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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> O'M. (M.) v. O'C. (B.) [1996] IESC 3; [1996] 1 IR 208 (18th April, 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1996/3.html Cite as: [1996] 1 IR 208, [1996] IESC 3 |
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1. This
is an appeal in a nullity suit against the decision of the High Court refusing
to grant the relief sought.
2. The
petitioner is the wife and the respondent is the husband. They were married on
the 16th August 1985 in the Roman Catholic Church at C. Two children were born
to the marriage: a son on the 6th August, 1987, and a daughter on the 8th
December, 1988. Since in or around Christmas, 1989, the parties have been
virtually separated though at the date of the hearing of the petition in
February, 1994, they were both still living in the family home.
3. The
wife presented her petition on the 20th June, 1990, and by order of the Master
of the High Court made on the 10th April, 1991, it was directed that the
following were the issues to be tried.
4. While
these were the issues directed to be tried, it is clear from the transcript of
the evidence given at the hearing and from the judgment of the learned trial
judge that the hearing in the High Court was concerned solely with the first
and second issues. The learned High Court Judge did however express his view on
the third issue also but it had never been contended by the husband that he had
not given a full, free and informed consent to the marriage.
5. Having
reviewed the facts and recited the medical evidence, the learned trial judge
expressed the conclusion he had reached as follows:-
6. The
notice of appeal sets out five grounds on which it is contended that the
decision of the High Court should be reversed. The first four grounds are all
concerned with the first issue, namely, whether the husband and wife were
capable of entering into and sustaining a normal lifelong marital relationship.
It is contended that they were incapable of doing so by reason of their
substantially conflicting personalities, their perceptions of life and their
immaturity at the date of the marriage; it was also contended that the learned
trial judge failed to give due weight to the psychiatric and medical evidence
to the effect that neither party was capable of entering and sustaining a
normal marriage relationship with the other and gave undue weight and attached
undue relevance to the statement made by Dr. O’S. that to grant a decree
on the grounds of “personality complex” would result in chaos, so
that the conclusion drawn by the learned trial judge was erroneous. On the
second issue it was contended that the learned trial judge erred in law in
holding that the wife gave a full, free and informed consent to the marriage in
that there was uncontroverted evidence that the wife was unaware at the time of
the marriage that the husband had attended a psychiatrist prior to the marriage
and that she would not have agreed to marry him if she had known this.
7. Before
dealing with the issues raised it is necessary to set out briefly the facts as
found by the learned trial judge.
8. At
the time of the marriage the husband was aged thirty seven and the wife thirty
two. On leaving secondary school the husband had decided to become a priest. He
spent one year in St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, which he disliked, and
six years in the seminary in C., where he was very happy. After ordination in
1972 he worked for four years as a curate but found the life lonely and
difficult and he came to the conclusion that he had been mistaken in thinking
that he had a vocation. At the suggestion of his Bishop lie went to D. for one
year to get a post-graduate qualification in religious education and he then
applied to be laicised. The laicisation process was commenced in 1976 and was
not completed until 1981. In 1977, the husband commenced working as a teacher
of religious education in a school in C. and still held that post at the date
of the hearing in the High Court and in addition to teaching religious
education he was also teaching media studies.
9. In
1976, the husband was sent by his Bishop to a psychiatrist, Dr. O’S., and
the latter helped him through the difficult period while he was waiting for his
laicisation to be completed. Between 1976 and 1982 the husband attended Dr.
O’S, between three and six times each year, apart from 1978, when he saw
him ten times.
10. The
wife is a dental surgeon. She qualified about 1978 and in 1984 she was living
and practising in the Midlands. Her parents lived in Cork.
11. The
parties met at a night club in Cork some time early in 1984. They had an
ordinary, uneventful courtship. They became engaged in January, 1985, and were
married in August of the same year. They lived at first in the husband’s
house. The wife sold her house in the Midlands. They then moved to a different
house in C. The learned trial judge found the following facts in regard to the
relationship of the parties in the early years of their marriage:-
12. The
learned trial judge referred also to a row between the husband and his
brother-in-law on Christmas Day in the home of his wife’s parents, as a
result of which the husband was asked to leave the house. He was immediately
contrite and tried to shake hands and did shake hands with some of the party.
The wife told him she was leaving him. Six months later she instituted the
present proceedings. The husband went back to see Dr. 0’S. in February,
1990. Dr. 0’S. also saw the wife. His view was that if he could exclude
in the case of the husband “a psychosis of a paranoid nature”
(which he subsequently did) he would recommend that they would both attend a
professional for marriage guidance for a short while before deciding about the
future of the marriage, but the wife was not interested in marriage
counselling. She only went once or twice, while the husband went quite a number
of times. The experts called were of the opinion that counselling might have
worked and would have been a good option.
13. Having
set out in his judgment the facts which I have summarised, the learned trial
judge then went on to recite the expert evidence given by the medical
witnesses: Dr. F., who was called by the wife, and Dr. O’S. and Mr. H., a
senior clinical psychologist with the Southern Health Board in Cork, who were
called by the husband. In addition to the oral evidence given by these
witnesses, reports prepared by Dr. F., a letter written by Dr. O’S., and
a report prepared by Mr. H. were admitted in evidence. A difficulty arises,
however, in regard to how the Court should view the medical evidence as the
learned trial judge did not expressly indicate what part of the evidence lie
was accepting and what part he was rejecting. On behalf of the wife, Mr.
Shatter submitted that the Court should assume that the learned trial judge
accepted whatever evidence he did not actually reject, but it is not possible
to approach the matter in this way as there was a clear conflict in some parts
of the evidence. For example, on page 7 of his judgment the learned trial judge
states that Dr. F. had expressed the opinion that the husband did not have the
capacity, at the time of the marriage, “to sustain a valid marriage
relationship” with the wife. And on p. 10 of his judgment, the learned
trial judge cited the evidence of Mr. H. who had stated in regard to the
husband that in his opinion there was “no evidence of a major personality
disorder which would prevent him from either entering into or maintaining a
normal stable relationship.” It is clear that the learned trial judge
could not have accepted both these statements since they are so obviously
conflicting. In the circumstances, the only way one can determine what evidence
the learned trial judge accepted is to look at his conclusion and it is clear
from this that he must have accepted Mr. H.’s evidence and rejected that
of Dr. F.
14. Or,
to approach the matter in a different way, it seems to me that applying the
principle laid down in
Hay
v. O’Grady
correct
test to apply to the conclusion reached by the learned trial judge on the first
issue is to determine whether there was credible evidence to support it. If
there was such evidence, then this Court cannot disturb the conclusion reached
by the learned trial judge. And it seems to me that there was. Mr. H. who is a
senior clinical psychologist, and whose qualifications as an expert were not
questioned, gave clear evidence that in his opinion the husband was capable of
entering into and sustaining a normal marriage relationship. There was also the
evidence of Dr. O’S. which was cited by the learned trial judge at p. 9
of his judgment:-
15. Mr.
Shatter in effect asked the Court to reject this evidence and prefer that of
Dr. F., but that is the function of the court of first instance, which has seen
and heard the witnesses and not the function of this Court. Once there is
credible evidence to support the finding of the learned trial judge on the
first issue, which in my opinion there is, this Court cannot disturb it. The
fact that there may have been evidence which, if accepted by the learned trial
judge, would have supported a contrary conclusion, is immaterial. The question
to be considered is whether there is credible evidence to support the actual
conclusion reached by the learned trial judge and I am satisfied that there was.
16. I
now turn to the second issue, whether the wife gave a full, free and informed
consent to the marriage. The point to be considered is a very net one but one
of great difficulty. It is concerned solely with whether the consent given by
the wife was an informed consent. It is not suggested that the wife’s
consent was not freely given. The case being made by the wife is that it was
not an informed consent because she had not been told by the husband that he
had attended Dr. O’S. between 1976 and 1982 while his application for
laicisation was being processed. The learned trial judge dealt with this issue
in a single sentence at the end of his judgment:-
17. The
learned trial judge did not, however, point to any particular findings of fact
as supporting this conclusion. Mr. Shatter submits that there is no evidence to
support it but on the contrary that there was evidence which led inexorably to
the opposite conclusion.
18. It
seems clear from the decision of this Court in
N
(orse. K) v. K.
[1985]
I.R.
733 that for a marriage to be valid it is necessary that the consent of each
spouse, in addition to being freely given, should be an informed consent.
Finlay C.J. said in his judgment at p. 742:-
23. What
has to be determined, accordingly, is whether the consent of the wife was an
informed consent, a consent based upon adequate knowledge, and the test is a
subjective one, that is to say, the test is whether this spouse, marrying this
particular man, could be said to have had adequate knowledge of every
circumstance relevant to the decision she was making, so that her consent could
truly be said to be an informed one.
24. The
wife relies on a single matter as establishing that she did not have adequate
knowledge of all the relevant circumstances. The evidence relied on as
supporting her case is contained in two answers which she gave in her direct
evidence on the first day of the hearing:-
25. The
learned trial judge would appear to have accepted this evidence. He said at pp.
3/4 of his judgment in the course of setting out the facts of the case:-
26. Further,
it is not denied by the husband that he did not tell the wife before they were
married that he had attended Dr. O’S.
..
between
1976 and 1982. So the issue comes down to this: Was this a relevant
circumstance such that the failure to disclose it meant that the wife did not
have adequate knowledge so that her consent lacked the quality of an informed
consent? It seems to me that the answer must be that it was a relevant
circumstance.
27. The
test is subjective. Because of this, great weight must be attached to the
wife’s evidence that had she known that the husband had attended Dr.
O’S. for approximately six years she would not have married him. It is
possible that another person would not have reacted in the same way, but this
was the wife’s evidence of how she would have reacted if she had known
and this was accepted by the learned trial judge. For her, accordingly, the
fact that the husband had attended Dr. O’S. was a circumstance which
would have influenced her in making up her mind. And it could not be said that
it was not a circumstance of substance. Apart altogether from any question of
psychiatric illness
-
and
there was no evidence that the husband had ever suffered from such an illness
-
a
person’s mental health or mental stability is obviously a matter of great
importance and anything which might throw doubt upon it calls for serious
consideration.
28. Because
of this, the husband ought to have told the wife that he had attended Dr.
O’S. His failure to do so deprived her of knowledge of a circumstance
which was clearly relevant to the decision she was making.
29. For
these reasons I would allow the wife’s appeal and declare that her
marriage was null and void by reason of the fact that her consent to it was not
an informed consent.