157 Ga. 397 | Ga. | 1924
J. P. Owens sought a divorce from his wife, on the ground that the marriage was procured by fraud practiced upon him by the defendant by which he was fraudulently induced to enter the contract. The fourth division of § 2945 of the Civil Code of 1910 (which section sets forth what grounds shall be sufficient to authorize the granting of a total divorce) provides that “Force, menaces, duress, or fraud, in obtaining the marriage,” shall be sufficient ground to authorize the granting of a total divorce. The allegations of fact upon the point of fraud as contained in the plaintiff’s petition are to the effect that the defendant knowingly misled and deceived the plaintiff by telling him that she was pregnant with a child of which he was the father; that she thus caused the plaintiff to believe he was the father of the child; that she made said fraudulent representation to the plaintiff with the knowledge of its falsity and with the intention to deceive him, and did so deceive him, and fraudulently caused plaintiff to believe he was the father of said child; “and by said fraudulent representation of defendant to plaintiff, said plaintiff did consent to marry defendant and did marry said defendant, because plaintiff did believe that he was the father of the said unborn child of the said defendant; said defendant knew that she was pregnant by some other man at the time that she made the said fraudulent representation to the plaintiff.” The petition then alleges that the child was born the day after the plaintiff married the defendant, whereas the plaintiff had never had carnal knowledge with the defendant except upon one occasion, which was on August 7, 1921, only a little more than six months previous to the birth of the child. It further appears from the fifth paragraph of the petition, that the plaintiff did not marry the defendant until February 10, 1922, after he had been lodged in jail under a warrant charging
Upon the first trial of the case the jury rendered a verdict finding in favor of the plaintiff a total divorce. At the next term the trial was proceeding, when the trial judge of his own motion withdrew the case from the jury and dismissed the petition. Exception is taken to this dismissal of the case. Two points are raised for our decision. Whether the trial by the first jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of a total divorce, and the action of the trial judge in permitting the case to go to the jury was such an adjudication as fixed the law of the case to the effect that the allegations of the petition sufficiently and legally stated a case of such fraud as is required by the Code to entitle a petitioner to a total divorce; and that it was not within the power of the court, upon the second trial of the divorce suit as required by law, to dismiss the petition even if it had been originally fatally defective. The second question (and the determination of the first depends partially upon the ruling as to the second question) is whether the petition, construed as a whole, so totally failed to state such a case of fraud that it should not, under any contention, have been submitted to the jury. Counsel for the plaintiff contend that, by the court’s consideration of the ease upon the trial which resulted in the first verdict, the law of the case became fixed, and the petitioner was entitled to a second verdict if he established the allegations of his petition as made. There is no appearance for the defendant in error before this court; and hence we are not informed as to what is the contention of the defendant in the lower court.
We cannot agree with the contention of the plaintiff in error that the petition could not be dismissed for fatal defects even upon the second trial of the divorce suit. Under the provisions of our law the proceedings in divorce cases are sui generis. As is well known, divorces were originally granted in Georgia only upon application to the General Assembly and by the action of the legislature. When the law was changed it was provided that divorces could only be granted by the concurrent verdicts of two juries at different terms of the court. There were several obvious purposes in this provision. One, which is very apparent, was to
Judging the action of the court in dismissing the petition upon the second trial upon its merits, we think the trial judge was right in dismissing the petition. The allegations of the petition did not make any case of fraud. No man can allege that he is defrauded when, with his eyes open to all the facts, or with the opportunity to ascertain the exact truth, he consents to be deceived. This common principle is one of universal application. This State has what in many States would be included within the general provision as to fraud as a ground for the annulment of a marriage. One of our grounds for divorce is “Pregnancy of
This plaintiff, about to enter a contract of marriage, had at least two good reasons why he should not have believed and acted upon the statement of the opposite party. In the first place, the statement of a woman who would grant sexual intercourse to a man she had just met should not be credited. In the second place, a man of ordinary intelligence could tell by ocular inspection that a woman so far advanced in pregnancy as to be within one day of actual delivery could not have been in that condition as the result of an intercourse had barely six months, before. The applicant for divorce stated in his petition that at the time of the marriage he was confined in jail under a warrant charging seduction; and in determining whether the action sets out a case of fraud within the purview of that word as used as a ground of divorce, the entire petition may be considered, and there we find that the real reason why the ground of fraud in procurement of marriage was relied upon is because this court has held that duress as a ground for divorce could not be predicated upon a prosecution for seduction. Griffin v. Griffin, 130 Ga. 527 (61 S. E. 16, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 937, 14 Ann. Cas. 866).
We have already shown that the second trial of this divorce case was absolutely distinct from the first trial and unaffected by it. The sufficiency of the petition could be questioned as well in the second trial as in the first; and even though no motion to strike was made and no demurrer had been filed, the court had the right,
Judgment affirmed.