Opinion
October 10, 1955 —
November 8, 1955.
APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Milwaukee county: MICHAEL T. SULLIVAN, Circuit Judge. Reversed.
For the appellant there were briefs and oral argument by E. J. Mueller of Milwaukee, guardian ad litem.
For the respondent there was a brief and oral argument by David Beznor Bartell, attorney, and Lee B. Bartell of counsel, both of Milwaukee.
Action for annulment of marriage instituted by the plaintiff George J. Witt, against the defendant Irene Witt, a mentally incompetent person.
The plaintiff and defendant were married on October 14, 1930. On April 20, 1939, the wife obtained a divorce from the husband in the county court of Ozaukee county on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment. In 1940, but more than one year following the date of entry of such divorce decree, George J. Witt was married to another lady, with whom he now resides in the ostensible relationship of husband and wife. No children resulted from either the purported first or second marriages. On July 15, 1941, Irene Witt was committed to the Milwaukee County Hospital for Mental Diseases, and has been a patient there since that time. Her mental illness has been diagnosed as dementia praecox, hebephrenic type.
In 1946, the general guardian of Irene Witt moved the county court of Ozaukee county to set aside the divorce judgment, which motion was denied. On appeal to this court, the order denying such motion was reversed and the cause was remanded with directions to enter an order vacating the divorce judgment. Heine v. Witt (1947), 251 Wis. 157, 28 N.W.2d 248. This court therein determined that a fraud had been perpetrated on the trial court because of the concealment from that court of a claim which had been made both to the defendant husband and also to the attorney for the plaintiff wife that Irene Witt was insane prior to the time of granting such divorce.
Under date of February 7, 1948, George J. Witt commenced an action for absolute divorce against Irene Witt which came on for trial and the cause of action was dismissed on the merits by the trial court on August 1, 1949. On January 16, 1951, George J. Witt instituted the present action for annulment of the marriage, alleging in his complaint that Irene Witt was feeble-minded and insane at the time of their marriage in 1930, "so as to be incapable of contracting a marriage," and that she "has not regained her reason from the date of said marriage." The answer interposed in behalf of the defendant Irene Witt by her guardian ad litem alleged, among other things, that plaintiff's cause of action is barred by sec. 330.18(4), Stats. Judgment was entered under date of December 8, 1954, annulling said marriage of October 14, 1930. From such judgment the defendant, by her guardian ad litem, appeals.
The issue before us on this appeal is whether the provisions of sec. 330.18(4), Stats., are applicable to an action for annulment of marriage based upon the alleged insanity of one of the parties at the time of such marriage. Such statute provides a ten-year statute of limitations with respect to "An action which, on and before the twenty-eighth day of February in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-seven, was cognizable by the court of chancery, when no other limitation is prescribed in this chapter."
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. 3 Nelson, Divorce and Annulment (2d ed.), p. 277, sec. 31.02, states:
"But since ecclesiastical courts have never existed in America, courts of equity have here assumed to exercise the power in respect of annulments which was exercised by the ecclesiastical courts in England until 1858."
As early as 1820. Chancellor James Kent, in Wightman v. Wightman, 4 Johns. Ch. Rep. (N. Y.) 343, annulled a marriage on the ground of insanity of one of the parties. In his decision he pointed out that in England the ecclesiastical court was the appropriate tribunal to try such suits, and that it was unthinkable that jurisdiction did not exist in some court in New York over suits of that nature. His conclusion was that jurisdiction formerly exercised by the ecclesiastical courts of England in such cases was properly exercisable by a court of chancery.
The Vermont court in Clark v. Field (1841), 13 Vt. 460, held that a court of equity has inherent power to annul a marriage. Later cases holding to the same effect are: McClurg v. Terry (1870), 21 N.J. Eq. 225; Crouch v. Wartenberg (1920), 86 W. Va. 664, 104 S.E. 117, 11 A.L.R. 212; Heflinger v. Heflinger (1923), 136 Va. 289, 118 S.E. 316, 32 A.L.R. 1088; and Estes v. Estes (1952), 194 Tenn. 96, 250 S.W.2d 32, 32 A.L.R.2d 730.
This court in Lyannes v. Lyannes (1920), 171 Wis. 381, 392, 177 N.W. 683, declared that the power to annul a marriage in Wisconsin is "exclusively of statutory creation" and cannot "be extended by resort to the general equitable powers inherent in the circuit court as a court of equity." However, we do not interpret such declaration as repudiating the principle that courts of equity, in the absence of statute, have the inherent power to annul marriages. What this court decided in the Lyannes Case was that, the legislature having by statute specified the grounds upon which Wisconsin courts might annul marriages, such legislative action was intended to be exclusive in character thus negativing the right of the circuit courts, sitting as courts of equity, to grant annulments on additional grounds not specified by such statute.
However, in the instant case we do not have to resort to precedents arising in other jurisdictions to establish that courts of chancery prior to March 1, 1857, exercised jurisdiction to annul void or voidable marriages, in view of the express provisions of ch. 79, sec. 3, Stats. 1849. Such statute provided as follows:
"When a marriage is supposed to be void, or the validity thereof is disputed, for any of the causes mentioned in the two preceding sections [1 and 2], either party may file a petition or bill in chancery in the circuit court of the county where the parties, or one of them reside, for annulling the same, and such petition or bill shall be filed and proceedings shall be had thereon, as in the case of a petition or bill filed in said court for a divorce; and upon due proof of the nullity of the marriage, it shall be declared void by a decree or sentence of nullity." (Italics supplied.)
In the recent case of Zlindra v. Zlindra (1948), 252 Wis. 606, 32 N.W.2d 656, this court held that the provisions of sec. 330.18(4), Stats., were applicable to divorce actions. The gist of our decision so holding was that at English common law the jurisdiction over divorce actions was exclusively in ecclesiastical courts, but that we have no courts corresponding to the ecclesiastical court; that ch. 79, sec. 8, Stats. 1849, conferred jurisdiction on the circuit courts of the state " sitting as a court of chancery" to decree divorces; and that, consequently, divorce actions were " cognizable by the court of chancery" on the 28th day of February, 1857.
Inasmuch as actions for an annulment of marriage were triable in our circuit courts sitting as courts of chancery prior to March 1, 1857, the ten-year statute of limitations imposed by such sec. 330.18(4), Stats., is applicable thereto. As explained in Zlindra v. Zlindra, supra, the legislature's designation of the date of February 28, 1857, in sec. 330.18(4), is because March 1, 1857, is the date the code abolishing the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity went into effect.
Counsel for the plaintiff George J. Witt base their principal argument against the application of sec. 330.18(4), Stats., to the instant suit to annul a marriage because of the insanity of one of the parties on the following statement appearing in our decision in Lyannes v. Lyannes, supra (p. 390):
"In the void marriage the relationship of the parties, so far as its being legal is concerned, is an absolute nullity from its very beginning and cannot be ratified. It may be questioned at any time during the life of both, and, with some statutory exceptions (vide sub. (2), sec. 2351 [now 247.02], Stats.), after the death of either or both, and generally whether the question arises directly or collaterally."
The above statement was also quoted by this court in its decision in Estate of Canon (1936), 221 Wis. 322, 328, 266 N.W. 918. However, in neither the Lyannes nor the Canon Cases was the court confronted with any issue of the applicability of the statute of limitations found in sec. 330.18(4), Stats., and it would have been obiter dictum if such statement were deemed to have been made with respect to such an issue. In the Lyannes Case the purported marriage to the plaintiff occurred on June 14, 1919, and the decision upon appeal in this court was rendered May 4, 1920; while in the Canon Case the marriage took place October 7, 1926, and the wife died August 4, 1932, and it was held that the husband could not inherit the estate of the wife because of the marriage being void. It surely cannot be assumed that this court in making the above-quoted statement in its opinion in the Lyannes Case had any intention of nullifying the express wording of sec. 330.18(4).
We find no necessity on this appeal of determining whether the marriage which occurred between George J. Witt and Irene Witt on October 14, 1930, was void or voidable. This is because sec. 330.18(4), Stats., does not distinguish between actions instituted to annul void and voidable marriages.
Nearly twenty-one years elapsed between the marriage of the parties and the institution of the instant action to annul the same. Upon the oral argument respondent's counsel advanced the contention that under no circumstances would the provisions of sec. 330.18(4), Stats., bar the instant action because George J. Witt did not discover the insanity of Irene Witt until approximately nine years after they were married and he was in military service in World War II from November 2, 1942, to September 4, 1945. Therefore, if such two periods are to be excluded in computing the period during which the statute operated, it is apparent that the instant action was commenced in time.
There can be no question under the provisions of sec. 330.32, Stats., but that the approximate three-year period in which Witt was in military service must be excluded in computing the limitation period. However, we cannot agree with the contention advanced as to excluding the period from 1930 to 1939 during which he claims he had not discovered his wife's insanity. The cause of action for annulment arose upon the date of the marriage on October 14, 1930, and not when Witt discovered the insanity. Sub. (7), sec. 330.19, covering actions for relief on the ground of fraud, is an example of a statute of limitations which starts to run not when the wrongful act giving rise to the action occurs, but when it is discovered. The legislature has failed to expressly provide a similar exception in the case of causes of action for annulment of marriage and we have no right to read such an exception into sec. 330.18(4) by implication.
We, therefore, have no difficulty in determining that the instant action is barred by the ten-year statute of limitations provided in sec. 330.18(4), Stats.
While the brief of the guardian ad litem raises additional issues we find it unnecessary to consider the same in view of our conclusion that the action is barred by the statute of limitations.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint.