Lindquist v. Lindquist

20 A.2d 325, 130 N.J. Eq. 11, 1941 N.J. LEXIS 578
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 20, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 20 A.2d 325 (Lindquist v. Lindquist) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindquist v. Lindquist, 20 A.2d 325, 130 N.J. Eq. 11, 1941 N.J. LEXIS 578 (N.J. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

The appeal is from a decree of nullity of marriage on the ground of fraud, in that, as found by the master, petitioner was guilty, in the face of defendant’s request for a full disclosure, of concealment of “facts about her past” which would “not only seriously mar his standing in the business and social world,” but also unfitted her for “the rearing of his children” by a former marriage, “two of whom were daughters, one of pre-adolescent, the other of adolescent years.” Defendant was a widower. His first wife died on June 16th, 1938. His marriage to petitioner occurred on September 20th, 1939.

Concededly, petitioner’s life had been one devoid of adherence to the conventions. In fact, it was characterized by a frequent disregard of legal and moral precepts in matters of sex. But defendant was aware of her sexual looseness. Indeed, he shared her weakness. They had antenuptial sexual *14 relations which began a few days after their first meeting and were continual until the performance of the marriage ceremony. Eecognizing the situation, the master observed that defendant’s inquiry of petitioner “could not have envisioned merely her chastity, for her ‘easy virtue’ was a matter of his immediate, personal and continued knowledge prior to his marriage to her;” but he concluded that petitioner’s suppression of the particular circumstances of her relations with two men, i. e., her misrepresentation of pregnancy to one as the fruit of their intimacy for the purpose of inducing payments of money and her entering into a ceremony of marriage with a married man (there was no finding that she was aware of the impediment), constituted “a fraud upon the defendant under the terms of marriage which he proposed;” that “the future well being and rearing of children of a former marriage, particularly when such well being and rearing of such children is made and accepted as a part consideration between the parties to another marriage,” is “to ,be considered in adjudicating sufficiency of fraud in a suit to annul that marriage;” and that, though there was “sufficient fraud in so far as the rights of the defendant himself are concerned considering his business and social position,” and notwithstanding “meretricious antenuptial relations with the intended spouse,” not “flaunted before the knowing eyes of the children,” defendant ought to have an annulment of the marriage “when that spouse has falsely represented or willfully suppressed facts which, as in the case sub judice, reasonably would or could reflect upon and mar the welfare of such children.” Acknowledging that defendant, “in view of his own admitted premarital relations” with petitioner, “cannot be heard to complain of her illicit premarital sexual relations with others,” the master found in the particulars mentioned “fraud that is neither the usual nor reasonably anticipated concomitant of such premarital relations.”

It is to be said in limine that we are unable to accept the master’s view that the evidence reveals non-consummation of the marriage. Antenuptial intercourse wholly aside, the evidence is convincing that there was coition after the ceremony. Concededly, there was access thereafter; and the proofs bring *15 such sexual congress within the realm of probability. The contrary inference would not be valid unless it derived from clear and convincing evidence.

Plainly, the foregoing considerations do not bring the case within R. S. 1937, 2:50-1. Nor do they warrant the annulment of the marriage under Chancery’s general equity jurisdiction. Premarital incontinence is not a sufficient ground for the annulment of a marriage; and this is likewise true of the deficiencies of character considered by the master as > precluding consent of the legal quality essential to such union. .True, the law views marriage as a civil institution grounded in contract; but it is a contract sui generis. Marriage is the foundation of our society; and it is indissoluble except upon grounds laid down by the legislature. It is invested with a character and status independent of the will of the parties.

Apart from the statute, equitable jurisdiction to annul a ceremony of marriage for antecedent cause stems from Chancery’s general authority to grant relief against contractual undertakings induced by fraud. There seems to be a contrariety of view among legal scholars respecting the classification of agreements thus tainted with fraud, i. e., whether all such are lacking in genuineness or reality of consent, and therefore void ab initio, or are founded upon an intended manifestation of mutual consent induced by fraud, and so a contract voidable at the option of the defrauded party. Anson on Contracts (Turck ed.) §§ 206, 210, 245, 260 et seq.; Williston on Contracts (Rev. ed.) §§ 20, 21. Mr. Turck says that “the idea” which the phrases “reality of consent” and “unreal consent” seek to convey is that “under certain circumstances the law will not recognize as a genuine consent nor as a binding contract an agreement affected by mistake, misrepresentation, fraud, duress or undue influence;” that “a consent which the law does not recognize as making a binding contract is to some extent at least ‘unreal;’ ” and that “consent” so induced is but an “apparent consent, an unreal consent.” Anson on Contracts, supra, § 206, note.

But the distinction is of no practical importance as regards the question sub judice, for, however classable, the annulment *16 of such marriage contracts is indubitably within Chancery’s general equity jurisdiction. Mr. Bishop says that the “mutual consent” which is of the essence of marriage is non-existent where “the mind is overcome by fraud, by error, or by duress, so that in fact it does not consent to an apparent marriage,” and therefore “the law will deem it to be no marriage; though, if after the thrall is broken it then freely consents, no repetition of the ceremony will be required to make it good;” and that it “may be termed void or voidable according to the meaning which we attach to these uncertain or variable words.” 1 Bishop on Marriage, Divorce and Separation (1891), § 550, also § 461. There is “a peculiar sort of voidable” in marriage law. Ibid., § 255.

Due to the nature of the relation, not all fraud in the consent serves to invalidate a marriage. Marriage has always been governed by considerations of public policy. While as a civil contract consent is essential to its constitution and subsistence, the rules applicable to ordinary contracts do not in their entirety govern in the law’s treatment and appraisal of the marriage contract. There ensues from the mutual consent of the parties to such an agreement a status and relation that the law, in the public interest, deems indestructible except for the most weighty reasons. In an early case holding that the dissolution of the marriage contract for antecedent cause was within the general jurisdiction of equity, this court said of the marriage contract and of the sufficiency of the fraud to warrant such judicial action: “Most serious considerations of public policy and good morals affect it

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Bluebook (online)
20 A.2d 325, 130 N.J. Eq. 11, 1941 N.J. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindquist-v-lindquist-njsuperctappdiv-1941.