Sissung v. Sissung

31 N.W. 770, 65 Mich. 168, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 578
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 770 (Sissung v. Sissung) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sissung v. Sissung, 31 N.W. 770, 65 Mich. 168, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 578 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Morse, J.

This is an appeal from the Monroe circuit court in chancery, from an order overruling the general demurrer of the defendant to the bill of complaint filed in this cause. We are therefore to determine from the bill, taken as true, whether it alleges a cause of action.

The complainant shows that he intermarried with the defendant, February 10, 1886; that he resides in French-town, in the county of Monroe, and has lived in this State the requisite statutory time, and upwards, previous to the filing of this bill; that while he lived with the defendant she .gave birth to a male child, born April 20, 1886, whose father is one Joseph Shoemaker, as he is informed by defendant, and verily believes;—

“That his acquaintance with said Gertrude began in the month of June, 1884, at which time she visited friends in the neighborhood of your orator’s home, for about one week; that she again came to visit said friends on or about the month of January, 1885, and remained for about one month, and then left for her father’s home, in said county -of Wayne, as he is informed and believes; that, after her said return, your orator neither saw nor heard from her again until the latter part of November, or the first part of De[170]*170comber, 1885, at which time she again visited her said friends for about one week, and returned home; that about six weeks after said last visit, said Gertrude requested your orator to come and see her, because she was sick since her last visit; that he went to visit her, and she informed your orator that she was pregnant by him, and insisted upon being married to him.
“Your orator further represents that, being without experience, and relying wholly on the truthfulness of said representation, and being willing to repair, so far as in his power, any wrong that he may have done, and to save the reputation and character of said Gertrude as well as his own, and intending to do as nearly right as he could in the circumstances, he married said Gertrude as aforesaid ; that he took said Gertrude to his home in Frenchtown, in said county of Monroe, and that they took and occupied a hoiise together, and lived together as husband and wife, until the birth of said child, as aforesaid, up to which time your orator had, in good faith, believed said child to be his own.”

He alleges that he never had sexual intercourse with the-defendant before her last visit, in the latter part of November or first part of December, 1885; that said child was full grown, and that the defendant had carried the same for the full period of gestation; that said child is not his, as falsely and fraudulently claimed by said defendant when she persuaded him to marry her; that defendant knew all the time that he was not, and could not be, the father of said child, but falsely pretended she was pregnant by him, and by so-pretending induced him to marry her; that he was deceived and defrauded into said marriage, and ought not to be held as the father of said child; that he remained in the house-with said defendant four days after her confinement, under the advice of a physician, and attended to her wants, for the sole purpose of seeing that she did not suffer; that, as soon as suitable help could be precured, he left, and went to his [171]*171father’s house, since which time he has had no communication or intercourse with defendant.

He avers the absence of any collusion or agreement, in conformity to the rule; and prays for a divorce, and that the child may be declared to be the child and heir of the defendant, but not of himself, and for general relief.

It seems to be well settled that a fraudulent concealment, by the female of her pregnancy by another person will void her marriage to one ignorant of this fact, and believing her chaste at the time of the marriage. If a woman is with-child by a stranger at the time of the marriage, and her intended husband is ignorant of the fact, he may have the-marriage declared null for fraud. Baker v. Baker, 13 Cal.. 87, 102; Reynolds v. Reynolds, 3 Allen, 605; Morris v. Morris, Wright (Ohio), 630; Ritter v. Ritter, 5 Blackf. 81; Scott v. Shufeldt, 5 Paige, 43; Carris v. Carris, 24 N. J. Eq. 516.

A woman to be marriageable, it is said, must, at the time, be able to bear children to her husband; as the first purpose of matrimony, by the laws of nature and society, is procreation. A woman who is pregnant at the time of marriage by a stranger is not in a condition to bear children to her husband, and the concealment of that fact, or a misrepresentation, is a gross fraud upon the husband, and sufficient to avoid the marriage, if he was ignorant of her situation, and believed her chaste and virtuous. But most of the reported-cases upon the subject hold that where the husband has had intercourse with the wife before marriage, and knows that she is pregnant, but is falsely led to believe that the child is his, and its birth proves it not to be his, yet, nevertheless, he must submit to the bonds of matrimony, and the presumed paternity of the child. Foss v. Foss, 12 Allen, 26; Crehore v. Crehare, 97 Mass. 330; Carris v. Carris, 24 N. J. Eq. 517.

In 97 Mass, the court say that the husband had full knowledge that the woman was unchaste before he entered into-[172]*172the marriage contract, and was thereby put on his guard, so that he cannot allege that he was induced to contract the marriage by such fraud and deceit of the defendant as will enable him to avoid his contract.

In Scroggins v. Scroggins, 3 Dev. 535, the petitioner was married on the eighteenth of December, 1828, and a mulatto child was born to his wife, May 1, 1829. The opinion states that he did not venture to swear that he believed her chaste at the time of his marriage, and for that reason denied his petition.

But in a later case, Barden v. Barden, reported in the same volume, at page 548, where the petitioner alleged that he knew at the time of the marriage that the defendant had .a child, but that he thought it was his, and that she, by her artful conduct before marriage, induced him to believe tha t .she had been modest and virtuous, except in the one instance, which she pretended was the result of her attachment for him, and that soon after marriage he discovered that the -child was a mulatto, upon which he had instantly parted from her, the court, composed of the same judges who united in the opinion in the case of Scroggins v. Scroggins, held the petition good. In Long v. Long, 77 N. C. 304, the majority of the court followed the decision in Scroggins v. Scroggins.

In Scott v. Shufeldt, 5 Paige, 43, the complainant alleged in his bill that he had occasionally visited defendant, and -that she afterwards made oath before a magitrate that she had been delivered of a bastard child, and that the complainant was the father of such child; that he was arrested upon .the charge of bastardy, and required to give bail as the putative father of the child; that, believing it to be a white child, and being unable to procure bail, he consented to marry defendant, and did marry her; that he subsequently ascertained that the child was a negro child, the complainant and defendant being both white persons; and that he had not cohabited with the defendant subsequently to such marriage. [173]

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 770, 65 Mich. 168, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sissung-v-sissung-mich-1887.