S.B. v. P.B.

771 A.2d 978
CourtDelaware Family Court
DecidedApril 19, 2000
DocketNo. CN99-08428
StatusPublished

This text of 771 A.2d 978 (S.B. v. P.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.B. v. P.B., 771 A.2d 978 (Del. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

CROWELL, Associate Judge.

A hearing was held on January 27, 2000, on the Petition for Annulment filed by Wronald S.B (Husband) against Irina P.B. (Wife). Present in the courtroom were Husband and his attorney, Joseph A. Wahl, Esquire. Although notice was mailed to Wife in St. Petersburg, Russia, she failed to appeal1.

She informed the Court by letter that she could not afford to return to the United States, nor could she obtain a visa to come. At the conclusion of the hearing, Husband’s attorney was invited to present a memorandum of law which was filed on February 7, 2000.

Background Facts

Husband testified that while he was on vacation in late August and early September, 1998, he, then age forty-three, and Wife, then age thirty-nine, met in a nightclub in St. Petersburg, Russia. He claimed that after meeting, they spent a part of every day of the remainder of his vacation together, except for one day, and that they had dinner on three occasions. He said that she is fluent in English and has been an English teacher. He claimed that at dinner in her apartment on the evening before he left, she stated she was in love with him and he believed that they had developed a meaningful relationship. He noted that the Russian economic crisis had begun while he was there and she expressed an interest in living in the United States. He claimed that they communicated by phone and e-mail from September 5, 1998 until February 5, 1999, when she and her fourteen-year-old daughter, Maria, came to the United States on a K-l visa that permits fíancées of American citizens to come to the United States. From February 5, 1999, until April 5, 1999, Wife and her daughter resided in his home in two separate guestrooms. In accordance with the tenets of the Christian Orthodox religion, to which beliefs Husband has subscribed for 2 íé years, they agreed to have no sexual relations prior to their marriage. Husband testified that following their marriage on April 5, 1999, Wife no longer greeted him and she spent every day in bed, leaving the household chores to him. While they had sexual relations on several more occasions, she often would rebuff his advances.

He testified that on April 28, 1999, he woke up after midnight to find that Wife was not in his bed. He claimed he looked for her and found her in bed with her daughter in her daughter’s bedroom. He believed they were engaged in sexual relations. Plusband said he confronted Wife about the incident, telling her that they would need to talk about the matter and obtain counseling. When he arrived home that afternoon, Mother and her daughter were gone. He claims he has been married twice before for brief periods of time and feels that this was not a legitimate marriage.

Wife and her daughter returned to St. Petersburg, Russia, following the parties’ separation. In her written answer to the Petition for Annulment, she had no objection to ¿ divorce or an annulment but she adamantly denied there were any fraudulent acts or misrepresentations on her part. She represented that before their marriage, Husband asked her to sign a prenuptial agreement, which she refused to sign, providing that if they obtained a divorce, she would have to pay him $5,000. She stated that her intention to live with Husband in his home was sincere and genuine and she denied she neglected her household duties, saying she was caring, clean and neat. Wife charged that Husband systematically abused, humiliated and showed disrespect to her and her daughter. She asserted in her answer that he demanded she go to bed with him at 7:00 p.m. She stated that he became [980]*980angry when she inadvertently threw out an old can cap and he forbade her and her daughter from visiting the Vandebriel family with whom she had become friends. She represented that Husband’s threats and accusations caused stress for her and made her daughter scared to sleep at home. After an incident on April 28, 1999, she claimed that Husband turned off the telephone and computer and hid her keys and “cases”. She stated that she and her daughter “escaped” to the Vandebriel’s home where they called the Russian Embassy, INS and the police. Ms. Vandebriel purchased the tickets for Wife and her daughter to return to Russia.

Grounds for Annulment Based on Fraud

While, in more recent times, the grounds for divorce in Delaware have become more liberal, Delaware law has continued to limit the grounds for obtaining an annulment to very specific, narrow circumstances.1

Husband’s petition seeks an annulment under 13 DelC. § 1506(a)(4), which states as follows:

(4) One party entered into the marriage in reliance upon a fraudulent act or representation of the other party, which fraudulent act or representation goes to the essence of the marriage.

While the Court has been unable to find any recent Delaware decisions discussing what constitutes fraud that “goes to the essence of the marriage”, annulment under Delaware law has been considered an extreme remedy2 It has been held that the public policy of the State of Delaware requires that a consummated marriage should not be lightly dissolved or set aside3 and should be forbidden except on the most convincing proof.4 In interpreting fraud as a basis for annulment, Delaware case law has underscored the statutory language and adhered to the orthodox rule that only such fraud as goes to the very essence of the marriage relation will suffice as a ground for annulment.5 More [981]*981specifically, Delaware courts have granted annulments on the basis of fraud in only very limited circumstances:

(1) Where the wife concealed at the time of the marriage she had an incurable case of syphilis6. It should also be noted that at the time of the marriage, the Delaware statute expressly prohibited the marriage of one who was “venereally diseased”.

(2) When the husband, thinking the wife was carrying his child at the time of their marriage, learned after the marriage that the wife was pregnant by someone else7, and

(3) When the sole motivation of the marriage for a citizen of Albania was to obtain a preferential entry into the United States as the spouse of an American citizen 8

On the other hand, the Delaware courts have concluded that the allegations of fraud did not go to the essence of the marriage and have denied an annulment in the following circumstances:

1. A representation by the wife before the marriage that she was pregnant, which turned out, after the marriage, to be false.9

2. The wife’s concealment of a premarital misdemeanor conviction and periodic disabling drug use.10

3. The wife’s alleged premarital concealment and misrepresentations as to moral conduct and character as well as alleged concealments as to the sources of her funds.11

4. The wife’s concealment of pre-mari-tal unchastity;12 and

5. A premarital misrepresentation concerning wealth or social position13.

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Related

Babis v. Babis
75 A.2d 580 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1950)
Husband v. Wife
262 A.2d 656 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1970)
Saunders v. Saunders
120 A.2d 160 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1956)
Husband v. Wife
257 A.2d 765 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1969)
Anonymous v. Anonymous
85 A.2d 706 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1951)
Williams v. Williams
118 A. 638 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1922)
Doe v. Doe
165 A. 156 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1933)
Morris v. Morris
13 A.2d 603 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
771 A.2d 978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sb-v-pb-delfamct-2000.