Any serious lie before marriage invalidates the traditional Catholic vow.
Matrimony, just like all other sacraments, have rules in canon law. Your above "definition" is WAY too vague and would never be accurate, because canon law requires precise definitions and meaning. There's nothing at all in the orthodox/traditional 1917 code which supports your claim.
A "serious lie"? Define "serious" and define "lie"...from canon law, please.

I can imagine a couple 7 years into their marriage, with 2-3 children, who hate each other. The husband complains that he doesn't like what's for dinner and wife says "
Oh, but this is my mother's meatloaf recipe and when we were dating, you said you LOVED it. This is a "serious lie" and i'm getting an annulment." Don't think stuff like this hasn't happened. When V2 opened the door to "catholic divorce" by allowing annulments for "serious lies" then the horse is out of the barn, and chaos is the order of the deal. P