Smith v. Smith

112 Misc. 371
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 112 Misc. 371 (Smith v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Smith, 112 Misc. 371 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Fawcett, J.

This is a motion to confirm referee’s report in an action for an annulment of marriage.

The plaintiff sets forth two causes of action: First, that he was induced to marry the defendant by reason of her fraudulent misrepresentations that she was of sound mind and body and fully competent to enter into the marriage state; Second, that at the time of the marriage the defendant was insane.

The report of the learned referee that the second cause of action cannot be maintained by this plaintiff is hereby confirmed. An action to annul a marriage is allowed and limited by statute. The only person who can sue to have the marriage annulled on the ground that one of the parties was a lunatic at the time the marriage was entered into, is the insane person, after restoration to sanity, or a relative of that person who has an interest to avoid the marriage, or, by permission of the court, a party suing as a next friend of the incompetent. Dom. Rel. Law, § 7; Code Civ. Pro. §§ 1747,1748; Walter v. Walter, 217 N. Y. 439.

That leaves for consideration the first cause of action, wherein plaintiff seeks to annul the marriage on the ground that plaintiff was induced to marry the defendant by reason of her fraudulent representations that she was of sound mind and body and fully competent to enter into the marriage. The learned referee, in an able opinion, reviews the leading authorities for the annulment of marriage on the ground of fraud, and presents the question raised on this issue for the decision of the court, namely: Was the silence of the defendant concerning the facts, that a brother and sister had been treated for a mental disease in a hospital for the insane, that the sister was [373]*373still confined in such hospital, and that she herself had been treated for a mental or nervous disorder in an institution in Canada, a sufficient fraud upon this plaintiff to warrant the annulment of this marriage? ”

The courts of this state do not seem to have passed on the precise question involved in this case.

It appears from an examination of the testimony that at the time of plaintiff’s proposal of marriage to defendant, he asked her the question, Is there anything going to come up between us to make life unhappy,” to which she answered, “ No.” They were married in August, 1913. Defendant became insane in July, 1914, and was confined in several institutions between then and 1917, from which time she has been continuously in the New York State Hospital for the Insane at Kings Park, incurably insane, suffering from dementia prcecox. That about a year prior to her marriage she had been treated for a nervous or mental disorder in St. John’s Hospital in Canada, of which fact plaintiff was wholly ignorant until about a year after their marriage. Her brother and sister were insane and committed to institutions, knowledge of which did not come to plaintiff until a year and a half after his marriage to defendant. Defendant also had a deranged uncle and a demented grandmother. A relative advised defendant to inform plaintiff of her illness in Canada and another relative told defendant to tell plaintiff of her sister being insane, and she promised to do so. A friend asked defendant the question : “ Is there anything you should tell him [plaintiff] concerning your physical health,” and she replied, “ There is nothing wrong.” She acted strangely and illogically at times during the period of their engagement to marry. Doctor Cusack, under whose care defendant had been during the past six months, testified that, in his opinion, the nervous or mental disorder, for which defendant was treated in Canada, was [374]*374the beginning of the insanity precipitated, at the time of the death of defendant’s mother and later further precipitated by the birth of her child; that defendant might have had some mental disorder or might have been insane at the time of her marriage to plaintiff, and have been in a period of remission or have known she was insane and have concealed it, as such a person would have a propensity to conceal such knowledge.

Marriage being a mutual and voluntary compact, based on mutual regard and affection to live together as husband and wife as long as both shall live, a confidential relationship exists between those contemplating marriage that demands frankness and truthfulness as to all facts that would affect the decision of either party, x Persons who have agreed to marry owe an affirmative duty to inform each other of all facts material to their contemplated marriage, not alone because such facts may affect the decision of the contracting parties,- but the state and community has an interest by reason of the property rights involved and the possible issue of the union. And if either party is unfitted by age, physical condition, mental incapacity, or legal disability from being joined in lawful wedlock, that party should not remain silent; there is a clear duty to speak, as such facts are of the very essence of the contract of conjugal union. Silence implies marriageability.

A confidential relationship exists between persons who contract to marry, and occupying such positions toward each other, concealment of material facts may be fraud. The suppression of the truth, when there is a duty to speak, is a fraud. Smith Frauds, § 9. There is a legal and moral obligation to communicate or disclose facts material to the contemplated marriage.

It was a material fact that defendant had been in St. John’s Hospital in Canada for treatment of a mental or nervous disorder shortly prior to her [375]*375engagement to marry plaintiff, and especially in the light of her knowledge that her sister was then in an insane asylum. Her failure to act on the advice of relatives and tell plaintiff of her own condition and of the condition of her maniacal sister, after promising them so to do, and her denial to the witness Stewart that there was anything wrong with her health, indicated an intent to practice a fraud on plaintiff. In Blank v. Blank, 107 N. Y. 91, it was held that the representation by the defendant that she was a widow, whereas she had been collusively divorced from a former husband, who was still living, was such a misrepresentation of a material fact as would justify the court in vacating the agreement. In Svenson v. Svenson, 178 N. Y. 54, the court held that the concealment of a contagious hereditary venereal disease was a sufficient fraud, though, at the time of the trial, the defendant was cured. The ease of Domschke V. Domschke, 138 App. Div. 454, held that chastity prior to the marriage, if insisted upon, may be made essential to the contract, and annulled a marriage because the defendant stated that she had been the wife of a man then dead and that he was the father of her child, whereas she had been his mistress and the child was a bastard. This was proposed as a test: if the fraud be such that, had it not been practiced, the contract would not have been made, or the transaction completed, then it is material to it. In Keyes v. Keyes, 6 Misc. Rep. 355, it was held that the defendant’s misrepresentation that he was honest and industrious, when in fact he was a professional thief, was a sufficient fraud. In King v. Brewer, 8 Misc. Rep. 587, the defendant had kept a “ poolroom ” (which was punishable by imprisonment for one year or by a fine or both). He did not inform the plaintiff of this fact, and the marriage was annulled because of the fraud. In Fontana v. Fontana, 77 Misc. Rep.

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112 Misc. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-nysupct-1920.