Ball v. Ball

36 So. 2d 172, 160 Fla. 601, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 807
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 18, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 So. 2d 172 (Ball v. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Ball, 36 So. 2d 172, 160 Fla. 601, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 807 (Fla. 1948).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, J.:

The record in this case discloses that Edward Ball and Ruth Latham were married in Washington, D. C., on June 17, 1933, and shortly thereafter established a home on the St. Johns River on the outskirts of the City of Jacksonville, where they lived together as husband and wife until the month of January, 1943. During the month of May, 1943, Mrs. Ball left the home and instituted a suit for divorce in the Circuit Court of Duval County, Florida, on the ground of mental cruelty and in her bill of complaint prayed for a divorce and other relief.

On December 6, 1943, the defendant and cross-plaintiff, Edward Ball, filed an answer to the bill of complaint and a counterclaim in which he prayed for affirmative relief. On May 30, 1944, the court below, on motion of counsel for Mrs. Ball, entered an order dismissing her bill of complaint with prejudice to her right to again maintain a suit for divorce upon the facts alleged in the bill of complaint. In the same order the defendant, Edward Ball, was. permitted to prosecute his counterclaim seeking or praying for an annulment of the marriage contract and antenuptial contract of the parties en *603 tered into shortly prior to their marriage. One phase of this litigation was considered by this Court in an interlocutory certiorari proceeding, but our ruling therein is not pertinent to the issues presented on this appeal. Ball v. Ball, 155 Fla. 768, 21 So. (2nd) 458.

On February 1, 1Q46, by leave of the Court, the cross-plaintiff filed an amended counterclaim and, in part, alleged that the cross-defendant and the cross-plaintiff in early 1933 became engaged to marry and frequently exchanged ideas as to the responsibilities and obligations of marriage and the rearing and education of children which, might be born to them as a result of their contemplated marriage, and their views on this point were set out in Sections Twelve and Thirteen of their antenuptial agreement signed by them on June 15, 1933, and are viz:

“Twelfth: It is agreed by and between the parties hereto that in the event the parties hereto have any child or children, that when one of the parties hereto shall have reprimanded, admonished or punished such child or children that even though the other party hereto may not have felt that such reprimand, admonishment or punishment was justified, no objection shall be raised to such reprimand, admonishment or punishment in the presence of the child or children, as the parties hereto realize that discipline is necessary and must be mutually enforced for the welfare and successful training and raising of a child or children.
“Thirteenth: It is mutually agreed by and between the parties hereto that in the event the parties hereto have a child or children, that such child or children shall have the benefit of a public school education up to and including the high school and that thereafter the parties hereto shall mutually decide whether it is desirable for such a child or children to have any additional educational facilities.”

No child was born to the marriage.

The amended counterclaim alleges that the antenuptial contract and the marriage between the parties are invalid and should be anulled because of fraud practiced on the cross-plaintiff by the cross-defendant. Some weeks prior to June .19, 1928, the cross-defendant consulted Dr. George B. Nor- *604 berg, of Kansas City, Missouri, and was advised to undergo-a -surgical operation, which was performed at the Trinity Lutheran Hospital on June 19, 1928, by Dr. Norberg. The cross-defendant’s right ovary and the right Fallopian tube-were removed. The left ovary was not removed but cysts-found thereon were punctured. The left Fallopian tube was either removed or some effort or steps taken by the surgeon to make the same patent. The cross-defendant was sterile-on June 17, 1933, and for sometime prior thereto, and cross-defendant knew it or had good reason to believe that she was sterile.

The amended counterclaim further alleged that it was the duty of the cross-defendant, before the marriage ceremony was performed, to make known to the cross-plaintiff the fact that in the year 1928 she had a surgical operation involving-her genital organs. It was her lawful duty to give to the cross-plaintiff all the information in connection with such matters, things and conditions as were known to her and also-all of the knowledge and information that she could have obtained by the exercise of ordinary diligence. The defendant, failed and neglected to give the plaintiff any information, whatever regarding the surgical operation and the cross-plaintiff did not know that the cross-defendant had ever had. an operation involving her genital organs or that her genital organs had been diseased. He did not know prior to marriage or prior to the filing of her suit on the 24th of May, 1943, of the diseased condition of her genital organs and he learned for the first time of the surgical operation and the diseased genital organs after she had instituted suit against him for-divorce.

The amended counterclaim also alleges that the cross-plaintiff performed his full duties as the husband of the cross-defendant, administered to her needs and wants in sickness and in health and transferred to her stocks and bonds and caused the title to described interests in real estate to be placed in her name. A bank account in the joint names of the parties was opened and the husband deposited therein income and earnings as provided for by the terms and provisions of their antenuptial contract and that the cross-defendant now *605 holds this property, because of her fraud and deception, in trust for the cross-plaintiff as his trustee.

The counterclaim prays for a decree declaring the ante-nuptial contract and the marriage contract void ab initio and that all property transferred by the cross-plaintiff to the cross-defendant in contemplation of marriage be transferred or conveyed to him.

The cross-defendant, Ruth Latham Ball, in answering the amended counterclaim, admitted her marriage to Edward Ball; that she had been previously married at the age of 24 and lived with her former husband about seven years and she had no children; she married the cross-plaintiff in good faith at the age of 33 and he was 45, and prior to the marriage ceremony she signed the antenuptial agreement referred to; and she lived with the cross-plaintiff as his wife for approximately ten years, and no children were born to the marriage.

The cross-defendant in her answer admitted that prior to June 19, 1928, she consulted Dr. Norberg, a surgeon at Kansas ■City, Missouri, and, after an examination, he learned that she had a cystic ovary and a diseased appendix and advised her to undergo a surgical operation. For a short period of time prior to the operation until several hours afterward she was unconscious from the affect of ah anaesthetic and of her own knowledge does not know and has never known whether her right ovary was cystic and greatly enlarged or whether her right Fallopian tube adhered around the cyst and stretched from its normal length of 2% or 3 inches to about 8 inches, or whether her left ovary was cystic and degenerated or whether her left Fallopian tube was diseased and the fimbricated end closed as alleged; she was advised by Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
36 So. 2d 172, 160 Fla. 601, 1948 Fla. LEXIS 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-ball-fla-1948.