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4 ACARELAR 1 (2023)

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IZUNWA: Voluntariety   in the Contract of Marriage and the Challenge of Duress


     VOLUNTARIETY IN THE CONTRACT OF MARRIAGE AND THE CHALLENGE OF DURESS*


Abstract
For  any human project including marriage, to be of value, it ought to proceed from the voluntary dispositions of the
free subject. This means that for any act to be properly a human undertaking, it must have been done with concrete
awareness,  willingness and deliberate consent of those involved. Predicated on this proposition, the Christian-
Canonical  Jurisprudence which informed the dictum of Lord Penzance in the celebrated case of Hyde v Hyde, made
voluntariness of the parties to marriage a sine qua non to any valid celebration. But in the ancient and modern times,
the issue of 'duress' has always operated to destroy the element of voluntariety in marriage. Whenever this happens,
the consequence  by law and  policy is nullity. Using the doctrinal method of inquiry, this paper is structured to
examine  the concepts of voluntariety and 'duress' as they affect the marriage contract. It finds that despite the trite
positions of the laws on this, people in their increasing numbers still enter into marriage under duress activated by
different persons and under various situations. The instant paper recommends more than else a Christian pastoral
engagement  of the problem, through value driven pastoral orientations, and robust enforcement of available legal
provisions against the operation of duress for marriages across all jurisdictions.

Keywords:   Voluntareity, Duress, Contract of Marriage, Consent

1. Introduction
Marriage  is a universal institution which is recognized and respected all over the world. It is usually governed by the
social and religious norms of the society. Essentially, 'marriage, as it were, is about the union of a man and a woman
for the purposes of living together in a community of love and having and rearing children.1 According to Osborn's
Concise  Law  Dictionary, the fundamental ethical component of the contract of marriage lies in its voluntariety.
Hence,  it is a 'voluntary union for life of one man and one woman  to the exclusion of all others... it is this
voluntariness which forms the bedrock of the contract of marriage, precisely as its formal cause, that is the victim of
duress among  other vitiating elements. Duress involves a coercion of the will or a situation in which one party has no
realistic alternative but to submit to pressure. It invokes a sense of intimidation or illegitimate pressure against a party
to the marriage.3 In its operation, it compromises the entire idea of voluntariety, thus exposing the vulnerable party to
exploitation during the life of 'the marriage'. It often comes by way of external pressures or emotional coercion
activated and sustained by either of the parties against the other, parental/family pressures, socio-cultural norms and
expectations as well as economic susceptibilities. Note that of all the elements of the marriage contract outlined by
Lord  Penzance in his definition of marriage namely; voluntariety, monogamity, heterosexuality, indissolubility and
exclusively,4only the element of voluntariety is universally accepted and defended. No known modern state, religion
or culture espouses force/duress in the institution of marriage. It is one of the areas in which the principles of
autonomy  and self determination are critically needed so as to make the common life of two persons possible. For 'if
both or all partners get to be in charge of their own lives, then you have a greater foundation for making room for each
other and growing  together In the progress of this paper, the relevance of voluntariness in human actions will be
examined  with particular emphasis on its consequences for the marriage contract. Furthermore, the vitiating element
of duress and how  it destroys voluntariety will be considered alongside some contentious issues surrounding the
concept itself in global jurisdictions. The paper will end with few recommendations that will strengthen the institution
of marriage against the vitiating 'assault' of duress and kindred forces.

2. The Question and  Relevance of Voluntariness in Human  Actions
Without  doubt, human  beings are not automatons; they  are moral entities free from all forms of psychological
determinations. Precisely as free moral agents, all human acts, actus humanus,6 properly so called are voluntary acts,
arising from an intellectual election of object and oriented towards an entelechy - end or purpose. This requires
knowledge,  awareness, willingness, considered decision and deliberated accent of the will. According to Dario
Composta,  what appears as moral in human  acts is only that which is guided by intelligence and will, or, in other
terms, by  understanding and willing, or also by awareness  and consent. Their flux constitutes the voluntary.7
Inferentially, voluntary acts require the concomitant presence by B: knowledge (awareness of the goal) and A: interior


*By  Maurice Okechukwu   IZUNWA,   PhD  (Phil), MA (Phil), MA (Rel), LLM, LLB, BL, Senior Lecturer, Department of
International Law and Jurisprudence, Faculty of Law, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria.
' M. O. Izunwa, 'Statutory Marriage and Contemporally Challenges: A Contextual Re-reading of some Modern Options'
[2010](1)(2) Confluence Journal of Private and Property Law, 75.
2 S Bone (ed.), Osborn 's Concise Law Dictionary (9th edn, London: Sweet and Maxwell, 2001) p. 246.
' Cf. Ludmer v. Ludmer, 2013 ONSC 784, [2013] O. J. No. 699.
4 Hyde v Hyde (1861-1873) ALL ER 175.
s'Its' Your  Choice: Personal Autonomy   in a Relationship' <https://genderminorities.com2021/03/11/autonomy-in-a-
relationship/>accessed on 17/07/2023.
6 Human  act(s), are completely different from Acts of Man, which are - those gestures and actions performed by a person,
but  not in a specifically human way. Examples include crying in a dream or acting under the effect of drugs or hypnosis.
? D Composta, Moral Philosophy and Social Ethics (India: Bangalore Theological Publications, 1988) p.14.


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