posted on Nov, 12 2023 @ 11:06 AM
I should add quickly, before the Scottish mafia descends, that this story is about the legality of a single marriage, not Scottish marriages in
general, and this marriage was Scottish only in the geographical sense. That is, the disputed wedding took place in Glasgow in 1910.
The difference between English and Scottish marriage law is the origin of the fame of Gretna Green. The English Marriage Act of 1754 imposed a strict
rule of “no marriage under the age of twenty-one without parental consent”, and the traditional procedure of issuing public “banns” in the
parishes of the two parties helped to enforce that rule. This law did not apply in Scotland, and it was possible to get married in Scotland on a much
more casual basis. The geography of the Border between England and Scotland makes Gretna Green the southernmost crossing-point and the easiest one to
reach from southern England, so it became a proverbial location for “runaway” marriages. The state of the law was amended in 1856 by “Lord
Brougham’s Act” which provided that marriage in Scotland could be allowed only if both parties were either Scottish-born, or permanently resident
in Scotland, or had resided in Scotland for a minimum of twenty-one days before the wedding. This would give angry parents a little time to track down
the fugitives.
I have a copy of the Times for May 20th 1922 (when my mother was born), and I find in the law reports that Archibald Dickson Winterbottom was seeking
the annulment of his marriage to Gladys Hughes Winterbottom.
Mr. Cotes-Preedy appeared in court for Archibald (“the petitioner”) and Mr. Preston appeared for Gladys (“the respondent”). Since this was an
English court, and the petitioner was basing his case on an alleged breach of the Scottish marriage laws, Mr. Mcgillivray, a member of the English
bar and the Scottish bar simultaneously, was also present in court to give testimony on the tricky legal points. Mr. Justice Hill was hearing the
case.
Since the story which could be eked out of this report looked interesting, I tracked down a document from a Winterbottom genealogist which supplied
more of the family background. Fortunately, because unaided speculation was already causing me to bark up a few wrong trees.
Archibald was born in Lancashire, but by the time he grew up his father William Winterbottom, a very wealthy businessman, had acquired Aston Hall in
Derbyshire, which became their family home. He joined the Cavalry, and in 1910 he was stationed in Dublin.
Gladys was born in Paris of American parents, and seems to have crossed the Atlantic frequently. She married a fellow-American in 1904 and got
divorced in America in 1908. The first date comes from the genealogist, the second from the Times. On her divorce, she returned to England and settled
in Bearwardcote in Derbyshire. Living in the same county might have been something of an icebreaker when she went to Dublin and got acquainted with
Archibald.
In the words of Mr. Preston, “The evidence is that he met her on the hunting-field and had known her for six weeks before they went through the
ceremony.” According to “The Curragh Incident” by Sir James Fergusson, the officers at the Curragh, further inland, would frequently go out with
the Kildare Hunt, with a territory which would have reached as far as Dublin. One diary, “after briefly noting details of training and inspections,
records a cheerful succession of meets, point-to-points, tea-parties and dances”. In that social environment, Archibald came to know Gladys and
decided to marry her, even though she was four years older than him. His father disapproved, and probably regarded Gladys as a gold-digger.
Archibald’s answer to this opposition was the resolve to get married in Glasgow and tell his father afterwards. I don’t suppose he was given
enough leave to allow them to meet the “twenty-one days” requirement. They got round this problem by claiming “permanent residence”, giving
false addresses. In her case, Port Logan in Wigtownshire. Port Logan is near Stranraer, which probably inspired the choice. They could have noticed
the name, at least, in their passage from Ireland. Fortunately the only “proof of residence” required in 1910 was a sworn oath in front of the
Sheriff-substitute. Nevertheless this shameless deception would be at the heart of the later legal tangle.
According to the genealogist, Gladys was already having a crisis of conscience about the legality of their marriage in 1913. The story in court is
that these doubts began in 1915, and Archibald tried to resolve them by urging her to marry him again.. He later withdrew the offer because
unspecified “difficulties” arose. One of them, I imagine, would have been the necessity of proving the first wedding to be invalid before the
ceremony could be repeated, but perhaps he was no longer sure that he wanted to be married. They lived “under the same roof, though not as husband
and wife” until 1919. She then left him, perhaps to go back to Paris. At least her counsel reports that he could not call her because she was very
ill, and he had presented a French medical certificate to vouch for the illness. Now, in 1922, Archibald himself was trying to get the marriage
invalidated on the grounds that the ceremony had been performed illegally. The case took the form of a suit against Gladys, in legal terminology a
“petition for relief”.
Since his argument was based on the fact that Gladys had given a false address, Mr. Justice Hill questioned him very closely about his own
involvement. It was a case of “What did he know and when did he know it?” He claims that he did not hear her giving a Scottish address before the
ceremony, and “I knew nothing at all about it until I saw it on the register which I signed” (though he admits that he made no comment about it
even at the time of signing). This innocent pose is very implausible, to be honest. He would have certainly had to think about some way of getting
round the twenty-one day rule, and may well have made the suggestion himself. He would have had to give a false address on his own account at the same
time, but neither side saw any advantage in bringing up that point explicitly.
So the first thing the court needs to know is whether giving a false address really would invalidate the marriage. That is where Mr. Mcgillivray comes
in. Technically as a witness for the petitioner and cross-examined by Mr. Preston. He confirms that the Scottish courts would at least “entertain”
a suit like the one brought by the petitioner, citing a couple of recent cases. He also affirms that the allegation would be a possible line of
defence against a prosecution for bigamy, should either party marry again.