265 Mass. 413 | Mass. | 1929
This is an action of tort for deceit, in which the plaintiff alleges she was induced to live with the defendant as his wife by reason of his fraudulent representation that they were lawfully married. The defendant excepted to the refusal of the judge to direct a verdict in his favor.
The parties were born in Latvia, the defendant coming to this country in 1906, and the plaintiff in 1909. The jury could have found that they first met in February, 1911, and,
During this period the defendant dealt to a considerable extent in real estate and the plaintiff, at his request, joined as his wife in all deeds and mortgages given by him, releasing dower and statutory rights. Several of these deeds and mortgages were executed within six years of the commencement of this action. In the year 1922, when differences arose
In the consideration of this case we must start with the admitted fact that the parties never were married. The testimony which, under other circumstances, as in Riley v. Murphy, post, page 420, just decided, would have a tendency to prove marriage can have no such' significance in this case.
1. The defence is made that the plaintiff cannot recover because the misrepresentation was one of law and not of fact. The question whether a misrepresentation of law may be actionable was expressly left open in Burns v. Dockray, 156 Mass. 135, 138. Kerr v. Shurtleff, 218 Mass. 167, 173, 174.
The sole reason urged by the defendant in support of his contention, that there can be no recovery because the misrepresentation was one of law, is that every one is “presumed to know the law.” The meaning of that expression was considered in Witherington v. Eldredge, 264 Mass. 166, 174, 175, where it was said: “The plaintiffs’ argument based upon the presumption of knowledge of the law is obviously unsound. This presumption means simply that ignorance of the law is no excuse. To illustrate, if Marion Eldredge knew that her father and stepmother were not married and induced them to live together without knowing that to do so was unlawful, her lack of knowledge would be immaterial.”
If it be assumed that the misrepresentation in the case at bar was one of law, the plaintiff upon the facts of this case is not for that reason barred from recovery. The defendant occupied a relation of trust and confidence toward the plaintiff because of their engagement to marry and was bound to
2. We are of opinion that the question, whether the plaintiff exercised due diligence and was justified in placing confidence in the statement of the defendant or should have known from the beginning that there was no valid marriage, was for the jury.
3. The defence of the statute of limitations also presented an issue of fact. The jury could have found that the confidential relationship continued and that the deception practised at first was operative until shortly before the action was begun. Upon such a finding the lapse of time would not be a bar to maintenance of the action. G. L. c. 260, § 12. Dean v. Ross, 178 Mass. 397. Old Dominion Copper Mining & Smelting Co. v. Bigelow, 203 Mass. 159, 201. O’Brien v. McSherry, 222 Mass. 147. The jury also could have found active fraud of a kind calculated to conceal the truth from the plaintiff and to lull her into security in the belief that she was the defendant’s wife. In Batty v. Greene, 206 Mass. 561, 565, a married woman went through
4. The defendant contends that the plaintiff by cohabiting with him participated in a crime and for that reason should not be allowed to recover. The plaintiff has not been convicted of the crime to which the defendant refers, but undoubtedly she might be so convicted notwithstanding the absence of criminal intent. Commonwealth v. Thompson, 11 Allen, 23. Commonwealth v. Mixer, 207 Mass. 141, 142, 148. Illegality was not set up in the answer, G. L. c. 231, § 28, Nowell v. Equitable Trust Co. 249 Mass. 585, 595, 596. But, if it be assumed that the defence is open and that the plaintiff’s own case reveals illegal action on her part, it does not follow that she is thereby deprived of her right to recover. The jury could have found that she innocently entered into the relations with the defendant solely by reason of his fraud, and that he thus created the illegality behind which he now undertakes to shield himself. If the defendant’s representation had been true no act of the plaintiff was either criminal or immoral.
Where a person is induced by the fraudulent representation of another to do an act which, in consequence of such misrepresentation, he believes to be neither illegal nor immoral, but which is in fact a criminal offence, he has a right of action against the person so inducing him for damages sustained by him in consequence of his having done such act. Burrows v. Rhodes, [1899] 1 Q. B. 816. In Cooper v. Cooper, 147 Mass. 370, the court said that a false representation by the defendant that he was divorced from his former wife, whereby the plaintiff was induced to marry him, gave her a remedy in tort for deceit. It seems to have been assumed that- the fact that she had unintentionally violated the law or innocently committed a crime by cohabiting with him
Furthermore, in the case at bar the plaintiff does not base her cause of action upon any transgression of the law by herself but upon the defendant’s misrepresentation. The criminal relations which followed, innocently on her part, were but one of the incidental results of the defendant’s fraud for which damages may be assessed.
Actions for deceit for fraudulently inducing a woman to enter into the marriage relation have been maintained in other jurisdictions. Sears v. Wegner, 150 Mich. 388. Larson v. McMillan, 99 Wash. 626. Blossom v. Barrett, 37 N. Y. 434. Morrill v. Palmer, 68 Vt. 1. Considerations of public policy would not prevent recovery where the circumstances are such that the plaintiff was conscious of no moral turpitude, that her illegal action was induced solely by the defendant’s misrepresentation, and that she does not base her cause of action upon any transgression of the law by herself. Such considerations distinguish this case from cases in which the court has refused to lend its aid to the enforcement of a contract illegal on its face or to one who has consciously and voluntarily become a party to an illegal act upon which the cause of action is founded. Szadiwicz v. Cantor, 257 Mass. 518, 520. The case was properly submitted to the jury.
Exceptions overruled.