102 Misc. 443 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
The evidence establishes to my satisfaction that prior to entering into a promise to marry this defendant the plaintiff requested her father to see the defendant and to question him in regard to certain matters which she regarded as essential to a happy marriage. The plaintiff’s father did question the defendant, and he answered these questions falsely. Upon these false representations the plaintiff promised to marry the defendant, and now after a lapse of years, during which a child was bom, has brought this ' action to annul her marriage. The misrepresentations made by this defendant did not concern any of those matters which the law regards as essential to that relation or even which common experience has shown to be very material to a happy marriage. While this particular marriage has turned out unhappy, and the plaintiff and the defendant are living separate, yet it appears that they separated before the plaintiff learned of the falsity of the defendant’s representations and for entirely different causes. These representations do not seriously affect the moral character of the defendant, according to the standards of a large proportion of the community, and while a frank disclosure of these matters on his part to the plaintiff’s father would, under the circumstances shown, have been fair and proper, even without questioning on the
Judgment for plaintiff.