Woronzoff-Daschkoff v. Woronzoff-Daschkoff

104 N.E.2d 877, 303 N.Y. 506
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 104 N.E.2d 877 (Woronzoff-Daschkoff v. Woronzoff-Daschkoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woronzoff-Daschkoff v. Woronzoff-Daschkoff, 104 N.E.2d 877, 303 N.Y. 506 (N.Y. 1952).

Opinion

Desmond, J.

This appeal is taken, by our leave, from an affirmance of a judgment annulling a marriage because of the husband defendant’s alleged fraud (Domestic Relations Law, § 7, subd. 4; Civ. Prac. Act, § 1139).

On March 24, 1947, in New York City, there was solemnized the wedding of plaintiff, a woman thirty-two years old, born in India, and possessed of great wealth, to defendant, an impoverished émigré Russian nobleman, forty-five years of age. They had known each other for about three months. The marriage had been urged and encouraged by defendant’s younger brother who had been acquainted with plaintiff for some years, and who had been her unsuccessful suitor. Plaintiff knew that defendant was poor. Defendant knew that plaintiff was rich. A European honeymoon, paid for by plaintiff, continued until August, 1947, when plaintiff went to India on business matters, and defendant sailed alone to New York to await her return. The parties cohabited while in Europe, hut not afterwards. When plaintiff came back to New York City, she lived with defendant at her home for about a month and there then ensued (in December, 1947) a quarrel in which, according to her testimony and the findings here, defendant upbraided plaintiff for her meanness in money matters and told her that he had married her for her money, and not for love. She told him, then, to leave the house and he did, “ and that was the end between us.” He was locked out of the house, and never returned.

This suit by plaintiff for an annulment on the ground of fraud was commenced in May, 1949. The complaint alleges that plaintiff’s consent to the marriage was procured by defendant’s fraud in that, as alleged, he falsely represented to her that he had always earned his own living and had never taken money from any woman, that his purpose in marrying her was to contribute to her happiness and her support and perform faithfully his husbandly duties, that he was an American citizen and had not forfeited that citizenship, that he was in every way qualified to carry the duties and responsibilities of married life and that his social position was high in Europe and New York. In a second cause of action there are allegations of a conspiracy by defendant and his brother whereby the former was to, and did. meet, court and marry plaintiff. The [510]*510complaint continues with averments that defendant’s representations were false in that he had not regularly earned his living for years, that he had received large sums of money from women, including a divorced wife in Europe, that he was a ne’er-do-well without social position, and a hypochondriac given to fits of uncontrollable temper and to periods of sexual impotency, that his purpose, successfully accomplished, was to obtain large sums of money from plaintiff for himself and his relatives and that, because of long residence in South America, his American citizenship was revocable.

Defendant’s answer contained, besides denials, a counterclaim in which, on various grounds, he demanded an annulment, but this counterclaim was withdrawn at the trial.

The trial court found that defendant had made all the representations alleged in the complaint, and that plaintiff had relied on them in giving her consent to the marriage. Those representations, so held the trial court, were all false in that defendant had, in Paris, received a large sum of money from his former wife, as a price for divorce, that defendant’s sole purpose in marrying plaintiff was to get money for his own life of idleness and for his relatives, that to accomplish this he permitted plaintiff to pay all the honeymoon expenses and took money from her, that he attempted secretly to collect commissions from the contractor who remodeled plaintiff’s home, that he tried to get money from plaintiff on the pretext of starting a business and tried to get her to set up a trust fund with him as her trustee, that he never made any real effort to find work or to support himself, and that he at no time offered “ to fulfill his marital obligation and promise to plaintiff to provide a home for her and to support himself ”. Such were the findings.

Leaving aside for a moment the matter of corroboration as required by section 1143 of the Civil Practice Act (see de Baillet-Latour v. de Baillet-Latour, 301 N. Y. 428), we now examine the proof. There was testimony that defendant’s brother was active in promoting and hurrying the marriage, and that defendant told plaintiff that he had never taken money from any woman and that he intended to support himself. There is no testimony that he ever promised to support plaintiff or provide a home for her, a promise which would have been of small consequence if made, in view of the disparate finances of the parties and [511]*511the fact that the wife had an elaborate home of her "own in New York. It could reasonably be inferred from defendant’s acts and attitudes that he was largely influenced by plaintiff’s wealth, and that he got money from her and tried to get more. He had worked, before marriage, as a hotel employee and as a dancing instructor or dancing partner in New York, Paris and the Argentine Eepublic, and he never claimed to have any other occupation or means of support. The wife and her brother provided the honeymoon expenses and defendant’s pocket money, but they did that not unwillingly. Defendant was sexually impotent at times, but cohabited with his wife on many occasions, before her departure for India, five months after the marriage. When she left on that journey, she sent defendant a loving message. There was testimony that defendant and his brother got secret commissions on the decoration and renovation of plaintiff’s home. Defendant was subject to colds and other minor ailments, and on occasions flew into sudden and stormy rages, unaccompanied by physical violence. He never got a job or tried to find one. He urged plaintiff to make him her trustee and unsuccessfully importuned her for capital with which to open a haberdashery business in New York City. When they had their final quarrel, he told her that he had married her for money and not for love, and he told his wife’s brother that his (defendant’s) former wife had to pay a great sum to rid herself of him, and that plaintiff would have to pay much more. Plaintiff ordered him from her house, and he left.

Defendant, on that showing, was no model of chivalry or propriety. That proof, believed by the trier of the facts, was enough, we will assume, to expose him as a fortune hunter, a sluggard, a hypochondriac, and a man who took his promises lightly. But this is a suit to annul a marriage for fraud, and, while we have, for better or worse, retreated (di Lorenzo v. di Lorenzo, 174 N. Y. 467; Shonfeld v. Shonfeld, 260 N. Y. 477, 481) from the old idea that marriages can be voided only for frauds going to the essentials of marriage, that is, consortium and cohabitation, it is, nonetheless, still the law in New York that annulments are decreed, not for any and every kind of fraud (Mirizio v. Mirizio, 242 N. Y. 74, 80; Svenson v. Svenson, 178 N. Y. 54, 59) but for fraud as to matters ££ vital ” to the marriage relationship only (Lapides v. Lapides, 254 N. Y. 73, 80), [512]*512Premarital falsehoods as to love and affection are not enough, nor disclosure that one partner “ married for money ” (Schaeffer v. Schaeffer, 160 App. Div. 48, 49; Feig v. Feig, 232 App. Div. 172, 177, 178). Lack of robust health is not enough (Riley v. Riley, 73 Hun 575, 576).

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Bluebook (online)
104 N.E.2d 877, 303 N.Y. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woronzoff-daschkoff-v-woronzoff-daschkoff-ny-1952.