Anonymous

158 N.Y.S. 51
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 N.Y.S. 51 (Anonymous) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anonymous, 158 N.Y.S. 51 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

CRANE, J.

[1] Due, no doubt, to the fact that so few cases brought to annul a marriage upon the ground of impotency have been contested, the law upon this subject in this state seems to be somewhat in doubt. What few authorities there are, together with the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, § 1743, lead to the conclusion that the law is as follows:

The physical incapacity of entering into the marriage state must exist at the time of the marriage and be incurable. That if a slight operation will remove the incapacity without endangering life and health, the fact that the incapable one refuses to submit to such an operation does not justify an annulment; whereas, if the incapacity can be cured only by a dangerous operation, such defect is incurable within the meaning of the law.

The Revised Statutes of 1828 (2 R. S. 144, pt. 2, c. 8, art. 3, tit. 1), headed, “Divorces on Ground of the Nullity of the Marriage Contract,” provided that the chancellor may, by a sentence of nullity, declare void the marriage contract upon the ground, among others, that one of the parties was physically incapable of entering into the marriage state. The incapacity must have existed at the time of the marriage, but nothing in the statute was said as to curability.

Under this provision of the Revised Statutes was decided by Chancellor Walworth, the case of Devanbagh v. Devanbagh, 6 Paige, 175. [52]*52Referring to the incapacity which existed in the wife, the chancellor .said:

“But from the testimony in this case I think there is good reason _ for believing that this disability is capable of being wholly removed by a slight surgical operation, and without the least possible danger to the defendant. And if there is a probability of capacity the court cannot annul the marriage. * * * The fact that the defendant has no wish to return to reside with her husband, and therefore will not consent to the slight surgical operation which may perhaps be necessary to remove the incapacity, is no ground for annulling the marriage, any more than if she refused to cohabit with him when no pretense of disability existed. That is a matter to be settled with .her own conscience and her lawful husband, as this court has no jurisdiction in .any case to enforce the performance of her marriage vows.”

The law as thus stated by the chancellor has never been reversed or •criticized, so far as I can find, by any subsequent decision in this state. On the contrary, this case has been cited continually as an authority in the various text-books and decisions. Anonymous, 21 Misc. Rep. 765, 49 N. Y. Supp. 331, reported with voluminous notes 28 Am. Dec. 449; Bascomb v. Bascomb, 25 N. H. 267; Anonymous, 89 Ala. 291, 7 South. 100, 7 L. R. A. 425, 18 Am. St. Rep. 116, cited in 26 Cyc. 902; 34 Am. Digest, § 116. Bishop on Marriage and Divorce (6th Ed.) at page 287, says of the doctrine that:

“The refusal to be cured by a slight operation is not ground for an annulment cannot be carried too far, “because no one can be required to run the hazard of life, or to submit to means of cure which in good faith he fears, however honestly and intelligently prescribed. Nor, in reason, is the doctrine to any extent, where remedies are declined, correct beyond question.”

All the authorities cited by the author for his doubts upon this point .are English cases, and no doubt the Ecclesiastical Law is broader than that stated in the Devanbagh Case. Such cases are L. v. L. (falsely called W.) 7 L. R. Prob. Divn. 16; G. v. G., 2 L. R. Prob. & Divorce, 287; S. v. A., 3 L. R. Prob. & Divorce, 72. How far the triennial test, the rule of the canon law, may have affected these cases, we cannot say. The fact is that in all of them the wife was shown to be a virgin after years of cohabitation. The triennial test of the canon law was not adopted in this country. Anonymous, 89 Ala. 291, 7 South. 100, 7 L. R. A. 425, 18 Am. St. Rep. 116; Merrill v. Merrill, 126 Mass. 228; Bascomb v. Bascomb, 25 N. H. 267. W. v. H. (falsely called W.) 2 Swab. & Tr. 240, frequently referred to, was based upon facts which showed that the operation would greatly endanger the life of the wife. H. v. P. (falsely called H.) 3 L. R. Prob. & Divorce, 126, was a judgment taken by default, the wife making no appearances and offering no denials. In the following cases we find it distinctly stated that the incapacity must be incurable; D. v. A., 1 Robertson’s Rep. 279; Brown v. Brown, 1 Haggard’s Ec. Rep. 524. In this pose it was stated that treatment ten months after marriage offered some relief and the cure was in progress when the attendant ceased to treat her. A surgeon of Cambridge and two experienced women were of the opinion that the obstruction had been removed. See, also, J. G. v. H. G., 33 Md. 401, 3 Am. Rep. 183; Anonymous, 35 Ala. 226. In the latter case annulment was refused [53]*53where three doctors testified that the - impotency was incurable and two testified that) it had been cured. See, also, Payne v. Payne, 46 Minn. 467, 49 N. W. 230, 24 Am. St. Rep. 240.

Nothing in these authorities leads to the point where we can say that the law as laid down by Chancellor Walworth in the Devanbagh Case for this state in 1836 is not the law to-day. The Revised Statutes above referred to, and in accordance with which the decision was made, remained the same up to 1880. In that year section 1743 of the Code of Civil Procedure was enacted in the same words as it is at the present time. It reads as follows:

“An action may also be maintained to procure a judgment declaring/a marriage contract void and, annulling the marriage for either of the following canses existing at the time of the marriage: * * * (5) That one of the parties was physically incapable of entering into the marriage state. But an action can he maintained under tills subdivision only where the incapacity continues and is incurable.”

The change made in 1880 by the Code provision just quoted is found in the words, “where the incapacity continues and is incurable.” The word “incurable” having been given a meaning by Chancellor Walworth as above stated which was the law at the time of the Code enactment, it is fair to presume that the meaning intended by the word when inserted in subdivision 5 was the same as that existing in the law under the Revised Statutes, viz., that an incapacity which a slight operation could remove without danger to life or health was not incurable merely because of the refusal to submit to treatment. It is to be classed with that attitude of mind and disposition which refuses cohabitation, although potent; a situation which the man must bear with fortitude and self-denial according to our law.

If this be the correct statement of the law, the husband in this case is not entitled to relief, for it is conceded that whatever trouble his wife has suffered or is suffering from can be readily cured by treatment or stretching without danger, and that, if success has not already attended the doctor’s efforts, it is due to the neglect or willfulness of the wife.

[2] Iffowever, the evidence in this case sufficiently shows that whatever impediment existed in the wife has been so far removed that the husband has been able, at times at least, to consummate the marriage, even if he has not been able to fully indulge his passions. An analysis of the evidence shows the following:

The plaintiff husband, who seeks to annul the marriage, is 63 years of age; the wife is 33. It is the second marriage of both of them.

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