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JACTITATION (from See also: English See also: law, the maliciously boasting or giving out by one party that he or she is married to the other
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In such a See also: case, in See also: order to prevent the See also: common reputation of their See also: marriage that might ensue, the procedure is by suit of jactitation of marriage, in which the petitioner alleges that the respondent boasts that he or she is married to the petitioner, and prays a declaration of nullity and a decree putting the respondent to perpetual silence there-after
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Previously to 1857 such a proceeding took place only in the ecclesiastical courts, but by express terms of the Matrimonial Causes See also: Act of that See also: year it can now be brought in the See also: probate, See also: divorce and See also: admiralty division of the High See also: Court
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To the suit there are three defences: (I) denial of the boasting; (2) the truth of the representations; (3) allegation (by way of See also: estoppel) that the petitioner acquiesced in the boasting of the respondent
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In See also: Thompson v
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Rourke, 1893, Prob
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70, the court of See also: appeal laid down that the court will not make a decree in a jactitation suit in favour of a petitioner who has at any See also: time acquiesced in the assertion of the respondent that they were actually married
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Jactitation of marriage is a suit that is very rare
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