Allen v. Allen

28 S.E.2d 829, 126 W. Va. 415, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 3
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1944
Docket9505
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 S.E.2d 829 (Allen v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Allen, 28 S.E.2d 829, 126 W. Va. 415, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 3 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinion

*416 Fox, Judge:

This suit, instituted in the Circuit Court of Harrison. County, seeks to annul a marriage on the grounds of alleged fraud in its procurement on the part of the defendant wife. In substance, the fraud alleged by the plaintiff, husband, in his bill, is that the defendant, at the time of the marriage ceremony, entered into the same with the intent and purpose not to fully consummate the marriage by engaging in normal sexual intercourse with the husband, and that she carried out such intent and purpose and refused to engage in or permit such intercourse over a period of six and a half years, during five years of which the parties occupied together an apartment in the City of Clarksburg, slept in the same bed, and but for the alleged absence of sexual intercourse lived together in a normal manner as husband and wife. The wife denies that she refused to engage in sexual intercourse with her husband, except on one particular occasion; but admits that there was no such intercourse during the first eighteen months of their marriage. The marriage occurred at Oakland, Maryland, on June 6, 1936, but was not announced until around Thanksgiving in 1937. During this period the parties did not live together, and at no time had sexual intercourse with each other. With the defendant’s answer, and as a part of the same, she filed her cross-bill alleging desertion on the part of the plaintiff, without cause, and prayed for separate maintenance. The suit was referred to a commissioner under Code, 48-2-26, and evidence taken before him, after which he filed a report in which he says: ■

“The undersigned is of the opinion that the relief sought by the complainant should be denied and that the relief sought by the respondent should be granted.” ■

Exceptions to this report, filed by the plaintiff, were overruled, and on February 20, 1943, the circuit court entered a decree denying the relief sought by the plaintiff, *417 awarding the prayer of defendant s cross-bill, and requiring the plaintiff to support the defendant “for and during her natural life, or until she shall sooner marry or until there is a reconciliation between the plaintiff and defendant”; and the plaintiff was required to pay to the defendant, without any limitation as to time or otherwise, fifty dollars per month, payable in installments of twenty-five dollars on the first and fifteenth days of each month, beginning March 1, 1943. From this decree, on petition of the plaintiff, we granted this appeal.

The plaintiff seems to assume, and we think correctly, that Code, 48-2-2 and 3, afford statutory authority for his suit. Code, 48-2-2, provides:

“When a marriage is supposed to be void, or any doubt exists as to its validity, for any of the causes mentioned in section one of this article, or for any other cause recognized in law, either party may, except as provided in the next succeeding section, institute a suit for annulling or affirming the same, and, upon hearing the proofs and allegations of the parties, the court shall render a decree annulling or affirming the marriage, according to the right of the case. In every such case, and in every other case where the validity of a marriage is called in question, it shall be presumed that the marriage is valid, unless the contrary be clearly proven, and, if the marriage be decreed to be valid, it shall be conclusive upon all persons concerned.”

Section 1 of Article 2, mentioned above, provides that certain marriages are void when so declared by decree of nullity; but marriages procured by fraud are not mentioned in said section. Code, 48-2-3, apparently recognizes that a marriage may be annulled for fraud in its procurement, because it provides that, “A suit for annulling a marriage may not be instituted: * * * (b) where the cause is fraud, force or coercion, by the party who was guilty of such fraud, force or coercion, nor by the injured party if, after knowledge of the facts, he or she *418 has by acts or conduct confirmed such marriage.” Reading these sections together, the plain inference is that where there has been no confirmation of a marriage, procured by fraud, it may be annulled. However, we do not have to depend upon the statute, although we think it warrants annulment in a proper case. In Crouch v. Wartenburg, 86 W. Va. 664, 104 S. E. 117, this Court held, “A court of chancery, by virtue of its ordinary equity powers, possessed jurisdiction to entertain a suit for the purpose of annulling a marriage supposed to be void, or as to the validity of which some doubt may exist.” See also Meredith v. Shakespeare, 96 W. Va. 229, 122 S. E. 520. Both of these cases grow out of marriages entered into in a spirit of jest or joke, and in which it was contended there was no real and serious intent to enter into a marriage contract. If courts are willing to annul a marriage on that ground, certainly they will not refuse to annul a marriage procured by fraud. Many other authorities sustain the theory that aside from statutory authority, and under the inherent jurisdiction of courts of equity to set aside transactions based on fraud, marriages procured by fraud may be annulled; but such a marriage is voidable only, and may only be declared void and annulled at the suit of the injured party, and then only where the fraud practiced goes “to the very fundamentals or essentials of the marriage relations.” 38 C. J. 1300, 35 Am. Jur., 234-5; Anders v. Anders, 224 Mass. 438, 113 N. E. 203, Moore v. Moore, 94 Mise. 370, 157 N. Y. S. 819. Uncommunicated intention of one party to a marriage, not to engage in normal sexual intercourse with the other, following the marriage, existing at its date, and subsequently carried into effect, is such fraud as will entitle the innocent party to an -annulment of the marriage. Millar v. Millar, 175 Cal. 797, 167 P. 394; Miller v. Miller, 132 Misc. 121, 228 N. Y. S. 657; Bolmer v. Edsall, 90 N. J. 299, 106 A. 646. In view of these authorities, we have no doubt that the allegations of the plaintiff’s bill, if sustained by proof, would entitle him to the relief prayed for therein.

*419 On the other hand, if the allegations of defendant’s answer and cross-bill be sustained by proof, which would in itself amount to a complete refutation of the allegations of the bill, then the plaintiff is not entitled to relief, and the allegations contained in the cross-bill bearing upon her right to support, if sustained by proof, entitle her to the relief prayed for therein. If the charge that the defendant fraudulently induced the plaintiff to enter into the marriage falls to the ground, then there was a valid, legal and binding contract o‘f marriage, which imposes upon the husband the obligation to support the wife. If he fails in that duty, Code, 48-2-29, provides the wife a remedy against the husband’s default. She may proceed against him in an independent suit to secure her support.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E.2d 829, 126 W. Va. 415, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-allen-wva-1944.