Shackleford v. Hamilton

19 S.W. 5, 93 Ky. 80, 1892 Ky. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 26, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 5 (Shackleford v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shackleford v. Hamilton, 19 S.W. 5, 93 Ky. 80, 1892 Ky. LEXIS 53 (Ky. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered tiie opinion oe the court.

Lena Hamilton, the plaintiff below and tbe appellee in this court, instituted the present action in the Mason circuit, in which she seeks to recover damages for the violation of the promise on the part of the appellant to marry her in pursuance of an agreement to that effect, entered into in the month of December of the year 1887, by the terms of which they were to marry in the fall of 1888; that subsequently and by mutual consent, the mar[83]*83riage was postponed until the spring of 1889. No day was designated for the consummation of the contract, but it is alleged that in the month of April, 1889, the defendant, against the consent of the plaintiff, announced to her that he would not perform his contract at any time or place; that the plaintiff was willing and ready to perform her contract at any time or place the defendant might designate, and offered to do so, of which fact the defendant had notice; that he failed and refused to execute his contract of marriage with her and still refuses.

On the 19th of April, 1889, the plaintiff had served on the defendant the following notice:

Mr. James Shackleford—

You are hereby notified that I am ready, able and willing to perform our contract of marriage and to become your wife at any time and place you may designate, and am now ready and propose to fix a time and place at which our engagement of marriage may be consummated. Yery respectfully,

Lena Hamilton.

An answer was filed by the defendant admitting the existence of the marriage contract and his failure to consummate it, and presents in his answer the following defense, to which a demurrer was sustained, and the question here is: Was that defense a bar to the recovery ? as on the demurrer the facts alleged stand admitted.

The defendant says that at the time he made the contract to marry the plaintiff he believed himself to be in good and sound health, and knew of no impediment to its consummation; that long prior to any contract of marriage with the plaintiff he contracted a loathsome disease, called syphilis, and was treated for it by skilled [84]*84physicians until he was pronounced cured and free from the malady; that this was long before he made the acquaintance of the plaintiff. That he consulted two reputable physicians, and one of whom made a thorough examination of his person and advised him there was not the slightest evidence of the existence of the disease, and this was long before he thought of marrying the plaintiff or anyone else; that his regular physician, who had treated his disease, advised him that he was cured and in a fit state to marry, and could safely do so; that after this time, and with the belief in good faith that the malady no longer existed, he made the contract with the plaintiff induced by the love and affection he had for her. He says that, after the engagement to marry, and without any fault on his part, symptoms of the disease again appeared and is now upon him, and he is advised by his physicians that he -ought not to marry; that prior to the bringing of this action he made known to the plaintiff the grounds for his refusal, etc.

’ After sustaining the demurrer to the answer the court below permitted testimony of defendant’s condition to go before the jury in mitigation of damages, and the facts alleged in the answer are all sustained by the testimony of skilled physicians who treated him, and that good faith prompted the conduct of the defendant in refusing to marry the plaintiff. He continued to visit the plaintiff' regularly with no evidence of any diminished affection until the return of the symptoms of this loathsome disease, that one of the physicians states is in its worst form. •'When the engagement was broken, he said to the plaintiff that he could make no explanation of his [85]*85course, except to say to her, You would not want to marry a man who would be sure death to you.”'

After the notice was served on him of the readiness of the appellee to fulfill her engagement, and before,the action was instituted, he wrote to the plaintiff as follows: “I engaged in good faith to marry you, and I am surely the party most aggrieved by my inability to do so. The; condition of affairs has caused me more suffering than you can possibly, and doubtless more than you have felt, but I am compelled, as an honorable man, to save you from that fate that would await you as my wife. You can but respect me the more when you know all. I can not tell you more, but I had a talk with your lawyer, Mr. Hutchins, and I refer you to him. I believed myself able to marry you, but recent developments have convinced me of my mistake and it would be a crime were I to do so. Think of me and my misfortunes as kindly as you can,” etc. Respectfully,

James Shackleeord.

Ye can well see how such a letter might be penned with a -view of escaping responsibility in the way of damages instead of being prompted by an honest conviction of right on the part of the defendant; but when his physicians testify as to facts, all of which are uncontradicted, that leave no doubt as to his good faith and of his belief that he was permanently cured long prior to his engagement with the plaintiff, the sole question arises as to the sufficiency of the answer; and we have alluded to the facts, only because they stand uncontradieted and were offered in mitigation.

The court below, entertaining the opinion that as the defendant had entered into this marriage contract he is [86]*86bound for its breach, although it might have been the duty of th'e appellant, under the> circumstances, to decline to execute it, sustained the demurrer to the defense; that the contract was unconditional, and the defendant being able at .the time the promise was made to perform the contract, he must either execute it or become responsible in damages for the breach. If such a contract as that of marriage is to be treated in the light of a mere bargain and exchange of chattels between parties competent to contract, then it seems to us there would be but little difficulty in sustaining the action of the court below; but if the agreement when entered into is to be treated as creating a status that forms the basis of our entire social system, and in which society has more interest in preserving its purity than the parties to the agreement, it must follow that the defense interposed to the appellee’s claim for damages was, in law as well as morals, sufficient to prevent the recovery. "When the marriage contract is consummated, the parties taking each other for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, and agree to cherish each other in sickness and in health, the fact that the social standing of the one party or the other, or their pecuniary condition, was not as represented, will afford no ground for relief; still, when there is a mere agreement to marry, there may be such a condition of the one party or the other as to health or other bodily infirmity arising subsequent to the agreement as would authorize either party to decline to enter into the marriage relation, and to hold' otherwise would be to place such a contract upon the same footing with cases of mere personal chattels.

It is said by Mr. Bishop in his work on Marriage and [87]*87Divorce that, one after marriage can not complain of an impediment known to him before; but if he were ignorant of the existence of the defect or of its incurable nature, though in himself, he may take advantage of it by suit of nullity.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 5, 93 Ky. 80, 1892 Ky. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shackleford-v-hamilton-kyctapp-1892.