Plaintiff-appellant, invoking the district court’s diversity jurisdiction, filed the instant three-count complaint claiming that defendant-appellee had alienated the affections of, seduced, and criminally conversed with appellant’s then wife. Defendant moved for partial summary judgment, asserting the one-year statute of limitations for criminal conversation and seduction, Tenn.Code Ann. § 28-304 (Supp.1975), as barring those two counts. The district court denied that motion, but six weeks later suet sponte dismissed the complaint, reasoning that the one-year statute of limitations barred even the alienation of affections count because “the subject matter of the action is essentially for criminal conversation,” the separate count of alienation of affections being only “incidental.” 1
Plaintiff appeals, contending that the district court should have applied the three-year statute of limitations for alienation of affections, T.C.A. § 28-305 (1955), to the alienation of affections count. Even if the section 28-304 one-year statute of limitations applied to the alienation of affections, as well as to the criminal conversation count, plaintiff claims that dismissal was improper because the district judge incorrectly construed the statute as beginning to run from plaintiff’s loss of consortium, to wit, no later than the commencement of divorce proceedings culminating in the April, 1973, divorce of plaintiff and his then wife, 2 rather than from plaintiff’s discovery *609 of defendant’s allegedly tortious conduct, the discovery purportedly being December 26, 1973. Even were the district court correct in applying the one-year statute and in running the statute from the loss of consortium, plaintiff argues that dismissal would still be improper because T.C.A. § 28-112 (1955) suspended the running of the statute, defendant assertedly “be[ing] outside [Tennessee] for most of the period” between the purportedly tortious conduct and the filing of the complaint. 3
We affirm in part, reverse in part.
Of course, the Tennessee statutes of limitations govern (see
Guaranty Trust Co. v. York,
“ ‘reported [Tennessee] decisions] on the precise issue involved,’ this court, like other courts in the absence of controlling state precedent, gives ‘considerable weight’ to the district judge’s interpretation of state law. . . .Yet [plaintiff is] ‘entitled to a review of the trial court’s determination of state law just as . of any other legal question.’ ” Randolph v. New England Mut. Life Ins. Co.,526 F.2d 1383 , 1385 (6th Cir.1975).
See
Bishop v.
Wood,-U.S.-,
We respectfully disagree, however, with the district court’s application of the § 28-304 one-year statute to the alienation-of affections count. The § 28-305 three-year statute explicitly applies to alienation of affections. Tennessee courts have long recognized the
“distinction between an action for criminal conversation and an action for alienation of affections. It is possible for a cause of action for either to exist without the other. ‘While . . . [both actions are] founded on the injury to the right of consortium they are generally recognized as essentially different. The gravamen or gist of the action where it is for criminal conversation is the adulterous intercourse, and the alienation of affections thereby resulting is regarded as merely a matter of aggravation, whereas the gravamen in the other case is the alienation of affections with malice or improper motives.” Darnell v. McNichols,22 Tenn.App. 287 ,122 S.W.2d 808 , 810 (1938).
Accord,
Stepp v. Black,
We recognize that
Broidioi v. Hall,
If the alienation claim were merely “incidental” to purported criminal conversation, however, the § 28-304 one-year statute would apply, but at this procedural stage we cannot be sure that the alienation claim is merely “incidental.” We cannot
*610
sustain the district court’s application of the one-year statute because, since the district judge in effect granted a motion to dismiss, we cannot say “that plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Greene v. City of Memphis,
We reject, however, plaintiff’s claim that the statutes began running only when he discovered defendant’s purported tortious conduct (in December, 1973, according to his affidavit), rather than from the loss of consortium. Admittedly, certain language in
Broidioi, supra,
and
Scates, supra
,
4
indicates that the statute begins running at discovery of the tortious conduct, but there the tortious conduct apparently was discovered prior to the loss of consortium. The loss of consortium being the recognizable manifestation of the purported tort, triggering the statute at the loss accords with the Tennessee policy of running the statute from the time “when the injury occurs or is discovered, or when in the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, it should have been discovered.”
McCroskey v. Bryant Air Conditioning Co.,
Tenn.,
Plaintiff, having failed to raise section 28-112 in the district court, cannot assert it for the first time on appeal.
Myers v. Alvey-Ferguson Co.,
The district court judgment dismissing the alienation of affections count will be reversed, and its judgment dismissing the criminal conversation and seduction counts affirmed.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
Notes
. The district court dismissed the seduction count also on an alternative ground,
to wit,
that, under Tennessee law, only the female or her parents may sue for seduction.
Graham v. McReynolds,
90 Tenn. (6 Pick) 673,
. The complaint states, or implies, that plaintiff was divorced on April 3, 1973, the parties’ stipulation that the divorce was on April 16, 1973, and plaintiff’s affidavit and the district court opinion that the divorce was on April 12, 1973. Regardless of the exact divorce date, the loss of consortium was more than one year prior to the filing of the complaint on April 12, 1974. Plaintiff makes no claim to the contrary.
. A Sixth Circuit panel, at defendant’s suggestion, originally vacated the dismissal and remanded to the district court for reconsideration in light of
McCroskey v. Bryant Air Conditioning Co.,
Tenn.,
.
Scates
also contains language that “the Statute of Limitations begins to run thereon at the time of the loss of affection or the loss of consortium is sustained . .”
