86 N.J. Eq. 119 | New York Court of Chancery | 1916
This petition by Jessie Orr BufEum to have her marriage to the defendant, Edgar BufEum, Jr., annulled on the ground of the defendant’s incapacity to enter into the marriage contract, arising from his lunacy at the time of the marriage, is filed under the Divorce act of 1907, paragraph 1, subsection 4 (P. L. 1907 p. 474), which authorizes decrees of nullity of marriage when “the parties or either of them was, at the time of the marriage, incapable of consenting thereto and the marriage has not been subsequently ratified,” and also under the supplement to the Crimes act, 2 Comp. Stat. p. 1778 § 105a (P. L. 1904 p. 270), which forbids one who has been mentally deficient from marrying unless he procure the certificate of two physicians showing that he has been restored to mental vigor and that he will not transmit defects or disabilities to offspring.
The parties were married at the city hall in Newark, by Mayor Haussling, on June 7th, 1910, and after the marriage ceremony they returned to the home of defendant’s parents in Newark, where they continued to reside until October 2d, 1910, when defendant was recommitted to the State Hospital for the Insane at Morris Plains, where he is now confined. An answer was filed and a defence made in defendant’s behalf bjr a guardian ad litem appointed for that purpose.
The evidence discloses that in May, 1908, defendant having shown delusions was, on the advice of his physician, sent to Dr. Millspaugh’s Sanitarium, in Paterson, for treatment. He remained in this sanitarium until March 16th, 1909, when his mental derangement having progressed to such a stage that adequate treatment could not be given him there, he was duly committed to the asylum at Morris Plains.
At this time he was without property or income, except such as his family allowed him. He remained at his uncle’s home until June, 1910, under the care of Mr. Madden, or his sister, or of some member of his uncle’s family. He occupied himself by doing whatever interested him about his uncle’s farm and was permitted to go about the town unattended, and made a number of acquaintances, among them being the petitioner. He first met the petitioner, who was then about twenty-two years old, in December, 1909.
After this defendant began paying 'attention to petitioner and at Christmas time he sent her a diamond pin worth about $100, which she returned to him. Notwithstanding this, he continued to meet her frequently and occasionally called on her. He was always very courteous, respectful and generous, and very free in spending what money he had. She did not take his attentions seriously and did not consider the possibility of marrying him, because he had no income and no means of supporting himself or a wife. On one of his visits he told her he had been very ill and had become tired out and gone away for a rest. No one ever told her he had been insane, or that he had been committed- in an asylum. At this time he appeared in good health, was about twenty-eight years old, a tall, strong, athletic, powerful looking man, and acted at times like a spoiled child; he would became jealous, and when he could not have his own way, he would become very angry.
In April, 1910, he gave petitioner a box of candy. When she opened it she found a small velvet box in the centre of the candy, and this contained a diamond ring. She tried to return the ring to him but he refused to accept it, and told her if she sent it back lie would throw it away. She believed he would do as he said, because on another occasion he. wanted her to
During his stay at the farm he made elaborate plans for turning the farm into a great institution and was going to raise crops that would bring him vast wealth. He wanted to raise turkeys, sheep and goats and do farming on an extensive scale, for which the place was not suitable and for which he had no money. He gave orders for expensive sheep and dogs which his family had to countermand.
' On June 5th, 1910, he compelled petitioner to leave her home and go with him to Boston and Newark under the following circumstances: After church services that day he had lunch at her home and she told him she had a rehearsal engagement for the afternoon. After the rehearsal, she and her friend,- Miss Bates, walked toward her home accompanied by defendant. In their walk they were obliged to pass the railroad station, which is located in an isolated part of the town. Defendant turned and said, “I am going to Newark and Jessie is going with me.” She told him she could not go with him. Then he said, “We will go as far as Boston anyway and get something to eat.” They could not get him to abandon the trip and then petitioner sent Miss Bates to notify defendant’s sister where they had gone. Defendant' had hold of petitioner at the time and as they were alone at the station, and she found she could not run away from him, and did not care to make a scene, she concluded to take the short trip to Boston, thinking she would be able to induqe him to abandon the trip to Newark. On their arrival in Boston about five-thirty p. m. he made inquiries about a train for New York or Newark, and bought two tickets for the nine p. m. train.
They then went to the Adams House, where he registered as man and wife and engaged a room; then they had dinner, and when they-came out of the dining room they met his sister and talked the situation over with her. Defendant said, “If you have anything to sajq come upstairs and say it.” When they reached the door of the room, defendant-was very angry and pushed petitioner into the room and shut the door and locked
Later in the night, against her pleading and struggles, he had sexual intercourse with her. The next morning, before seven o’clock, they met Miss Bates and his uncle and sister in the hotel, and they tried to have him abandon his trip, which he refused to do. They then sought the assistance of policemen along the street to prevent him ‘from taking petitioner to the railroad station, but without success. It was raining very hard at the time and neither of them had umbrellas or baggage. He provided no breakfast for her until after ten o’clock on the train. They reached Newark about five o’clock. On their arrival in Newark he took her to his parents’ home and introduced her to his mother as his wife. Later in the evening, after his father came home, the parents talked matters over and they asked her if she had any certificate and defendant said, “Yes, they were up home, that he had been married before that.” His father did not believe him and told him he must produce the certificate. The next morning defendant said to her, “I guess we better go downtown.” He said he would have to> get a license or certificate of some kind, because his father was objecting.
At no time did he ever mention marriage or speak about marriage to her. She married him, not knowing he had ever been insane, because she felt it was the only thing she could do after what had taken place between them at the Adams House.
Defendant was brought for treatment to Dr. W. H. Hicks of Newark by his sister in March, 1909, and he found him suffering from a form of insanity which he diagnosed as dementia precox, which, he states, is one of the most common forms of mental diseases, occurring usually in early life, in the teens or in the twenties. It is more or less progressive and is not curable. The symptoms are subject to remissions, during which the patient gets much better, but at no time are the symptoms
Dr. Evans, the medical director of the hospital at Morris Plains, states that when defendant was admitted to the hospital on March 14th, 1909, he was suffering from a serious form of mental disease known as dementia precox, which was characterized by delusions of persecution and suspicion, some mental confusion, abnormal excitability and a tendency to be violent, combative, abusive and profane. He was discharged on October
Dr. Evans’ opinion is that the incidents sworn to by the petitioner’s witnesses, if substantially true, show that defendant on the day of his marriage did not possess that state of mind or reason which would enable him to understand the nature, force, character and responsibility of the marriage contract as a sane person does or should understand it,- and that a person suffering from dementia precox, during a period of remission would be capable of misleading or deceiving a person not conversant with mental disorders, as to the real mental state existing. In his opinion, at the time of the marriage defendant was' mentally unsound and did not have a proper comprehension of the responsibilities- — legal, moral or social, which were entailed upon him and the woman he was about to marry, and that there is nothing in the case to indicate that circumstances subsequent to the marriage, or arising out of the marriage relation itself, brought about the recurrence of the disease.
. The present inquiry is confined to the question whether at the time of the marriage the defendant’s mind was so impaired by disease that he was not capable of entering into the contract. Kern v. Kern, 51 N. J. Eq. 574—586; Brainen v. Brainen, 79 N. J. Eq. 270-273. The evidence produced by the petitioner in support of her allegations, consist of the testimony of persons as to defendant’s conduct and of the medical testimony. This evidence shows an entire absence of intent on the defendant’s part to marry petitioner. At no time, until the day of the marriage, did he mention the subject of marriage. He did not show her the consideration due to the woman about to become his
His failure to ask petitioner if she would marry him; the fact that he did not ask any member of his family to witness the marriage ceremony; his inability to support himself or his wife, or to provide a home for them; his purpose in going through a marriage ceremony merely to obtain a certificate to show his father; his failure to furnish his wife any money or clothing during the four months they lived together after the marriage; his insane and causeless jealousy of her; his purpose in having her continually near him to satisfy his sexual desires, and his constant watch upon her, locking her in' her room, reading her mail, refusing to permit her to converse with the members of his family and becoming furiously angry over trifling matters, all indicate a total absence of understanding of the conditions of the marriage state and of its rights and responsibilities.
“Marriage is a legal bond around affections assumed to be already united and the blending in law of two lives into one. * * * Hence, in reason, the test question should be whether or not the parties have the capacity or mind required for duly comprehending this union. * * * The question in a marriage case is whether the alleged insane person acted rationally regarding the marriage and the particular one in dispute.” 1 Bish. Mar. & D. 599-601.
The circumstances previous to and in connection with the marriage ceremony, the subsequent conduct of defendant towards his wife and his treatment of her, taken in connection with the history of defendant’s diseased mental condition and the positive testimony of the medical experts, show that he was not capable of understanding the nature of the contract he was entering into, and establishes the existence of defendant’s mental disease at the time of the marriage ceremony, to the extent of incapacitating defendant from entering into the marriage contract.
Having reached the conclusion that defendant was of unsound mind at the time of the marriage ceremony, I have not .considered it necessary to determine if the act of 1904, page 210, is applicable to the circumstances of the case.