Costello v. Costello

155 Misc. 28, 279 N.Y.S. 303, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1975
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 155 Misc. 28 (Costello v. Costello) 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
Costello v. Costello, 155 Misc. 28, 279 N.Y.S. 303, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1975 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The action falls within the provisions of section 1139 of the Civil Practice Act. That section provides that where the consent to a marriage has been obtained by fraud, the party whose consent was so obtained may maintain an action for the annulment of the marriage, unless at any time before the commencement of the action the parties voluntarily cohabited as husband and wife with a full knowledge of the facts constituting the fraud.

The complaint alleges the fraud consisted of (1) a false representation to plaintiff by defendant that by and through plaintiff she was in a pregnant condition, and (2) a false representation to plaintiff by defendant that she was single and had never been married to any other man. The complaint further alleges that these representations were made for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to give his consent to enter into the marriage state, that they had such effect, and that plaintiff would not have given his consent if he had known the truth.

[29]*29There is a sharp conflict in the testimony. Plaintiff testified he had had sexual intercourse with defendant before they were married and that defendant thereafter told him she had become pregnant through him and that unless he married her at once she would have him put in jail and make a lot of trouble for him. Plaintiff also testified that defendant represented and led him to believe that she was single and had never been married. In the latter charge plaintiff is corroborated by his two sisters who assert the defendant also told them she had never been married.

Defendant, on the other hand, denies she had ever had intercourse with the plaintiff prior to their marriage or that she had ever told him she was pregnant or made any demands upon him to marry her or that she had threatened him in any way. She also testified that he was fully apprised of her former marriage and divorce and that plaintiff asked her to suppress these facts from his family. Defendant produced several witnesses in an attempt at corroboration.

In my opinion, the testimony of defendant and her witnesses is not entitled to much credence. In the light of all the circumstances, and considering the demeanor of the witnesses and the manner in which they testified, plaintiff’s evidence is entitled to much greater consideration than that of defendant. It is quite apparent that plaintiff, a young man in his early twenties, was beguiled and coerced by the defendant into consenting to the marriage at a time when she thought he was the heir to a considerable fortune.

However, even accepting plaintiff’s evidence with respect to defendant’s representation of her pregnancy, plaintiff, nevertheless, is barred from maintaining this action on that ground. It appears clear that plaintiff and defendant cohabited as man and wife for some five years after plaintiff became aware of the falsity of defendant’s representation concerning her pregnancy. And this is sufficient to defeat an action for annulment (Civ. Prac. Act, § 1139). Plaintiff, therefore, must be penalized, despite the fact that he remained with defendant only because he "was reluctant to make public the true facts and feared to face the shame and disgrace.

On the second ground alleged, namely, the false representation that defendant was single and had never been married, I think plaintiff has established a cause of action to which there is no bar. He left defendant and refused to cohabit with her as soon as he discovered the fact that prior to her marriage to him she had been married to and divorced from a man by the name of Hayes who died some time after the marriage between plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff discovered these facts in 1929 and he left defendant [30]*30almost immediately. Here there was no condonation or waiver of defendant’s fraud.

While perhaps the fact of a prior marriage which has been lawfully dissolved and which is not a legal impediment to another marriage, may not always be material, yet in this case it went to the essence of plaintiff’s consent to the marriage. It is clear from all the evidence, and particularly in view of defendant’s' pretended claim of pregnancy, that plaintiff consented to the marriage only because he was definitely led to believe that defendant had never been married and that he was the first man to have had sexual relations with her. Plaintiff, as his testimony shows, naturally had some difficulty in explaining his feelings in this delicate situation. However, the bearing and materiality of defendant’s prior marriage on plaintiff’s consent is made very clear from the following testimony given by plaintiff: “ Q. Did yon have any conversation with her about whether or not she had been married previously? A. I took that for granted that she was not married before, because, if I thought for a minute that she was married previously, I knew she would be too smart to tell me that she was married, because then I knew she would not deceive me. I thought that was the first time that anything like that happened. * * * Q. Suppose at this time at the City Clerk’s office that she had answered that she had been married previously, would you have married her? A. I would not. Q. You did not know of the previous marriage when you married her? A. No, sir. Q. She never represented to you that she was a single woman? A. Yes, sir. Q. She said she was a single woman? A. She always represented herself as a single girl. Q. Did you ever ask her if she had been married before? A. I asked her during the course of conversation did she ever know anybody before? * * * Q. When you said z know ’ did you mean sexual intercourse? A. By knowing anybody, going out with any other man. Q. You used the words, z Did you ever know anybody before you knew me ’ ■— what language did you use? A. I said, Now, did you keep company with anybody before you knew me? ’ That is what I meant, your honor. * * * Q. What did you mean by z keeping company? ’ A. By knowing, you know what I mean, keeping company; was I the first fellow that she ever kept company with, that had any, you know.”

Although this testimony is given rather inartificially, it makes abundantly clear the fact that plaintiff consented to the marriage principally, if not solely, because he thought defendant, until she met him, was an unmarried woman who had never kept company with or known any other man.

[31]*31That there is a relationship of trust and confidence between two people contemplating matrimony there is not the slightest doubt. (Truiano v. Truiano, 121 Misc. 635; Weill v. Weill, 104 id. 561; 26 C. J. Fraud, § 18.) And in such a relationship the concealment or failure to disclose a material fact or the suppression of the truth concerning a material matter is as grievous an offense as active misrepresentation. (Weill v. Weill, supra, p. 563; Roth v. Roth, 97 Misc. 136; 26 C. J. Fraud, §§ 9-18.)

In Weill v. Weill (supra), where one of the parties suppressed the fact of a previous marriage and its annulment, Mr. Justice McAvoy, then sitting at Special Term, New York county, expressed the duties of each and stated the law as follows: The relations of the parties antecedent to the marriage contract are relations of trust and confidence, and when such relations exist it is not enough to keep silence with regard to the facts material to the contract about to be made or to make no false statement respecting the same. The affirmative duty exists of making a full and complete disclosure, if the contract is to be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
155 Misc. 28, 279 N.Y.S. 303, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/costello-v-costello-nysupct-1934.