Davidson v. Davidson

188 S.W.2d 464, 300 Ky. 305, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 539
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 22, 1945
StatusPublished

This text of 188 S.W.2d 464 (Davidson v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davidson v. Davidson, 188 S.W.2d 464, 300 Ky. 305, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 539 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Perry, Commissioner

Reversing.

The plaintiff, Laymon Davidson, appeals from a judgment of the Clay circuit court dismissing his petition for an absolute divorce. This petition was filed on August 5, 1943, and is as follows:

“The plaintiff, Laymon Davidson, states that he and defendant, Marjorie Davidson, are husband and wife and been such continuously since their intermarriage to each other on the 19th day of November, 1942; that the plaintiff is a citizen and resident of this county and has been such continuously ,all his life; that the defendant is a nonresident of this state and is absent from this state and is a citizen and resident of 315 Fifth Street, S. E., in the city of Minneapolis, in the state of Minnesota, and has been a resident at said address for more than four months and in fact for more than six months last past next before the institution of this action; that said bonds of matrimony existing between them were solemnized in the said city and state, und were procured by fraud, and he further avers that the defendant represented and held out herself to this plaintiff as being virtuous and chaste and had never known any man carnally and which induced plaintiff to marry her when in fact and truth she was pregnant, great with child at the time he married her and actually gave birth to a full developed child six months and no days after said marriage of the plaintiff and the defendant; that he had no knowledge of her being unchaste until the child was born; that he has not lived with her or cohabited with her since his knowledge of the fact that she was pregnant, great with child at the time she held herself out to plaintiff that she was ■ a virtuous woman, never knew any man in a carnal way,, or had any sexual relations with any man, and he avers that on said false and fraudulent representations she obtained said marriage sought to be cancelled and annulled herein; because of said fraud and fraudulent statements and representations, and because the defendant had been guilty of adultery prior to the making of said false and fraudulent representations; and he *307 further avers that said false and fraudulent representations, and said crime of adultery, and the same being kept hid from plaintiff constituted cruel and inhuman treatment by the defendant of this plaintiff.

“The plaintiff says that he is not guilty of a fault, a like fault or any fault complained of herein; that it was no fault on his part that caused the defendant to commit adultery complained of or any adultery; that same was committed without his knowledge, procurement or connivance and within less than three years (months) before their said marriage, and plaintiff has not voluntarily, or at all, lived with her or cohabited with her since his knowledge of same, neither has he forgiven any of said adulterous acts, fraud, or fraudulent acts and deceit or in any way condoned same or any of same; that the adultery, the fraud, and cruel and inhuman treatment set out above, and each of them is a cause of divorce under the statute laws of the state of Minnesota, and each of them is a cause of divorce under the statute laws of this state.'

“Wherefore, the plaintiff, Laymon Davidson, prays that the existing bonds of matrimony between the plaintiff and the defendant, Marjorie Davidson, and each of them be cancelled, annulled, set aside and forever for naught; and he prays for all proper and necessary orders appointing a corresponding attorney to represent hereby made; and he prays for all proper relief to which he may appear to be entitled.”

Upon the filing of the plaintiff’s verified petition, a corresponding attorney was appointed to warn the defendant of the nature and pendency of the action, which appointment he accepted and as such states, as set out in his warning order report, that he wrote the defendant (here appellee), Marjorie Davidson, at the address given in the affidavit, which was properly made and averred in the verified petition, informing her of the nature and pendency of the said action, and although there was on said envelope containing said letter, his return address, the same was not returned to him nor had he otherwise heard from her. Further, he stated that he had made a careful examination of the pleadings and that he was unable to make any affirmative defense thereto.

Briefly, the facts, as alleged in the petition and also as additionally given in evidence by the plaintiff in his *308 deposition, taken by agreement of the parties and their respective counsel, are as follows:

That the ■ plaintiff, Laymon Davidson, is now 26 years of age, was born on Bar Creek, in Clay county, Kentucky; has constantly there lived and made his home until in March, 1941, when he was called and inducted into the United States Army under the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, 50 U. S. C. A. Appendix, see. 301 et seq., and has since been shifted from post to post for more than 12 months, when he was then assigned to Fort Snelling, located on an army reservation in Hennepin county, near the suburbs of Minneapolis, Minnesota. While stationed at this post, which it appears defendant frequently visited, he met and courted the defendant, Marjorie Brown, who as stated above, lived near the post, residing at 315 Fifth Street, S. E., Minneapolis, Minnesota, for a period of some five weeks, when, on November 19, 1941, they were intermarried at the said Fort Snelling. To establish these facts, alleged in his petition, plaintiff when giving his deposition, offered in evidence his marriage certificate issued him by the authorities of Hennepin county, Minneapolis, Minnesota, showing that he and the appellee were married on November 19, 1941, at Minneapolis, Minnesota. Following their marriage they lived together as man and wife sometime prior to May 19, 1942, when he states that he separated from and left the defendant, because on that day, which was exactly six months after the date of their recent marriage, the defendant gave birth to a fully developed child, weighing 10 pounds and 4 ounces, indicating the child’s birth occurred after a nine months period of gestation and pregnancy. Such being the facts developed, he was advised by medical authorities that this fully developed baby could not be conceived, developed and born with a gestation period of only six months, as was here shown by the photostatic copy issued plaintiff by the station hospital of the birth certificate record of the defendant’s baby. Further, the plaintiff testified that he had never had sexual relations with the defendant during their five weeks courtship before their marriage, and, as a matter of fact, that he had never seen the defendant nine months before the child was born,- that he had no knowledge whatever that the defendant was pregnant at the time of their marriage, as she had fraudulently concealed her prenuptial pregnancy *309 from Mm, or any time prior thereto, or he “never would have married her; ’ ’ bnt, on the contrary, that she led him to believe “by her every act and conduct that she was a virtuous woman and seemed to have the highest regard and respect for morals;” that he had never cohabited with the defendant after or since his first knowledge of her being pregnant by a man other than himself, nor had he ever forgiven or condoned any of her wrongful acts connected with her pregnancy, and thought that he was getting a virtuous woman.

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27 S.W.2d 950 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 464, 300 Ky. 305, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-davidson-kyctapphigh-1945.