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daf bit: Ketuvot 75
A mishna discusses cases where a man can divorce his wife
without paying her ketubah. One such case is if she is found
to have certain bodily defects -- the defects that disqualify
a priest can also disqualify a wife (if the husband chooses),
according to the gemara.
However, the mishna teaches, if the defect was visible the man
has no recourse, and if she resides in a town with a public
bath he has no recourse even if it was invisible. Why? Because
it is presumed that he had his female relatives check her out
before betrothing her. (75b)
(Aside: two pages later is the mishna that discusses the man's defects and when he can be compelled to divorce her.)

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The restrictions on remarriage absent the religious divorce run in only one direction, so the situation is unbalanced. (The man can remarry even if he hasn't given his wife a bill of divorce (a "get"), but she is stuck -- again, religiously and not civilly.) This is why it is sometimes necessary for a rabbinic court to compel the man, though they do not always succeed and then things get ugly. These days, many couples write what amounts to a pre-nup into the ketubah so that the "get" will be automatic upon civil divorce.
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bus link, thank you