination, then a neighboring clergyman of the same society may serve; but only in the town or district where the bride or bridegroom dwells.[1117] In 1821 such ordained and stated minister, although living outside of the district over which he is settled, may conduct the ceremony at his own place of residence or at that of either of the persons, provided one or both of them is a member of his congregation. If there be no such minister in the place, then the couple desiring to be married may go to any other clergyman in the commonwealth, who in such case is authorized to act.[1118] All previous laws on the subject are repealed in 1834, when a new statute empowers the minister or justice, each in his own place of residence or in that of either of the persons, to perform the ceremony, if at least one of them lives in his official district.[1119] The present law is still broader in its terms. A marriage may now be solemnized in any place within the commonwealth by Jewish rabbis duly accredited; Friends according to their rites; any minister of the gospel, ordained according to the usage of his denomination, who resides in the commonwealth and continues to perform the functions of his office; or, until a few years ago, by any justice of the peace.[1120] By the act of May 23, 1899, an important change is made. Henceforth no justice of the peace may solemnize a marriage unless he also holds the office of city or town clerk, city registrar, clerk of a court, or that of assistant in either case; or "unless he shall have been specially designated by the governor." The latter may at his discretion name justices of the peace "who may solemnize marriages in the city or town in which they severally reside." Each place is to have at least one such designated magistrate; but otherwise the number is not to exceed one for every five thousand of its inhabitants. No justice may act without a certificate of designation, which the governor is authorized to revoke whenever he thinks fit; and every year in January the secretary of the commonwealth is required to send to the respective clerks or registrars a list of the justices to which authority is thus granted.[1121] However, by the Massachusetts law is prescribed the wise, though unique, condition that the ceremony may be conducted only by a person who is able to read and write the English tongue.[1122]
The course of legislation in the other states has been much the same as in Massachusetts previous to 1899. In all of them throughout the century, except in Rhode Island, justices of the peace in their respective counties have had authority to solemnize marriages. In that commonwealth any justice of the supreme court may now act,[1123] as earlier could the assistants, justices of the peace, and justices of the courts of common pleas.[1124] For over fifty years the judges of the county and higher courts in Connecticut have had the same power;[1125] and so during the assumption period had the councilors, judges, and even the governor and deputy governor, in Vermont.[1126] But in that state, after the admission to the Union, the justice of the peace has always been the only lay officer empowered to conduct the ceremony.
The law governing the ecclesiastical celebration has been a matter of slower growth and of much experimentation. That of Massachusetts has already been described. The New Hampshire statute of 1791 provides that marriage may be celebrated by any "ordained minister" in the county where he is settled or has his permanent residence.[1127] For many years thereafter no change was made in that requirement.[1128] But in 1833 every resident "ordained minister," if in "regular standing" with his denomination, is authorized to act throughout the state, after causing the "credentials of his ordination to be recorded in the office of the clerk of common pleas, in the county where he shall solemnize any marriage."[1129] The present law is the same in substance, except that the filing of credentials is not mentioned. A non-resident minister, similarly qualified, may now officiate anywhere in the state, on receiving a commission from the governor acting on the advice of the council; and within his own parish, when having a pastoral charge wholly or partly within the state.[1130] Authority in the state to join persons in wedlock is granted to "settled" or "ordained" ministers or elders of the leading churches by the Rhode Island laws of 1798;[1131] to the ministers or elders of any religious denomination who may be "domiciled" in the state, by the revision of 1844;[1132] and by the present law the same elder or minister may obtain a license to join persons in marriage, when he shall have registered his residence, the name of the parish with which he was last "associated, if any, and the name of the religious denomination to which he belongs, in the office of the town clerk of the town in which he resides ... in a book to be provided for that purpose," and "shall have subscribed his name thereto."[1133]
By the first laws of Maine like authority, in the counties where they dwell, is conferred upon ordained ministers, who shall be duly appointed and licensed during pleasure by the governor with the advice and consent of the council; provided either of the persons resides in the same county.[1134] In 1828 this restriction is removed; and the ministers of any denomination of Christians may be so commissioned for counties other than those in which they dwell.[1135] The law has since taken a different form. Power is now granted, during the pleasure of the executive, to every ordained minister of the gospel and to every person licensed to preach by an association of ministers, religious seminary, or ecclesiastical body, who shall be duly appointed and commissioned for that purpose by the governor.[1136] Moreover, in this state women, otherwise eligible under the constitution, may in the same way be commissioned to celebrate matrimony.[1137] In Vermont during the assumption period similar authority was granted to "settled" ministers in their respective towns while they continue in the ministry.[1138] The district of the "ordained" minister was extended to the county in 1797.[1139] Three years later, because "irregular itinerant preachers, under pretence of being ordained ministers of the gospel," in remote parts of the county, practiced impositions, and marriages solemnized by them were wholly illegal, it was again restricted to the town;[1140] but the act making this change was itself repealed in 1802.[1141] By a statute of 1806 a minister is required to file credentials of his ordination with the clerk of the town where he shall solemnize any marriage.[1142] But a more liberal provision appears in the revision of 1839, any resident minister of the gospel being then authorized to celebrate wedlock throughout the state.[1143] By the law as it now stands the same power is conferred upon a clergyman, ordained according to the usage of his denomination, who resides in the state, or else "labors statedly therein as a minister or missionary."[1144]
Ordained ministers of the "several plantations" of Connecticut, as already seen, in 1694 were first allowed to share with the justices of the peace the function of joining persons in marriage. Their power was restricted to their respective towns in 1702. It was extended to the county in 1783;[1145] and the clergyman is to have authority "while he continues settled in the work of the ministry." In 1820 the word "settled" was dropped. In the revision of 1821 marriages celebrated according to the rites of any religious denomination were declared valid.[1146] Authority to solemnize was granted in 1847 to any clergyman regularly licensed according to the forms and usages of the denomination to which he belongs, and having charge of a society for one year or more.[1147] Finally, since 1855, the same power has been conferred upon all ordained or licensed clergymen of Connecticut or any other state while engaged in the work of the ministry.[1148]
The law of Connecticut still retains the broad provision that marriages celebrated according to the rites of any religious society within the state are valid.[1149] This, of course, includes the Quakers, who in each of the other New England states are expressly permitted to follow their own usages in this regard, as also are the Jews in Rhode Island.[1150] No form of ceremony is anywhere prescribed; nor, except in Rhode Island, are any witnesses required by the statute.[1151] In New Hampshire persons living together and acknowledging each other as husband and wife, and generally reputed to be such for the period of three years or until the death of one of them, shall thereafter be deemed to have been legally married.[1152] Various penalties are prescribed in the different states for unauthorized celebration;[1153] but in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Rhode Island it is expressly provided that when a marriage has been solemnized by a person professing to be legally authorized, although not so authorized, its validity shall be unaffected by such lack of authority, if it is valid in other respects, and entered into by the parties or one of them in the belief that they were lawfully wedded.[1154] It is also enacted in Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island that the validity of a marriage shall not be affected by any omission or informality in entering the intention to marry.[1155]