Shepherd v. Shepherd

192 S.W. 658, 174 Ky. 615, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 658 (Shepherd v. Shepherd) 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
Shepherd v. Shepherd, 192 S.W. 658, 174 Ky. 615, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 226 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hurt

Reversing in part.

The appellee, Jack Shepherd, "being dissatisfied with a marriage, which he entered into with the appellant, Willie Shepherd, on the 28th day of July, 1915, instituted this action for a divorce, alleging as the grounds for the divorce, that the marriage was obtained by duress, per minas, imposed upon him by the father of appellant and presumably with her., connivance. The ground relied upon is a statutory one, which is provided by one of the provisions of section 2117, Ky. Statutes, which authorizes a court of general jurisdiction to grant a divorce, to the party not in fault, for force, duress or fraud in obtaining the marriage. The action, it will be observed, is not for an annulment of the marriage on account of force or fraud, which is authorized by section 2100, Ky. Statutes. The result of a decree, granting a divorce for force or duress in obtaining the marriage, must, however, have the same effect as a judgment annulling a marriage because of force. A decree granting a divorce because of duress in [617]*617obtaining the marriage is a ground which goes directly to the validity of the marriage contract at the time of its consummation by the rites of matrimony. An essential element in the contract of marriage is the agreement and consent of the parties, Just as it is an essential element in any other contract. In the absence of the essential element of consent there is no meeting of the minds in agreement, and "a judgment, which decrees that the marriage was procured by duress is a determination that the consent of the complaining party was not obtained, and hence the consent to marry did not exist. In Bassett v. Bassett, 9 Bush 697, it was said:

“The common law treats-a matrimonial union of this kind, where the injured party has not ratified or affirmed it after all constraint is removed, as void, ab initio, and permits its validity to be questioned in any court, at the option of such party, upon the palpable ground that the element of mutual consent, so essential to every contract; is wanting.”

It was held in that opinion, however, that such a marriage was prima facie, valid, and that the burden of showing that it was obtained by duress or force rested upon the party who complained of it, and the further burden of making out a state of case, which would authorize the conclusion that the marriage had not been ratified by the exercise of any marital rights since the removal of the constraint. It is apparent, however, that a marriage procured by fraud or duress is not absolutely void for all purposes, but it can only be declared so at the option of the injured party, since all of the authorities are to the effect that it may be ratified or affirmed by the injured party by the exercise of marital rights after constraint has been removed. Furthermore, to have such marriage dissolved or declared null is a privilege personal to the injured party, and can not be affected by the heirs of such party, or by any third parties, or by the party in fault. For as said by this court in Tomppert’s Ex’tr v. Tomppert, 13 Bush 326, with reference to a marriage alleged to be void \ because of having been procured by fraud:

“If a marriage procured by fraud is void, the most unjust and absurd consequences would follow. A void marriage is incapable of ratification. It is as if no pretended marriage existed — neither party is bound; the guilty and the innocent are alike at liberty to disre[618]*618gard it. If such a marriage as this is void, the guilty party may set up his or her fraud in order to escape the responsibilities incident to the marriage relation.”

Hence, the injured party in a marriage obtained by duress may waive the wrong and ratify the marriage and make it valid by the exercise of the marital rights after the constraint has been removed. "While the law treats the assumption of the marriage relation as a civil contract, it is not treated in all respects as an ordinary contract. In the instant case, the appellant, by her answer, plead that a contract to be married, in the future, existed between her and the appellee, and under promise of marriage he accomplished her seduction and procured her to submit to permitting him to have sexual intercourse with her, the result of which was her impregnation, which resulted in the birth of a child after the marriage, and that the marriage was not procured by duress imposed upon the appellee, but his motive for entering into it was the performance of the obligation which he owed to her. All force and duress alleged in the petition was, also, denied by the answer, and that the appellee had abandoned her and a prayer was made for the dismissal of the petition, and for the recovery of alimony and the expenses of the litigation. The appellee, by his reply, denied any promise of marriage to the appellant, and denied the paternity of the child, and alleged that it was the fruits of her unlawful cohabitation with some other person, but, it is noticeable, that the reply fails to deny that previous to the marriage that the appellee had been guilty of sexual intercourse with the appellant. The chancellor decreed that the appellee was entitled to be granted a divorce on account of the alleged duress imposed upon him in submitting to the performance of the marriage rites, and while it decreed the payment of the ordinary costs of the suit by the appellee, denied to appellant any alimony or the allowance of any attorney’s fees for her benefit. While she admits that the judgment granting a divorce from her can not be reversed by this court, she has appealed from that portion of the judgment which denied her the allowance of alimony and attorney’s fees, upon the ground that the judgment granting the divorce was erroneous, and that because of the abandonment of her by appellee that she was entitled to have an allowance for alimony and that he be required to [619]*619pay a reasonable sum for attorney’s fees to enable her to resist the procurement of the divorce.

While the answer of the appellant did not contain any prayer for a separation in the nature of a judgment for a divorce from bed and board, the prayer was for alimony, and an issue having been joined upon the averments of the answer, as was held in Freeman v. Freeman, 11 R. 822, it was in effect a prayer for a decree of separation. It has been held by this court that in all cases where the husband obtains a divorce without the fault of the wife, that she is entitled to alimony, which includes the state of case, where the judgment for divorce was erroneously granted and where the divorce should have been granted to the wife. Lacey v. Lacey, 95 Ky. 110; Steele v. Steele, 27 R. 120; Davis v. Davis, 86 Ky. 32. It was held in Hulett v. Hulett, 80 Ky. 364, that where the facts of the case show that a separation was- proper that the chancellor was authorized to require the husband to maintain his wife during the coverture, and that although, where the charge was abandonment, that the statutory period had not expired, which is necessary to support the action, an action might be maintained for alimony by the wife without seeking or being entitled to a divorce, other than from bed and board, and in Butler v. Butler, 4 Lit. 206, this court said:

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 658, 174 Ky. 615, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-shepherd-kyctapp-1917.