New
Jersey a Party To Marriage Contract
The State of New Jersey claims it is a third party to the marriage
contract in all marriages. Yet, the State never discloses this to
the other two parties to the contract. It never discloses what its
specific performance is in order for the State's position in the
contract to be valid. It never discloses what its consideration to
those parties in order for the State's position in the contract to
be valid.
The State of New Jersey claims it is a third party to a marriage
contract but never performs its end of the bargain. This is
"constructive fraud". The two parties to the marriage contract,
husband and wife, have been defrauded by the State of New Jersey
acting as a fraudulent third party who is under no obligation to
abide by the terms of the marriage contract.
If the State of New Jersey were to abide by the terms of the
marriage contract then they would have to pay for a married couple's
home mortgage, new car loans, trips around the world, million
dollar bank accounts. Otherwise, the State of New Jersey has no
business being involved in marriages.
Marriage is a fundamental, God-given right that cannot be
licensed
by the State in order to allow the State to become an uninvited
third party. Licenses are imposed by the regulatory police powers
of the State in order to do something that is illegal or unlawful.
Since when did marriage, a God-given, fundamental right, become
illegal or unlawful. In New Jersey, marriage licenses were once
required because of interracial marriages and blood testing. Since
interfering with interracial marriages is a racially motivated
bias/hate crime and since 1998 blood tests are no longer necessary,
why are marriage licenses required at all?
In Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U.S. 374, 98 S.Ct. 673 (1978),
the
U.S. Supreme Court held that marriage is fundamental right that
requires
strict judicial scrutiny if the State wants to interfere with
marriage. The High Court held that substantial interferences with
that
right will therefore not be sustained merely because they are
rational. In Zablocki, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a
Wisconsin statute
that prohibited a party from marrying if they owed child support.
In Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1, 12, 87 S.Ct. 1817 (1967), the
U.S. Supreme Court further upheld the fundamental right to marry
when it held that the State could not prohibit marriages on the
basis of race.
Yet, New Jersey violates those U.S. Supreme Court holdings
and
violates the fundamental, God-given right to marriage by stating it
is a
third party to every marriage. Not only is this unconstitutional
but
it violates Freedom of Religion as it interferes with marrying
parties' rights to worship their religions. This is a direct
religious persecution attack by the State on religions.
There is a long line of New Jersey cases implicating the
State
in
criminal acts of violating constitutional rights. These cases show
that
the state is a party to a marriage and to divorces. This is a
violation of the fundamental right to marry without state
interference.
The state has no real compelling interest to interfere with
marriages
because to do so only supports the legal industry's profit motive.
The State is a party at interest to the marriage contract
or
status together with the husband and wife". Duerner v. Duerner,
142 N.J. Eq. 259 (E. & A. 1948).
"The law does not encourage divorce actions and regards
such
actions as imposing special responsibilities upon the court and
attorneys as officers of the court because, in every divorce
action, State is in fact, if not in name, third party having
substantial interest, and public is represented by 'court's
conscience'. In re Backes, 16 N.J. 430, 433-34 (1954). See also,
Schlemm v. Schlemm, 31 N.J. 557, 585 (1960).
"The State is a third party to every matrimonial action to
sever
or void the bonds of matrimony...It has long been well settled and
now stands unchallenged that marriage is a social relationship
subject in all respects to the state's police power". Manion v.
Manion, 143 N.J. Super. 499, 502 (Ch.Div. 1976), citing Rothman v.
Rothman, 65 N.J. 219, 228 (1974).
"It has been well said that in the granting of divorces the
state,
as well as the parties, is interested, and that the public is
represented by what is called 'the conscience of the court'...."
The State is a third party to every divorce proceeding and has
exclusive control of the matrimonial status of those domiciled
within its borders. McLean v. Grabowski, 92 N.J. Super. 545,
547-48 (Ch.Div. 1966).
"Other contracts may be modified, restricted, or enlarged,
or
entirely released, upon the consent of the parties. Not so with
marriage. The relation once formed, the law steps in and holds the
parties to various obligations and liabilities. It is an
institution in the maintenance of which, in its purity, the public
is deeply interested, for it is the foundation of the family and of
society, without which there would be neither civilization nor
progress". McLean v. Grabowski, at 547.
These words sound great but in reality they are hollow
words. However, after the New Jersey Divorce Reform Act of 1976, in
which no-fault divorce came into being, the State of New Jersey
showed its true hand by not being interested in marriages. Under
the new law the State allowed one party to request a divorce--a
total sundering of the
institution of marriage.
When did the State of New Jersey become a party to a
marriage? When did it inform the parties to a marriage that it was
a third party to the marriage? When did it inform the parties of
what specific performance it would perform? When did it inform the
parties of its consideration to those parties?
The courts nowadays are talking out of both sides of their
mouth
about this issue. This is for the beneficial profit motive of
attorneys. At the recent Michaels Attorney Ethics hearings in
1994-1995, and the recent Divorce Reform legislation hearings
around the same time, testimony by dozens of attorneys reflected
one thing: They were only interested in how they were going to get
paid for representing their clients in divorce matters. One of
the ways they suggested was to put a lien on a client's property.
The state is no longer interested in maintaining
marriages. Divorce is a huge industry making many lawyers wealthy
and feeding the bureaucracies associated with divorce, i.e., mental
health bureaucracy, child support enforcement bureaucracy, domestic
violence administration bureaucracy, etc. Lawyer created
legislation has given lawyers a multitude of avenues to create as
many divorces as
possible. Divorce in New Jersey averages between $70,000- $100,000
per couple. Since the Divorce Reform Act was instituted, divorces
jumped from under 5,000 to over 70,000. Lawyers have found a
financial windfall in divorce litigation. This is redistribution
of wealth from the suffering of others into lawyers' pockets.
As can be clearly seen in Massar v. Massar, 279 N.J. Super.
89,
94-95 (App.Div. 1995), 652 A.2d 219, the State gives "lip service"
that it "does not promote divorce and as always has strong public
interest in promoting marriage". Massar vs. Massar at page 94
holds that "the State has adopted a public policy through statute
that citizens of state shall have liberal grounds to disengage
themselves from marriages...."
What the State granteth by licensure, the State can taketh away!
The time has passed already and all of us must contact our state
legislators and demand that they remove all statutory reference to
marriage licenses except in cases of homosexual marriages or where
two mentally defective adults are involved. The state has no right
to tell who and when to marry except in these two circumstances.
DO YOU THINK THERE IS A VIOLATION OF CHURCH AND STATE
HERE?????????????????
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