The 2023 Florida Statutes (including Special Session C)
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. . . contracts attached to the complaint clearly fit within the legislative prohibition of sections 771.01 and 771.04 . . . Section 771.04 solely addresses contracts to marry: No contract to marry hereafter made or entered into . . .
. . . . § 771.04 (1986). Illinois, too, outlawed the common law cause of action. . . .
. . . . § 771.04. . . . Fla.Stat.Ann. § 771.04. . . . .
. . . consideration of premarital sacrifices, the Duttenhofer court purported to reason by analogy from section 771.04 . . . Section 771.04 bars a cause of action where a prospective spouse abandons the marriage plan before consummation . . .
. . . Florida’s “heart balm” legislation, see § 771.04, Fla.Stat. (1983), which abolished, inter alia, the . . . Before the enactment of Section 771.04, damages recoverable for breach of promise to marry included loss . . . for loss of future support, if brought as an independent action, would likely be outlawed by Section 771.04 . . . Section 771.04, Florida Statutes (1983), states: “No act hereafter done within this state shall operate . . .
. . . . § 771.04, Fla.Stat. (1979). . . .
. . . In 1952 the average gross monthly income from cabin rentals was $771.04. . . .
. . . Judgment was asked against the defendants and each of them in the sum of $771.04. . . .