Romatz v. Romatz

Black, J.

Barden v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 154 US 288 (14 S Ct 1030, 38 L ed 992), provides an appropriate introduction to the ensuing confession of error. It follows (p 322):

“It is more important that the court should be right upon later and more elaborate consideration of the cases than consistent with previous declarations. Those doctrines only will eventually stand which bear the strictest examination and the test of experience.”

*84When an appellate court discovers that a majority of its members have erred, the duty of frank and corrective avowal takes first place in the order of judicial business. With the coming here of this second bill for annulment of Anton Romatz’ apparently solemnized Ohio marriage, we descry an egregious mistake, appearing in our unanimous opinion of Romatz v. Romatz, 346 Mich 438. On that occassion it was erroneously held that a Michigan court of equity — even though possessed of jurisdiction of the necessary parties and even though such parties at all times have been domiciled in Michigan — is without jurisdiction to entertain a bill for annulment of a purported marriage, solemnized in another State, where the pleaded ground of annulment is that one of the involved parties was mentally incompetent at the time and the other party is charged with having fraudulently taken advantage of such incapacity in order to bring about the relation of husband and wife.

Our said misstep was taken on the false premise that equity must find her jurisdiction to annul in legislative enactments granting direct and specific authority;* whereas, and certainly as to cases of annulment distinguished from divorce, it is clear that the jurisdiction is inherent; also that it is “not prohibited by law.” (Quotation from article 7, § 10, Const 1908.)

*85This brings us to the jurisdictional instrument itself; the bill of complaint filed in behalf of Anton Romatz in his lifetime. If that bill conferred requisite jurisdiction at the time, and we so hold, subsequent events — such as Anton’s death prior to hearing below — have not destroyed such jurisdiction (L’Hommedieu v. Smith, 351 Mich 223).*

The bill considered in Romatz, supra, alleged that both parties to the purported marriage were at all times resident of the city of Detroit; that a form of marriage was solemnized between plaintiff Anton Romatz (represented in the case by his guardian), and defendant Matilda Winter Romatz, “before a justice of the peace in the city of Toledo, State of Ohio, on the 26th day of March, 1954;” that said Anton Romatz, at the time of such purported marriage, was a mentally-incompetent person and was later so adjudged (June 1, 1954) by the Wayne county probate court, and that said Anton Romatz, on April 7, 1954, left the defendant’s home and “returned to his own home, to live with 2 of his children.” The bill, coming to its jurisdictional allegation, averred that the purported marriage “was obtained by fraud” of defendant, charged this way:
“(a) That defendant herein, well knowing of the mental incapacity of the plaintiff, stole him away from his family and cajoled and influenced him, taking advantage of his idiocy and insanity, to permit her to drive him to another State and to go through the ceremony of marriage.
“(b) That the defendant herein, knowing that plaintiff had considerable property, planned and *86schemed said marriage in an attempt to obtain the property of plaintiff therein at his death.
“(c) That the following day after said marriage, the defendant herein, engaged an attorney and had certain documents drawn which, had plaintiff signed, would have secured for her a better claim to his estate.”

Issues having been joined, the case proceeded to due hearing. At conclusion of such hearing the chancellor found and held:

“The court has heard the testimony of the various witnesses who have been presented here in plaintiff’s behalf, numbering more than 10,1 believe. All told pretty much the same story; that following his illness on the 6th of October, 1953, his condition became decidedly different. He was a victim of apoplexy at the time. In other words, he suffered a stroke. There was a complete change in his personality as revealed by the witnesses. They told how neat and clean he was before and that subsequently he was very slovenly and indifferent as to his personal appearance, his eating habits changed, he was grossly indifferent to money, treated it very lightly, and seemed to be unconscious of its value. The doctor himself who saw him in March of 1954 believed that he was not competent to handle his own affairs. The record itself is replete with incidents where the plaintiff’s personality, without question, had changed, and it was reflected that he was without the mental capacity to recognize this fact.
“This marriage was contracted in Ohio, and I think the court should be guided by the laws of Ohio. Ohio has followed the common law that in order to make a valid marriage, one must have the capacity to contract. In this matter the court is of the considered opinion that the plaintiff at the time he entered into this contract with the defendant was without the mental capacity to contract. Therefore, a good and valid marriage was not performed, and it might be noted here that following the-marriage in June, as *87a matter of fact the first day of June, 1954, the Honorable Judge Cody declared this man mentally incompetent.
“Therefore, the court does believe that this marriage between the plaintiff and the defendant is void ab initio and a decree may be entered to that effect, with costs to the plaintiff.”

As Romatz, supra, shows, the chancellor’s decree was reversed for want of jurisdiction (p 442) to annul “the marriage of an incompetent person when the marriage was performed out of Michigan.” Following such reversal the plaintiff heirs of Anton Romatz filed this new bill for annulment. Such new bill is a substantial duplicate of the one filed in behalf of Anton Romatz during his lifetime. It varies from the earlier bill only in respect of new and specific allegation that the subject marriage license was applied for and issued “within less than 5 days from the filing of an application for said license,” in violation of a pleaded Ohio statute. Defendant Matilda Winter Romatz moved to dismiss such new bill, assigning principally that same presents a “matter that is res judicata between the parties.” The successor chancellor granted the motion and entered a decree of dismissal. Appeal having been taken from the decree of dismissal, and a serious cloud having been cast by our previous opinion on the “powers and jurisdiction of the circuit courts in chancery” of Michigan, we move now of our own will to overrule Romatz.

First: Historically, the jurisdiction of equity came to Michigan from England, after the pattern of New York. By statute, effective in 1830, it was provided in the Empire State that “The powers and jurisdiction of the court of chancery are co-extensive with the powers and jurisdiction of the court of chancery in England, with the exceptions, additions, and limitations created and imposed by the Constitu*88tion and laws of this State.” (See detailed discussion, 1 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (4th ed), §§ 283, 284, pp 531-533, in which the common origin of equity jurisdiction as applied in New York, Michigan and Vermont was noted.)* Eight years later (by part 3, title 1, chapter 2, § 23, of the revised statutes of 1838) the general and presently known jurisdiction of Michigan circuit courts, sitting in chancery, came into being. Our enactment of 1838 was worded the same as quoted from the earlier statute of New York, save only that the words “shall be” were substituted for the word “are”. Having matched these time-honored laws, we find that no material amendment of the Michigan statute has been made during the intervening 120 years. The statute reads, today:

“The powers and jurisdiction of the circuit courts and. circuit judges in chancery, in and for their respective counties, shall be co-extensive with the powers and jurisdiction of the courts and judges in chancery in England as existing on March first, 1847, With the exceptions, additions and limitations created and imposed by the Constitution and laws of this State.” CL 1948, § 606.4 (Stat Ann § 27.545).

What do these words import, in the way of provided jurisdiction to hear and determine the merits of a bill of complaint such as was filed in behalf of Anton Romatz on July 7, 1954? In the orderly course of progress toward solution of such a problem, the questing briefer turns first to that which comes with the imported statute. He finds immediately the regularly cited case of Ferlat v. Gojon, 1 Hopkins Ch (NY) 478, 484, 485 (14 Am Dec 554), wherein it was held that a marriage procured by fraud and abduction may be vacated in equity at suit *89of the innocent party. The chancellor said (pp 556, 557 of Am Dee report):

“The jurisdiction of this court is that of the English chancery, with the various additions which have been made to it by our own laws. This court has jurisdiction in ease of fraud, and especially in all cases of contracts procured by fraud. In such cases this court effectually annuls the fraudulent contract, adjudges it void, causes it to he delivered up or canceled, or prohibits the parties from claiming any right under it. Such is the undoubted jurisdiction of this court in other cases of contracts; and if this court has not the same jurisdiction where the contract of marriage has been procured by fraud, it is the only case of a fraudulent contract to which its jurisdiction does not extend. * # * The jurisdiction of equity in cases of fraudulent contracts seems sufficiently comprehensive to include the contract of marriage, and though this may be a new application of the power of this court, I do not perceive that it is an extension of its jurisdiction. It would be deplorable that in a case of fraud so gross there should be no adequate remedy; and to give the same relief in this case which this court gives in other eases of contracts procured by fraud, is no assumption of any general jurisdiction over matrimonial causes: Reeve’s Domestic Relations, 206, 207.”

We note, before passing to general authority, that the jurisdiction in Ferlat was sustained from that which inheres and not from a specific statute granting jurisdiction to hear and determine suits for marriage annulment. We also observe that Ferlat led the way in this country toward establishment of the firm and well-nigh universal rule that a contract of marriage, fraudulently induced or obtained, is as much subject to the immanent power and control of equity as is any contract tainted with fraud. An early instance of the exercise of such power, in a case not unlike the one before us, appears in Gillett *90v. Gillett, 78 Mich 184, and the following authorities uniformly tend to sustain the jurisdictional principle which, on reflective consideration, appears to have been overlooked by the participating members of our Court (the writer included) when Romatz came to decision in 1956:

“In this country at an early date courts of equity assumed independent jurisdiction of suits to annul marriages on the ground of fraud. This jurisdiction was expressly rested upon the general power to vacate contracts in all cases where they had been procured by fraud. From this general jurisdiction of equity a contract of marriage was not regarded as being excepted, when the assent to it was the result «of artifice or gross fraud.” 9 RCL, Divorce and Separation, § 61, pp 293, 294.
“Questions of jurisdiction and conflict of laws relating to annulment of marriage are closely interrelated and for that reason are herein treated together. Jurisdiction of actions or- suits for the annulment of marriages is sometimes prescribed or conferred upon particular courts by statute. In the absence of statute, the general rule is that courts of equity have inherent jurisdiction of such suits or actions.” 35 Am Jur, Marriage, § 60, p 222.
“Statutes sometimes expressly confer jurisdiction upon some court to annul a marriage on the ground of fraud, but equity has jurisdiction, resting on its general jurisdiction to set aside contracts procured by fraud, to annul such a marriage irrespective of statute, although the jurisdiction of equity to set aside a marriage for fraud should be exercised with extreme caution, and only on clear, distinct, and satisfactory evidence.” 35 Am Jur, Marriage, § 88, pp 236, 237.
“In the absence of statute, jurisdiction to annul marriages depends on common-law principles which are recognized and adopted in equity. * # * and, *91even where the jurisdiction is purely statutory, it is regarded as equitable in its nature. Where the statutes authorizing annulment of marriages so provide, or where no statutory limitation has been imposed on the jurisdiction of a court having general equity powers to entertain such suits, a court of equity may take jurisdiction of a suit to annul a marriage where the ground alleged is one on which equity gives relief in respect of contracts generally, namely, in the case of fraud.” 55 CJS, Marriage, § 52, p 929.
“Undoubtedly, in the eye of the law, marriage is a civil contract differing from other contracts in the circumstance that it cannot be rescinded by the mere consent of the parties. Being, then, a contract, it seems to follow that, where it has been procured by fraud or duress, it may be set aside by a court whose inherent jurisdiction gives it authority to annul any ordinary contract procured in the same way, provided the application be promptly made, and before a consummation of the marriage by voluntary cohabitation.” Ridgely v. Ridgely, 79 Md 298, 307 (29 A 597, 600, 25 LRA 800).
“Apart from the statute, NJSA, 2A :34-l (g), equitable jurisdiction to annul a ceremony of marriage for antecedent causes stems from chancery’s general authority to grant relief from contractual undertakings induced by fraud. Lindquist v. Lindquist (1941), 130 NJ Eq 11 (20 A2d 325); Carris v. Carris (1873), 24 NJ Eq 516; Akrep v. Akrep (1949), 1 NJ 268 (63 A2d 253).” Houlahan v. Horzepa, 46 NJ Super 583, 587 (135 A2d 232, 234).
“Divorce is the creature of statute; annulment rests within the inherent power of equity, inherited by it from the ecclesiastical courts of England. Fraud, particularly before consummation, is within the reach of its long arm, and that power is not lost because other grounds are specifically mentioned in the statute. It is a power not conferred by statute but is inherent with respect to all civil contracts void*92able upon grounds recognized by it.” Pretlow v. Pretlow, 177 Va 524, 548, 549 (14 SE2d 381, 387).
“The inherent power of courts of equity to declare a marriage void when procured by fraud or duress has long been recognized in Maryland. LeBrun v. LeBrun, 55 Md 496, 503; Wimbrough v. Wimbrough, 125 Md 619 (94 A168, Ann Cas 1916E, 920).” Townsend v. Morgan, 192 Md 168 (63 A2d 743, 745, 746).
“In the absence of any special statute conferring power on the courts to exercise jurisdiction over suits for annulment of marriage, the chancery courts of America have assumed jurisdiction in such cases under their inherent equity powers.” Witt v. Witt, 271 Wis 93, 95 (72 NW2d 748, 52 ALR2d 1158, 1161).

Annulment proceedings are not, as said in Romats, supra, “strictly statutory.” They inhere in the traditional powers of our circuit courts, sitting in chancery, as in the case of any proceeding in equity designed toward vitiation of a contract for fraud; the only condition being that the court have proper jurisdiction of the parties. Romats should, in consequence, be overruled.

This leaves but 1 question affecting the jurisdiction : Whether the courts of Michigan are possessed of jurisdictional authority — concurrent or exclusive — to annul a marriage contracted according to form in another State; the parties at all times having been resident subjects of Michigan. We turn thereto.

Second: The distinctive fact-premise, which to us .appears controlling of an otherwise troublesome question stemming from possibly conflicting laws of sister States, is that all of the necessary parties to this proceeding were domiciliary residents of Michigan and that the court below, from the very first, was and now is possessed of jurisdiction in personam.

*93The governing rule is given by the annotator in 128 ALR 61. The annotated subject is that of “Jurisdiction, as between different States, of suit to annul marriage.” As will be seen from thorough examination of the excellent brief prepared under such quoted heading, various aspects of this issue of contested jurisdiction have arisen throughout the States and, as subsequent annotations show, have continued to arise since the annotator’s brief was prepared in 1940. So far as concerns this case of Romatz, and repeating for emphasis that the court below was and is possessed of jurisdiction of requisite parties, we need but refer to the pertinent summations of the mentioned annotator, noting in the way of preface to quotation thereof that such summations have been adopted as the text of 35 Am Jur, Marriage, § 61, pp 222, 223. We adopt, then, the following :

“Jurisdiction of courts of domicil, where marriage celebrated elsewhere.
“a. In general.
“The authorities both in this country and in England directly or inferentially recognize the jurisdiction of the courts of the domicil to annul a marriage celebrated elsewhere, treating the question as identical with that involved in divorce, without, however, expressly holding (as is held in divorce cases) that the jurisdiction of the domicil is exclusive of that of any other State, particularly that of the place of celebration of the marriage.” (p 64 of annotation.)
“b. Domicil of both.
“Where the forum of the suit for the annulment is the domicil of both the parties at the time of suit, this presents the clearest situation for the application of the rule that (apart from the question of the exclusive or nonexclusive character of jurisdiction) the court of the domicil of the parties has jurisdic*94lion to annul a marriage celebrated elsewhere.” (p 65 of annotation.)

There is no occasion for extended discussion of the copious authorities which support these reasonable conclusions. Of those cited Hanson v. Hanson, 287 Mass 154 (191 NE 673, 93 ALR 701), supplies specially persuasive reason why the courts are so inclined. Having pointed out that Massachusetts “may exercise jurisdiction of the marriage status of persons at all times domiciled within this commonwealth,” the court went on to say (p 157):

“The wisdom of a uniform rule of this nature is apparent, because parties would be without a forum to decide their cause if the courts of this commonwealth do not have jurisdiction, since the courts of New Hampshire decline to entertain a petition for annulment of a marriage solemnized within that State between parties at all times domiciled outside that State.”

It is true, as applied to this case of Romats, that Ohio has apparently taken no position that she will or will not accept jurisdiction of á bill to annul a marriage contracted in Ohio between parties at all times domiciled outside Ohio.* Even so, and since we have determined that the jurisdiction of our courts of equity in cases as at bar is concurrent, if not exclusive, it would hardly become us, the high chancellors of this court of conscience, should we insist that citizens of Michigan must seek — without success — relief in the courts of another State before *95they may appeal for such relief in the local courthouse.

We conclude and therefore hold that the hill submitted in behalf of Anton Romatz was properly filed below; that the chancellor rightfully proceeded to hear and determine the merits of such bill and that he was authorized to find, on the substantially uncontradicted testimony shown in the record, that Anton Romatz, at the time of his apparent marriage to defendant Matilda Winter Romatz, was mentally incompetent and incapable of contracting marriage “by the laws of Ohio.” Accordingly, and since the question of jurisdiction only was raised and argued here, we hold that Romats should have been affirmed.

Our Brothers would open the door to new application for rehearing of Romats without committing themselves upon the right or wrong of its jurisdictional declaration. We in turn would have done with further delay of overdue self-correction. Every week and every month an admittedly erroneous decision of a court of last resort is permitted the vigor of apparent life, that decision continues to deceive those who rely on its reports for trustworthy guidance. No power of re-argument, and no amount of research however assiduous it might he, would or could lead to conclusion that Romats’ appraisal of equity jurisdiction was right. In these circumstances we would treat Romats (346 Mich 438) as having been reheard on motion of the court and would now affirm Judge Maher’s decree.

The present ease was properly dismissed. We therefore join in affirmance of Judge Ferguson’s decree.

Smith, Voelker, and Kavanagh, JJ., concurred with Black, J.

We conclude, on reflective examination of CL 1948, § § 552.2, 552.3 (Stat Ann §§ 25.82, 25.83) (the provisions of these sections date back without essential change to the revised statutes of 1846), that direct and specific statutory authority to hear and determine the bill considered in Romatz, supra, has been present at all times. Nevertheless, and since the question steadily recurs whenever contention is made that equity must exclusively find her powers in explicit legislative enactments, it is proposed that exploration be made of equity’s inherent powers, derived as they are from the Constitution and general laws of the State, in order that the presented jurisdictional question be tested with lasting pronouncement. See, to this point of inherent powers of equity, Mr. Justice Smith’s helpful analysis in Sovereign v. Sovereign, 354 Mich 65.

There is no conflict here with certain authorities which, in specific circumstances, appear as holding that a marriage cannot be attached' after the death of a party or parties (see annotation, 47 ALR2d 1393). This bill was properly filed in Anton’s behalf during his lifetime and the court was jurisdietionally authorized to proceed to final decree.

For current and corresponding treatment of the same subject, see 1 Symons’, Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (5th ed), §§ 283, 284, pp 633-635.

While it is unnecessary that we decide the question now, we note good reason given in Turner v. Turner, 85 NH 249 (157 A 532), for holding that equity eourts do require residence, if not domicil, of at least 1 party in order that an annulment suit may be maintained. Turner is the ease cited, in Hanson v. Hanson, supra, to the point that New Hampshire declines to entertain a petition for annulment of a marriage solemnized in New Hampshire between parties at all times domiciled outside that State.