Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Marilyn Ireland's avatar

People seem happily to call marriage a “contract,” but really it isn’t. In the case of a contract, people get to set the terms. Some might insist on fidelity, others not. Some anticipate children; others, from choice or physical impediment, would not. People might choose their own financial arrangement rather than leaving it to common law or community property, depending on the state of eventual residence. Some might, if they were drawing up their own “contract,” set the term as less than a lifetime commitment.

In fact, the state sets the terms of a marriage, creating what in feudal times the law would have called a status, not a contract. We still have legal status, for example infancy and military service, but lawyers do not study status law as such. Marriage law thus gets analogized to contract. Tradition and religion combine with state power to make marriage subject to set rules and expectations, but one must be careful, particularly if one has a libertarian bent, not to apply contract law to the institution. It is a poor fit.

Ps. Re Sayers, a vote here for The Nine Tailors, where accidental bigamy plays a role. Query: why, if marriage is a contract, is polygamy and polyandry illegal? Strange to limit a contract to two, and only two parties.

Expand full comment
William H Stoddard's avatar

I'm pleased to learn that you're a fan of Sayers! But I wouldn't pick Busman's Honeymoon as one of her best; it seems to me to be one of her lesser efforts. My own top choice would be Gaudy Night, which is not merely my favorite mystery but one of my favorite novels; followed by The Nine Tailors, though I'm also very fond of Murder Must Advertise, perhaps partly because it was the first Wimsey novel that I read.

I'm currently rereading her collection of essays Unpopular Opinions, a copy of which resides in the local university library; I'm struck by how sophisticated her understanding of historical linguistics is, and entertained by her Sherlockian essays, especially the one about what university Holmes attended and what courses he took.

Expand full comment
25 more comments...

No posts