Heath v. Heath

159 A. 418, 85 N.H. 419, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 1, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 159 A. 418 (Heath v. Heath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heath v. Heath, 159 A. 418, 85 N.H. 419, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 98 (N.H. 1932).

Opinion

*420 Allen, J.

The case presents the issue how far bad character, bad conduct and material worthlessness, fraudulently denied to induce a marriage renders the marriage voidable at the instance of the defrauded spouse. The issue is one of difficulty and has far reaching bearings. If proof of the charges, collectively or separately, is held sufficient to authorize annulment, it is through an advance of judicial power not hitherto exercised and accomplished by a declaration of public policy in expression of views of social welfare.

Summarized, the charges of falsehood are of sober and industrious habits and sexual virtue in respect to character, of savings in respect to material worth, and of law abiding conduct when there had been a conviction for the crime of adultery. Admittedly so important and serious as to underlie the petitioner’s consent to the marriage, is the fraud so material that the marriage may and should be annulled?

It is said in Keyes v. Keyes, 22 N. H. 553, 556: “Fraud is an element which vitiates all contracts, and may be of a character to vitiate, and will vitiate even the marriage contract.” No rule or test is made in definition of the kind of fraud which will entitle the defrauded party to an annulment. But a test was undertaken in Gatto v. Gatto, 79 N. H. 177, 184, in this pronouncement: “As marriage is deemed to be a civil contract and not a sacrament, fraud in a material respect which prevents a substantial meeting of the minds of the parties in an intelligent agreement for marriage cannot be said to be immaterial, or beyond the province of the court to correct by a decree of annulment.”

Thus defined the rule permits the avoidance of marriage for any fraud of the guilty spouse if it is important enough to be a substantial inducement of the marriage. It signifies no narrowing of the general principle of avoidance for fraud. It makes no discrimination between different inducements by which the fraud is accomplished. It would apply to promises of future conduct not intended to be kept when made.

Going further, the opinion declares in general terms that public policy “does not regard a fraudhlent marriage ceremony as sacred and irrevocable by judicial action.” It is conceded in the opinion that marriage is a contract “attended with many important and peculiar features in which the state is interested,” and “is one of the fundamental elements of social welfare.” It is maintained that its importance should make it “difficult to successfully perpetrate fraud and deceit as inducements to the marriage relation,” rather than that the fraud should be “wholly disregarded by the courts.” In con *421 elusion of the argument it is said that “The successful perpetration of fraud is not ... a subject for judicial encouragement . . . nor is the court authorized to legislate in favor of such a policy.”

The reasoning comes to the proposition that the public concern in the marital status is such as to call for the annulment of all marriages tainted with “material” fraud. The public interest in the welfare of the institution of marriage is promoted by the erasure of such marriages. Not to cancel them is against the public interest because “Unhappy and unfortunate marriages ought not to be encouraged,” and if judicial relief is not given, the courts are open to the charge of upholding wrong.

Carried to its logical conclusion, the case would appear to leave “material” fraud preventing a “substantial” reality of agreement to be determined as a question of fact in each case, by the rule it defines. The effect of the fraud in the particular case as well as its general nature would have large bearing. To some the fraud would be more serious than to others. The rule is so broad and general in its comprehensive scope that it leaves much to the discretion of the trier and practically each case would be largely decided on its own special merits. The uncertainties and discrepancies that would thus arise would produce an unsatisfactory situation both from the public’s and the individual’s standpoint.

In view of the insecurity and disturbance which the rule would seem to lead to, and in view of the serious doubts with reference to its statement of the public policy on the subject in its application to such cases, it is thought proper to consider if the reasoning of the case is to receive credit as accepted and established authority. The case was one of extreme urgency, and no such broad latitude for the play of fraud in affecting the validity of the marriage contract as the case holds is authorized, was necessary to reach the result of sustaining the annulment which the trial court had decreed.

The issue of what constitutes a voidable marriage is not readily determined, as is shown by a rather hopeless conflict of authority and a large variety of rules among the different jurisdictions. As the subject is approached and emphasized from the standpoint of contractual relations or from that of public interest, difference of opinion naturally appears. In the ascertainment of the extent and limits of the public interest varying conclusions are reached. It would seem that matters of doubt and of personal opinion are at times resolved into settled rules and principles of policy. Almost necessarily the conclusions are not uniform.

*422 The courts have authority to annul void marriages. They also have some authority to hold a marriage voidable and annul it. But such authority is exceptional, and does not mean the right to hold a marriage voidable as though it were an ordinary contract.

It is said in the Gatto case that there is no public policy against the annulment of fraudulent marriages, as evidenced by the statutes, decisions and general consensus of opinion. Statutes and decisions are admittedly sources of the ascertainment of public policy, but general opinion or the state of the public mind as an independent matter of investigation has been questioned. It is said in Spead v. Tomlinson, 73 N. H. 46, 58, that public policy is “the policy of the state as evidenced by its laws,” and that on the issue of a policy “the only matters which can be considered are its constitution and statutes and the provisions of the common law as evidenced by the decisions of the courts; for the common law, modified by the constitution and statutes of the state, is the law of the state.” This limitation of evidence to show policy is followed in Glover v. Baker, 76 N. H. 393, 419. It therefore becomes necessary as a preliminary inquiry to resolve the conflict between the rule of these cases and the broader rule employed in the Gatto case.

In the statement that the common law, as modified by organic and statute law, is the law of the state, the common law, with its adaptability to change, is not fully defined. The constitutional enactment (Const., Pt. II, art. 90) that “All the laws which have heretofore been adopted, used, and approved, in the province, colony, or state of New Hampshire, and usually practiced on in the courts of law, shall remain and be in full force, until altered and repealed by the legislature; ..

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In the Matter of Keli Eckroate-Breagy and Paul Breagy
168 A.3d 1148 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2017)
In the Matter of Paula Geraghty and Kenneth Geraghty
150 A.3d 386 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2016)
Welzenbach v. Powers
660 A.2d 1133 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1995)
Woy v. Woy
737 S.W.2d 769 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1987)
Jordan v. Jordan
345 A.2d 168 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1975)
Gordon v. Pollard
336 S.W.2d 25 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1960)
State v. De Meo
118 A.2d 1 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1955)
Brown v. Brown
112 A.2d 1 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1954)
Anonymous v. Anonymous
85 A.2d 706 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1951)
Nerini v. Nerini
11 Conn. Super. Ct. 361 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1943)
Bellows v. Page
188 A. 12 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 A. 418, 85 N.H. 419, 1932 N.H. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-heath-nh-1932.