Horton;13188684:
There are indeed forms of deception (or its consequent error) that could render marital consent null:
Can. 1097 §1. Error concerning the person renders a marriage invalid.
§2. Error concerning a quality of the person does not render a marriage invalid even if it is the cause for the contract, unless this quality is directly and principally intended.
Can. 1098 A person contracts invalidly who enters into a marriage deceived by malice, perpetrated to obtain consent, concerning some quality of the other partner which by its very nature can gravely disturb the partnership of conjugal life.
After I married him, he told me that he knew what to do and say to court a woman. When we were dating, he showered me with gifts. After we were married, he said there was no need to buy me birthday or Christmas gifts. It was a waste of money.
Before we were married, he said any man who would lay a finger on a woman needs to be strung up. After we were married, he said that a man was supposed to treat his wife the way that Jesus treated the Church. Jesus whipped the money changers; therefore he had the right to hit me whenever he felt I did something wrong.
Before we were married, he told me he made all kinds of money. He said he had over a hundred thousand dollars in one of his accounts. Imagine my surprise when he borrowed money from his son to pay the caterer on our wedding day. (He had over a hundred thousand dollars in his IRA.

)
He told me he had to have his hand re-attached. I discovered after we were married that actually, he had only sliced the tendons in his wrist and they had to be stitched back together.
He told me that he was irreplaceable at work. The big bosses loved him. He was one of the first people laid off 3 months after we were married.
He told me he came from a big Italian family who ate pasta every day. He is of Austrian descent and he ate a lot of Kraft macaroni and cheese when he was growing up.
He told me he had a close and loving relationship with his son. I think he talked to his son 3 or 4 times during the 2 years we were together.
He told me he had been a pilot, but had given up his license because it was an expensive hobby. Turns out he couldn’t keep a pilot’s license because he passed out while he was riding in a commercial airplane.
He told me that he went to mass everyday, and that was very important to him. Turns out he used to go to mass everyday, 3 years before I met him.
He told me he was animal lover. After we were married, he told me I couldn’t get a dog, because he hated dogs.
He told me he loved to cook and made me promise that when we got married I would let him cook at least 3 times a week. I can count on one hand the number of times he cooked while we were together.
He said his clothes were basically all the same color because his mother was blind and she did his laundry. His mother had blurred spots in her frontal vision, but she could see color and had peripheral vision. He had a maid who did his laundry.
After we were married, he told everyone that my son from a previous marriage was his son. I couldn’t figure out why someone he worked with said they could see the familial resemblance between my son and him. I started to say something and he elbowed me. When the person left, he told me that he told everyone that my son was his son.
I feel so stupid that I didn’t realize most of what he told me was lies. It never occurred to me that someone who professed to be a devout Catholic would lie about who they were.