This is an action by plaintiff for damages for the alleged alienation by defendant of the affee *742 tions of one Orris 0. Budd, the plaintiff’s husband. The amended and supplemental complaint alleged that the plaintiff and said Orris 0. Budd were, and ever since the fourth day of March, 1901, had been, husband and wife, and stated in detail the acts and conduct of the defendant alleged to have caused and resulted in such alienation. The defendant in her answer denied, for want of knowledge, information, or belief, that plaintiff was lawfully or otherwise married to said Budd, or that they are or at any of the times mentioned in the complaint were husband and wife, and also denied both the alienation of the husband’s affections and the alleged means and acts by and through which it was claimed that the same had been accomplished. The answer further averred that the defendant was the victim of a conspiracy entered into by the plaintiff, her husband, the said Orris 0. Budd, and certain other named persons, by and in pursuance of which the said Budd was to make love to defendant and was to entrap her into compromising positions with him in order to lay the foundation for and further this action, and to extort money from the defendant.
The action was tried upon the issues thus framed before the court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for fifteen thousand dollars damages in favor of plaintiff, for which amount judgment was entered, and from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The appellant does not contend that the evidence upon the issue of alienation was insufficient to support the verdict, but confines her claim for reversal to the following: First, that the marriage between plaintiff and the said Orris 0. Budd was not sufficiently established; second, error in the exclusion of certain evidence; and, third, misconduct by the court in the use of certain language when ruling upon one of defendant’s objections.
“We are, therefore, of the opinion that the plaintiff, by the form of evidence which she presented to the trial court, sufficiently made out a prima facie ease of the existence of the relation between herself and Orris O. Budd of husband *745 and wife, that the objections of the defendant to such evidence were properly overruled, and that her present contention that the same was insufficient to prove the fact in issue cannot be sustained.”
We discover no ground for reversal in appellant’s final claim that the following remarks, made by the trial court when ruling upon one of defendant’s objections, amounted to misconduct. The court said: “I think in so far as the alienation is concerned, there is no question but what the wife lost the affections of her husband at the time at least when he said he was leaving, never to return. ... If she did not possess his affections at that time, why, certainly they could not thereafter be alienated”; thereupon the appellant’s counsel asked the court to instruct the jury that the “court does not mean to say as a matter of fact it has been established, as your Honor’s words would indicate, that beyond doubt the alienation has been proved,” to which the court replied, “The court is not intending in any way to pass upon the facts; merely had reference to the statement made by the plaintiff that at a certain time her husband left her and stated he was never coming back. ’ ’ While these last quoted remarks were not east in the form of an instruction, they were in effect the equivalent thereof, and substantially told the jury that the court was not passing upon the facts, and that that was their function.
For the reasons already stated the judgment is reversed.
Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Sloane, J., Shaw, C. J., and Waste, J., concurred.
