Opinion
July 10, 1928.
Isidore Schneider [ Jesse Fuller, Jr., of counsel], for the plaintiff.
Blau, Perlman Polakoff [ Nathan D. Perlman and Samuel Mezansky of counsel], for the defendant.
The fraud alleged in the complaint is that the defendant, who had suffered from mental disability and had been treated in a sanitarium, concealed from the plaintiff her impaired mental state, thereby permitting him to contract a marriage which, but for the concealment, would not have taken place.
The defendant, who is admittedly at this time insane, and probably incurably so, by special guardian puts at issue the allegations of plaintiff's complaint, and sets out as an affirmative defense the Statute of Limitations.
Hoadley v. Hoadley ( 244 N.Y. 424) holds that a marriage voidable for insanity may not be annulled at the suit of the spouse who is sane.
Plaintiff seeks to draw a distinction between a suit to annul a marriage on the ground of insanity and a suit to annul it upon the ground of fraud based upon such insanity. This distinction I am unable to follow.
Assuming, however, that such an action in fraud will lie, plaintiff is still barred by the Statute of Limitations.
Admittedly this action was brought more than six years after the discovery by the plaintiff of the fraud which he alleges the defendant practiced upon him.
Section 48 of the Civil Practice Act enumerates the classes of cases in which actions must be commenced within six years. Subdivision 5 of that section provides that an action to procure a judgment on the ground of fraud must be commenced within six years after the discovery by the plaintiff of the fraud.
The amendment of section 1137 of the Civil Practice Act (Laws of 1928, chap. 83), which took effect on February seventeenth of this year, changed the rule established in Hoadley v. Hoadley ( supra), but as the pleadings now stand any benefits which might accrue to plaintiff by reason thereof are not available to him.
Judgment for defendant.