A person's
status is a set of social conditions or
relationships created and vested in an individual by an act of
law rather than by the
consensual acts of the
parties, and it is
in
rem, i.e. these conditions must be recognised by the
world. It is the qualities of universality and permanence that
distinguish status from consensual relationships such as
employment and
agency. Hence, a person's status and its
attributes are set by the law of the
domicile if born in a
common
law state, or by the law of
nationality if born in a
civil law state and this status and
its attendant
capacities should be
recognised wherever the person may later travel.
Identity/personality
In early laws, an
outlaw was a person who, by
judicial process, was deprived of all normal rights as a human
being unless and until a court reversed itself through an
affirmative act of inlawry. This was a form of
civil death. Similarly, a
slave was a chattel or possession, and had no legal
personality except that, in the U.S., some of the Free States did
allow limited legal personality. Legal personality could be
surrendered voluntarily by becoming a monk or by travelling, e.g.
the first provisions of the French Civil Code deny
civil rights to foreigners. As an aspect of the
social contract between a state and
the
citizens who owe it
allegiance, most developed legal systems contain
positive provisions defining each individual's legal identity and
its attributes.
All matters of social
rank or caste are examples of personal
status, the modern extremes of which would be nobility and the 200 million dalits, the untouchables of
India
.
Full age or
minority are in many laws
treated as aspects of personal status. The same thing is true of
the loss of
capacity by reason of
insanity or other
mental illness. This is of critical
importance if a person wishes to enter into a
marriage or a
contract having travelled to a state
where the age of minority is different or the form of marriage is
apparently not consistent with the laws of the "home" state.
Fictitious persons or
legal entities
may be created by law through the act of
incorporation and these
corporations are quite separate from the
natural persons who may be involved.
The holders of some public offices are vested with the office, its
terms are fixed by law, and every person within the state must
recognise the existence of the office and its rights and duties,
e.g. an
archbishop or a corporation may
represent a business association with its own purposes and
capacities. It would be commercially inconvenient if the status of
the entity changed depending on the laws of the place where
commercial transactions were effected. For example,
general partnerships have a separate
legal personality in some states but not in others.
Personal Status
With some exceptions, it is universally accepted that
marriage bonds lawfully entered into under the laws
of any
country, which changes the status of
a person from "independent", "single" or "unmarried" to "a married
person", will be recognized as such by all other countries in the
world, and the partners to the marriage assume the status of
husband and
wife. That
status goes with the people no matter where in the world the
spouses may find themselves (except where local
public policy is invoked). However,
though they are recognized as husband and wife, pursuant to a
marriage anywhere in the world, the mutual rights and duties owed
by the spouses are determined by the law or custom of the country
in which they find themselves.
Under normal circumstances, marriage exists until either one of the
parties dies or until it is ended by legal process through
nullity or
divorce. The
circumstances in which that status is to be brought to an end is of
sufficient interest to the State that it usually regulates the
circumstances in which the
family relationship may be terminated.
On the death of a spouse, the survivor's personal status changes to
"widow" or "widower", and on the termination of the marriage, both
of their status changes to "divorcee".
The emotional ties between
parents and their
children come into being through the
natural blood relationship but the law attaches a series of right
and duties to all involved. A child has the status of a
minor. Another is the status of
legitimacy. A legitimate child is usually
defined as one born to parents who are married to each other; the
child is illegitimate if the relationship is not recognized by the
law, but usually has the opportunity to change status if the
parents subsequently marry.
Adoption
usually creates a legal relationship similar to that of natural
parent and child. In that event, legitimacy or otherwise of the
child is not an issue. A parent does not have status as a parent.
Issues may arise as to who is in the position of parent in relation
to a child when there are issues of illegitimacy,
surrogacy or other disputed parenthood.
When a child or other person incapable of looking after themselves
requires care by someone who may not be his or her natural or
adoptive parent. They are sometimes said to be
wards of a
legal
guardian. This relationship, however, does not change the
status of the child as a minor, and, like a parent, the guardian
has no status, though rights and duties are expected between the
people.
Footnotes
- Whether or not the marriage is or is not recognized by society
in general or any other non-government authority.