264 Mass. 28 | Mass. | 1928
J. This is a petition filed in the Probate Court for the county of Suffolk for the nullity of the marriage of Thomas M. Cassin with Helen M. Cassin. The relevant facts found and reported by a judge of that court are as follows: The libellant and the libellee were married in this Commonwealth, in accordance with the rites of the Roman Catholic faith, on May 26, 1918, and lived together until December 13,1921. No children were born of the marriage. The libellant before his marriage ever was and is now a devout communicant of the Roman Catholic Church. The libellee was an adherent of and baptized in the Methodist Episcopal Church. At the time the parties were contemplating marriage the question of their religious differences was discussed. The libellant proposed that he would marry the libellee if there were no religious impediments. He asked her if she had ever been married and she replied that she had been. He asked her if she had ever been divorced and she said that she had never been divorced; that she was a widow, her husband and she had lived in Brockton, and he had met with an accident and had been killed. The libellant then made known to her that as a condition precedent to his marriage, since she was not a divorced woman, he would require her to become a convert and be married according to the rites of the Roman Catholic Church. The libellee thereupon agreed to comply with these terms and did in the early part of January, 1918, enter into due preparation for her affiliations with, the Roman Catholic Church. At the preliminary examination before a pastor of that church, she'
The libellant believed the representations made to him by the libellee as to her being but twenty-five years of age, that she was a widow and not divorced, that her husband was killed by an accident, and that she was eligible to embrace the Roman Catholic faith, and he would not have entered into the said marriage with her had he known that she had been divorced. From the time he first learned that she was a divorced woman, he ceased to live with her. The judge further found that “under the Canon Laws of the Roman Catholic Church a person who has been baptized and subsequently marries and is divorced, cannot while his wife or her husband is still living, be married in said church; that the impediment is one which cannot be dispensed and that such a marriage if actually performed under a misstatement of facts, as in this case, to the officiating clergyman is not a valid marriage in the eyes of the said church. The libellee in the present case was baptized in the Methodist Episcopal Church prior to her marriage to her first husband, was later divorced from him and he was living at the time of her marriage to the libellant . . . said marriage to the libellant is not a valid marriage under the laws of the Roman Catholic Church.”
The libellant accepts as the law of the case the judgment of Reynolds v. Reynolds, 3 Allen, 605, 608, wherein Bigelow, C.J., said that, where the contract has been executed, “Nothing can then avoid it which does not amount to a fraud in the essentialia of the marriage relation.” What such fraud may be is stated at page 607 in these words: “ . . .it is not to be supposed that every error or mistake into which a
Petition dismissed.