237 Mass. 502 | Mass. | 1921
This is a libel for the annulment of a marriage.
The relevant facts as found and reported by the Superior Court-
It is not every error or mistake into which an innocent party to a marriage may fall, even though induced by disingenuous or false statements, silences or practices, which affords ground for its annulment. Manifestly wicked deception was perpetrated upon the libellant. That alone is not enough to vitiate a marriage duly solemnized and fully consummated. Fraud, in order that it be ground for annulment, must go to the essentials of the marriage relation. The law in this particular was succinctly stated by Chief Justice Bigelow in the leading case of Reynolds v.
The libellant was not mistaken in the identity of the Iibellee. He was the human being whom she intended to marry. He did not impersonate another. Even though she was deluded as to his name and place of residence, that did not affect his personality. His representations as to relatives in another part of the' country merely concerned his social standing. It does not appear that these feigned relatives were known to the libellant. Doubtless the false representations of the Iibellee would have justified the libellant in breaking an agreement to marry and in refusing to execute the contract if she had ascertained the facts in time. Van Houten v. Morse, 162 Mass. 414. After the ceremony of marriage and the subsequent cohabitation, brief though it was, a change of status took place affecting both the parties and the community. A relation thereby sprang into existence which for important reasons the law recognizes and takes under its protection. It is a relation which cannot be lightly disregarded. It might affect the legitimacy of the posterity of the parties. In this particular the case is quite distinguishable in its facts from Smith v. Smith, 171 Mass. 404, and Anders v. Anders, 224 Mass. 438. In the main it resembles, in respect to the governing principle, Foss v. Foss, 12 Allen, 26, Crehore v. Crehore, 97 Mass. 330, Vondal v. Vondal, 175 Mass. 383, and Commonwealth v. Shaman, 223 Mass. 62. See Napier v. Napier, [1915] P. 184.
The validity of the marriage has been upheld where one of the parties has assumed a false name in Meyer v. Meyer, 7 Ohio Dec. (Reprint) 627, The King v. Burton-upon-Trent, 3 M. & S. 537, and The King v. Billingshurst, 3 M. & S. 250. Decisions to the contrary collected in the notes to the latter case at page 259 et seq., appear to rest upon the terms of the marriage act of England.
The rule is stated in Trask v. Trask, 114 Maine, 60, to he that “no fraud will avoid a marriage which does not go to the very
Libel dismissed.