Craun v. Craun
This text of 168 A.2d 898 (Craun v. Craun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This action was brought by appellant for the annulment of her marriage on the ground of fraud. The alleged fraud consisted of misrepresentations on the husband’s part that he was employed and had a furnished apartment in which they could reside after marriage, and his concealment of a criminal record. The husband filed a noncommital answer. He did not appear at trial but was represented by counsel. At the conclusion of appellant’s evidence the trial judge dismissed the complaint, and this appeal followed.
The only evidence on the issue of fraud was supplied by appellant. She testified that she had been previously married to one Elkins; that two children were born to the union who now live with their paternal grandmother in West Virginia; that after four years of marriage she obtained a divorce in 1957; that she came to the District on September 1, 1958, to live with her parents; that two weeks later she casually met appellant in a restaurant and thereafter saw him on the average of twice a week for approximately two months. -On November 3, 1958, she married appellee under the following circumstances. Appellant left her work at ten o’clock that evening, was met by appellee and another couple named Smith, and the party drove to Forestville, Maryland, where a double wedding ceremony was performed. On returning to the District that night appellee informed her that he was not employed and had no place for them to live, but suggested that they reside with the Smiths and two . other couples who were not married. Appellant testified that she refused this proposal and returned to her parents’ home.
[899]*899Appellant’s principal contention is that the court erred in not finding that fraud was established. Fraud necessary to justify an annulment must be of such character as to go to the very foundation of marriage. Behr v. Behr, 1943, 181 Md. 422, 30 A.2d 750. We do not think the evidence presented in this case meets' this test.
According to the record, appellant divorced her first husband for nonsupport after four years of marriage which produced two children, yet she contracted a second marriage less than a year later hastily and with little circumspection. Although she was living with her parents she never saw fit to introduce them to appellee or to tell them of her intention to marry him. She met appellee quite casually in a restaurant and thereafter dated him for approximately two months, at the end of which time she married him late one evening. Prior to the ceremony, appellee assured her he had a job and a suitable place for them to live and she accepted these assurances. She now maintains that had she known the truth, she would have refused to marry him but she made no effort to ascertain the truth. It is apparent that appellant did not learn from her previous marital mistake. In the light of her past experience, appellant could have demonstrated reasonable caution and investigated appellee’s background. This could have been done very easily. As for appellee’s criminal record, which consisted of six disorderly charges and one conviction for petit larceny for which he served thirty days in 1955, he was under no obligation to disclose it.1
A careful review of the stenographic transcript indicates that one of two different conclusions might reasonably have been drawn from the evidence. We fail to find anything to indicate that the .trial judge’s conclusion was erroneous as a matter of law.
Affirmed.
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168 A.2d 898, 1961 D.C. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craun-v-craun-dc-1961.