Jactitation
Jactitation or jactitation of marriage is an archaic cause of action in English and in Irish law. Where one person falsely asserts that he or she is married to another, the wronged party could obtain an order restraining further repetitions of the falsehood. The action was abolished in England in 1986 and in Ireland in 1995.
The suit for jactitation of marriage
Where one person falsely asserted that he or she is married to another, the wronged party (the petitioner) could bring a suit for jactitation of marriage. The suit could be brought only against the person (the respondent) wrongfully claiming to be married, and could not be used to forbid third parties from alleging the existence of a marriage.[1]
If the court found the case to be proven, it could issue a declaration that the two parties were not married, along with an order forbidding the respondent from repeating the assertion.[1]
There were three defences to the suit:[1]
- that an assertion of marriage was in fact never made
- that the assertion was true
- that the misrepresentation was acquiesced in by the petitioner.
Origins and history
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, jactitation is "a false declaration tending to someone's detriment". The word, in the sense of "a public or open declaration, especially of a boastful sort; ostentatious affirmation; boasting, bragging" was first recorded in 1632. Legal proceedings for jactitation of marriage were recorded as having been brought before the Ecclesiastical courts in England in 1685.[2]
Prior to Lord Hardwicke's Act of 1754, which first made a formal ceremony of marriage compulsory, a suit for jactitation was the usual method of determining the validity of a marriage in England. After that date, the suit was much less used since proof of a formal ceremony was all that was needed to establish a marriage.[1]
Before 1857, proceedings for jactitation in England took place only in the ecclesiastical courts, but the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 transferred the jurisdiction to the newly created Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Court. After 1925, the suit had to be instituted in a divorce County Court, with the case being transferred to the High Court if a defence was filed.[1]
Abolition
In 1971 the Law Commission reviewed the state of the law in England and recommended that the suit for jactitation of marriage should be abolished. It was by then little-used, with the last reported case being in 1968. The Commission noted in particular the suit's narrow scope and its inapplicability to false statements made by third parties.[1] The right to petition for jactitation was ultimately abolished by section 61 of the Family Law Act 1986.[3]
In the Republic of Ireland a Law Reform Commission report of 1983 recommended abolition of jactitation as "an ancient remedy which has fallen into complete disuse".[4] The recommendation was implemented by the Family Law Act 1995,[5] which instead empowered the Circuit Family Court to make a declaration about the status of a person's marriage.[6]
References
- Working paper no. 34 - Family Law: Jactitation of Marriage (Report). Law Commission. 22 January 1971. at paras 2,3,5,6,9
- "Jactitation". Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
- "Family Law Act: Section 61", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 1986 c. 55 (s. 61)
- Taylor, Mervyn (18 May 1994). "Family Law Bill, 1994: Committee Stage". Select Committee on Legislation and Security proceedings. Oireachtas. pp. Section 34. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
- "Family Law Act, 1995, Section 34". Irish Statute Book. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
- "Family Law Act, 1995, Section 29". Irish Statute Book. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
Bibliography
- Law Commission (England and Wales) (15 January 1971). Jactitation of Marriage (PDF) (Report). Consultation papers. BAILII. Retrieved 12 February 2012.
- Law Reform Commission (Ireland) (1983). Report on restitution of conjugal rights, jactitation of marriage and related matters (Report). LRC reports. 6. Dublin.