Lead Opinion
for the Court:
¶ 1. Following his divorce, Vennit Mathis, individually and as next friend of his two minor children, sued Dr. Charles Brent for tortious interference of a mar
Statement of the Facts
¶ 2. Vennit and Nicole Mathis married in October 2005; they had two children, Vennit B. Mathis III and Alexa Mathis. Vennit and Nicole divorced in August 2010, after Nicole had an affair with Dr. Charles Brent. Nicole and Dr. Brent met in December 2008 when Nicole saw Dr. Brent for neck pain. Dr. Brent performed a cervical diskectomy on Nicole in February 2009. Nicole had post-operative appointments with Dr. Brent in February and April, but she cancelled her May appointment. Dr. Brent got Nicole’s cell phone number from her patient records and personally contacted her about the cancelled appointment. Nicole and Dr. Brent began talking on the phone and exchanging text messages; they eventually met in person several times. They engaged in consensual sexual relations on two occasions. After the second encounter in the fall of 2009, they did not see each other again and communicated only sporadically.
¶ 3. In March 2010, Vennit discovered text messages from Dr. Brent in Nicole’s phone. Vennit left immediately after the discovery and pursued a divorce. The divorce was final on August 18, 2010. Ven-nit then sued Dr. Brent individually and as next friend of Vennit III and Alexa, alleging tortious interference with a marriage contract, alienation of affection, and reckless infliction of emotional distress.
the children’s claims.
Standard of Review
¶ 4. The Court reviews the trial court’s grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment de novo. Price v. Clark,
Discussion
¶ 5. Dr. Brent asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion for sum
I. Whether the minor children have standing to bring claims of alienation of affection.
¶ 6. Dr. Brent asserts that the minor children’s claim that he alienated the affection of their mother fails as a matter of law because the children lack standing to bring such a claim. Questions .of standing are reviewed ele novo. Hall v. City of Ridgeland,
¶ 7. Dr. Brent argues that the children do not have standing, because only an aggrieved spouse has standing to bring a claim of alienation of affection. Vennit responds that alienation of affection can be used to protect the family unit, not just spouses. Dr. Brent maintains that the Court has never allowed minor children to recover against a third party for the alienation of their parent’s affections. The Court has never “allowed” minor children to recover because whether minor children have standing to bring alienation of affection claims regarding their parents is a matter of first impression.
¶ 8. Though whether children have standing for alienation of affection claims is an issue of first impression, the Court has enjoyed ample opportunity to develop its jurisprudence on the general tort over the years. The Court has written the following about alienation of affection: “where a husband is wrongfully deprived of his rights to the services and companionship and consortium of his wife, he has a cause of action against one who has interferred [sic] with his domestic relations.” Camp v. Roberts,
Alienation of affections is the only available avenue to provide redress for a spouse who has suffered loss and injuryto his or her marital relationship against the third party who, through persuasion, enticement, or inducement, cause or contributed to the abandonment of the marriage and/or the loss of affections by active interference.
Id. In every case considered by the Court, a husband or wife has brought the claim for alienation of affection.
¶ 9. However, Vennit argues that “some of the earliest recognitions of alienation of affection involve claims having nothing to do with extra-marital affairs,” but deal with intrusion into the family unit by an outside party. Vennit and the dissent cite the 1896 case of Tucker v. Tucker, in which a wife sued her father-in-law and the Court recognized his potential liability for intruding on his son and daughter-in-law’s marriage. The Court ultimately held that the father-in-law was not liable to his daughter-in-law for the alienation of his son’s affections if that alienation was prompted by parental concern. Tucker v. Tucker,
¶ 10. Vennit asserts that “Mississippi courts have not held that a claim of alienation of affection is specifically limited to a spouse injured through interference by a third party.” While Vennit’s statement is true on its face, the Court’s precedent supports that the tort exists to protect the marital relationship, not the familial relationship as a whole. See Bland v. Hill,
The interest sought to be protected is personal to the wife [husband] and arises out of the marriage relation. She [He] is entitled to society, companionship, love, affection, aid, services, support, sexual relations!,] and the comfort of her husband [his wife] as special rights and duties growing out of the marriage covenant. To these may be added'the right to live together in the same house, to eat at the same table, and to participate together in the activities, duties and responsibilities necessary to make a home. All of these are included in the broad term, “conjugal rights.” The loss of consortium is the loss of any or all of these rights.
Kirk v. Koch,
¶ 11. Vennit advances two arguments to persuade the Court to extend standing for alienation of affection to the children. First, he asserts that Mississippi allows for recovery by minor children for the “loss of affection or society of a family member” due to physical injury or death, and he draws a parallel between a child’s claim for alienation of his or her parent’s affection through the interference of a third party and a child’s claim for the loss of society and companionship under the Mississippi wrongful death statute. See Miss.Code Ann. § 11-7-13 (Rev. 2004). The parallel Vennit draws between a divorce and the death of a parent is misplaced. A minor child loses the affection and society of a deceased parent because that parent is no longer living and is, therefore, not even physically available for affection and society. A parent who has been paralyzed or otherwise significantly injured may be similarly unable to interact with and care for his child in the same manner as before the accident. By contrast, while divorce means that a child must interact with each parent at separate times and in separate homes, the parents are still available for affection, care, and society.
¶ 12. Second, Vennit argues that the courts traditionally have protected the family unit from any intrusion, and he claims that it is the court’s duty to “protect minors from the acts of others.” He asserts that a third party who knowingly interferes with a marriage and family recognizes that children will be damaged in addition to the marriage, and he claims that Dr. Brent knew of the impact that his actions would have on Nicole and her children. The Hawaii Supreme Court summarized the basis of Vennit’s claim in the 1979 case of Hunt v. Chang, where an ex-wife sued her ex-husband’s girlfriend for alienation of affection individually and as next friend of her minor son:
In short, society relies on the family to perpetuate itself, and the relational interests of the child in the family have been considered legally protectable interests. A child has a right to the support, care, training, and love of both of its parents, and these rights may be protected against interference by third parties.
Hunt v. Chang,
¶ 13. Even if the Court recognized children as “beneficiaries” of their parents’ marriage, as Vennit seems to imply, the implications would stretch beyond standing to sue an enticing interloper. We find the Supreme Court of Hawaii’s discussion of the implications convincing. The Hunt Court wrote that the majority of courts, which had held that children did not have a cause of action for alienation of affection, had raised “numerous practical objections” about the alternative:
(1) Possibility of a multiplicity of suits ...; (2) Possibility of extortionary litigation, for this action, always susceptible to fraud, would become even more so by virtue of its numerical increase and the relative tenuousness of the child’s relationship; (3) Inability to define the point at which the child’s right would cease, inasmuch as the status itself hypothesizes mutability ...; (4) Inability of a jury adequately to cope with the question of damages, first, because injuries like that now under discussion are hard to measure in money and courts are averse to permitting the more or less conjectural awards based on mental suffering, and second, because damages thus assessed are apt to overlap, the number and ages of children ordinarily being noted in a parent’s action.
Hunt,
¶ 14. Further, if allowed to bring alienation of affection claims, the children virtually become their parents’ pawns to seek revenge on a former spouse’s paramour. As the Supreme Court of Arkansas wrote with clarity in a similar case, “[c]ommon sense and some knowledge of the practical affairs of life inform us that six-year-old Nick Alvin did not initiate this suit.” Lucas v. Bishop,
¶ 15. Reviewing Mississippi’s century-long jurisprudence regarding alienation of affection, we conclude that the Court has always regarded the tort’s cause of action as one that is personal to the aggrieved spouse. Nothing in Vennit’s brief convinces the Court that the alienation of marital affections naturally results in the subsequent alienation of parental affections such that a minor child might have a cause of action against the lover of the straying spouse. Though standing requirements in Mississippi are indeed liberal, we hold that minor children do not have a “colorable interest” in the alienation of one parent’s affections toward the other, nor do they suffer an “adverse effect” from a defendant who is the cause of that alienation of marital affections. Hall,
II. Whether the minor children’s claims for tortious interference with a marriage contract must be dismissed.
¶ 16. Dr. Brent contends that the children’s claim for tortious interference with a marriage contract must be dismissed as a matter of law because that claim does not exist in Mississippi. Vennit did not address the point in his brief. Dr. Brent is correct that Mississippi law does not provide for tortious interference with a marriage contract,, because Mississippi does not recognize marriage as a contract. “It was held long ago that ‘marriage itself, as a personal relation between the parties, is not a matter of contract within the meaning of the constitutional provision in reference to the inviolability of contracts.’ ” Germany v. Germany,
III. Whether the trial court erred in denying Dr. Brent’s motion for summary judgment and allowing the minor children to proceed with their claims of intentional infliction of emotional distress.
¶ 17. Like the claim for tortious interference with a marriage contract, Dr. Brent argues that the children’s claim for reckless infliction of emotional distress should be dismissed as matter of law because that claim does not exist in Mississippi. The plaintiff in Carter v. Reddix also asserted a claim for reckless infliction of emotional distress, and the Court of Appeals held that the claim was, in fact, a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED), based on the language in the complaint and the elements of IIED.
¶ 18. Vennit’s complaint alleged that Dr. Brent’s actions evoked “outrage and disgust in civilized society.” The terms are consistent with an IIED claim, as the Court has held that a plaintiff must prove that the defendant’s actions “evoke outrage or revulsion in civilized society.” J.R. ex rel. R.R. v. Malley,
¶ 19. Even viewing the claim as one for IIED, Dr. Brent asserts that the children’s claim cannot survive summary judgment because they have failed to produce sufficient evidence, and because their IIED claims are based on their mother’s consensual relationship with him. The party moving for summary judgment carries the burden of showing that no material fact exists and the non-moving party enjoys the benefit of the doubt regarding the existence vel non of a material fact. Monsanto v. Hall,
¶ 20. At trial, the children would have to prove the following to succeed on their IIED claim: (1) Dr. Brent acted willfully or wantonly toward the children by engaging in an extramarital affair with Nicole; (2) Dr. Brent’s actions evoke outrage or revulsion in civilized society; (3) Dr. Brent directed his actions at or intended to harm the children; (4) the children suffered severe emotional distress as a direct result of Dr. Brent’s actions; and (5) such resulting emotional distress was foreseeable from Dr. Brent’s intentional actions. See J.R. ex rel. R.R. v. Malley,
¶ 21. The children have not satisfied the burden of production for their IIED claim such that they could survive summary judgment. First, they have not produced any evidence that Dr. Brent acted “toward” the children by maintaining an affair with their mother. Vennit asserts that Dr. Brent’s actions were “directed at the sanctity of the marriage as well as the sacred relationship of the family.” However, that is not the standard. The requirement is that Dr. Brent’s actions must have been directed toward the children, who must have personally suffered injury to bring the claim.
¶ 22. Second, looking at elements two and three of the tort, Vennit makes much of the “destruction” of the Mathis family unit because of the divorce. However, the Court is required to focus its analysis on the defendant’s conduct, not the plaintiffs reaction. “[I]t is the nature of the act itself — as opposed to the seriousness of the consequences — which gives impetus to legal redress.” Adams,
¶ 23. Third, the children were not deposed, and the record does not contain any information regarding counseling that they may or may not have undergone following their parents’ divorce. The only references in the record to the children’s alleged emotional distress are found in Vennit’s deposition. Vennit’s vague statements about his children being “all tore up” because of the “bad set of circumstances” simply do not reveal the severity of his children’s alleged emotional distress and, therefore, cannot satisfy the children’s burden of production to survive summary judgment. Even where cases of IIED have passed the summary judgment phase and gone on to trial, the Court has held that “two sentences out of the entire transcript offered in support of this claim [for mental anguish] are hardly enough evidence to support a verdict” of more than $3,000 in damages. Morrison v. Means,
¶24. Finally, as to the last element, Vennit asserts that the children’s emotional distress “was foreseeable, as admitted by [Dr. Brent] in his own deposition.” Vennit cites the following exchange from Dr. Brent’s deposition:
Q: ... [Y]ou have seen how [an affair] can destroy the — and cause grievous mental and emotional distress?
A: Yes.
Q: And you also know that this can cause and have a problem with the kids involved in that marriage too, don’t you?
A: Yes.
Q: Where kids have both parents and live together and support and now the parents and the kids live in two different houses; it can cause that problem too?
A: A divorce can, yes.
Based on the above-quoted statements, Vennit argues that Dr. Brent knowingly caused severe emotional distress to the minor children, and he maintains that the above-quoted exchange from Dr. Brent’s deposition is enough to satisfy the burden of proof on summary judgment. Dr. Brent did acknowledge that an affair, generally, and a divorce may foreseeably result in the children having “problems.” However, at the time of the affair — the affair being the conduct that Vennit argues was outrageous and malicious and directed toward the children — Vennit III was three years old and Alexa was one or two years old. Dr. Brent did concede foreseeability of “problems” following a divorce, but the foreseeability of emotional distress — based strictly on the affair — to the children seems unlikely, given their ages at the time.
¶ 25. We hold that no genuine issue of material fact exists regarding the children’s claims for IIED. Though the summary judgment phase occurs before the start of the trial, non-moving plaintiffs still carry a burden of production for the elements of their claims. Karpinsky,
Conclusion
¶ 26. We hold that the trial court erred in denying Dr. Brent’s motion for summary judgment on the minor children’s claims. Even though Mississippi’s standing requirements for civil lawsuits are quite broad, children in general simply do not have a colorable interest in alienation of affection litigation. Given that Mississippi does not view marriage as a judicially enforced contract, the children’s claim for tortious interference with a marriage contract is dismissed. Finally, the children have failed to produce sufficient evidence to support a claim of IIED. The trial court’s denial of Dr. Brent’s motion for summary judgment as to all of the minor children’s claims is reversed.
¶ 27. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Vennit III was five years old and Alexa was three years old when Vennit filed suit.
. Dr. Brent’s motion for summary judgment includes only three paragraphs and a list of exhibits. It states that the reasoning for the motion is set out more fully in the memorandum brief, but the memorandum brief is not included in the record. The same is true of Vennit’s response in opposition to the motion.
. Mississippi is among only six states that still recognize the common law tort of alienation of affection. See Fitch v. Valentine,
. Vennit also cites Stone v. Bang,
. Although the tort of alienation of affection has been abolished entirely in most states, prior to its abolition, many states held that children did not have standing to bring claims of alienation of affection against third parties. See, e.g., Hale v. Buckner,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
¶ 28. No law of this State precludes minor children from bringing, claims of alienation of affection against interlopers whose misconduct interferes with familial harmony. I would hold that the minor children in the present case have standing to pursue alienation of affection claims against Dr. Brent, and I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to the contrary.
¶ 29. My colleagues in the majority say that “[njothing in Vennit’s brief convinces the Court that the alienation of marital affections naturally results in the subsequent alienation of parental affections such that a minor child might have a cause of action against the lover of the straying
¶ 30. It is true, as the majority posits, that “[i]n every case considered by [this] Court, a husband or wife has brought the claim for alienation of affection.” But this Court’s not having entertained the question previously does not foreclose our serious and open-minded consideration of the possibility that children also have standing to prosecute such a claim. Our early alienation of affection cases, in which this Court allowed relief where third parties had interfered with familial harmony, lend strong support to Vennit’s argument that children ought to have standing to bring claims against offenders who harm or destroy previously harmonious families.
¶ 31. One case to which Vennit points the Court is that of Tucker v. Tucker,
¶ 32. This Court liberally has permitted spouses alleging alienation of affection to bring claims against third parties other than paramours. It never has limited such causes of action to paramours as defendants, but rather has recognized that any kind of intrusion into the marriage is actionable by the spouse who is alleged to have been robbed of the affection of his or her spouse. Yet today’s majority declines to recognize that children likewise affected by the intrusion of a third party into the family unit ought to have standing to bring suit for the alienation of familial affection. The majority acknowledges that “[a]l-though nonparamours were named as defendants, the party bringing the claim in each case was a spouse.” (Emphasis theirs.) The majority continues: “the Court’s precedent supports that the tort exists to protect the marital relationship, not the familial relationship as a whole.” I respectfully disagree, finding no prior decision of this Court precluding claims by children thus damaged. The majority’s exclusion of children strikes me as oddly
¶ 33. The Court, however, squarely has addressed cases in which parents sued to recover for the loss of the society, affection, and services of children, which are analogous to alienation of affection claims. In Ellington v. Ellington,
¶ 34. Similarly, more than fifty years later, in Stone v. Bang,
¶ 35. As the majority notes, alienation of affection actions protect, among other things, “the right to live together in the same house, to eat at the same table, and to participate together in the activities, duties and responsibilities necessary to make a home.” Kirk v. Koch,
¶36. While Mississippi has not previously addressed standing of children to bring claims of alienation of affection against a parent’s paramour, other courts have. The Appellate Court of Illinois held that the tort of alienation of affection “involve[s] the rights which all members of the family have a right to protect” and that “the State likewise has an interest in the sacredness of the family relationship.” Johnson v. Luhman,
Defendant’s conduct resulted in the destruction of the children’s family unit— that fortress within which they should find comfort and protection at least until they reach maturity — and deprived them of the unstinting financial support heretofore contributed by their father, as well as of the security afforded by his affection and presence.
Johnson,
¶ 37. Additionally, the Supreme Court of Minnesota considered the question “whether a minor child has a cause of action against one enticing its parent from their family home to recover damages sustained as a result of the enticement.” Miller v. Monsen,
It is the foundation of civil society, sanctioned as such by both civil and ecclesiastical authority. It provides not only shelter, food, comfort, family life, happiness, and security for its members, but also instruction in, and example of, virtue, morality, and character. Not only the permanent welfare of the human race, but also the great advances of civilization, such as the elevation of woman to social equality, the education of children, the refinement of manners, the awakening of the finer things and subjugation of the gross in man, may be directly traced to it as, an institution. Human Society could not endure without it.
Id. at 402,
¶ 38. The majority, however, argues that “in Minnesota and Michigan, alienation of affection has since been legislatively abolished.” That may be so. But Miller did not involve an alienation of affection claim. • And in Russick, the court noted that the childrens’ suit “is not- the traditional alienation-of-affections suit — it is an action to recover damages for a
¶ 39. The majority further opines that Vennit’s analogy of alienation of affection to the context of wrongful death is misplaced: “[a] minor child loses the affection and society of a deceased parent because that parent is no longer living and is, therefore, not even physically available for affection and society.” (Emphasis in original.) But, again, the majority’s distinction is based on the erroneous assumption that alienation of affection exists solely to protect the marital relationship, and not the familial relationship as a whole. I reject that premise. In the context of an alienation of affection claim, the family unit is dead, much like a deceased parent in the context of a wrongful death claim. The society and companionship of the family as a unit, and not merely that of the enticed parent, forever is lost.
¶ 40. This Court expressly has upheld the claim of alienation of affection: “[I]n the interest of protecting the marriage relationship and providing a remedy for intentional conduct which causes a loss of consortium, this Court declines the invitation to abolish the common law tort of alienation of affections in Mississippi.” Fitch v. Valentine,
Alienation of affections is the only available avenue to provide redress for a spouse who has suffered loss and injury to his or her marital relationship against the third party who, through persuasion, enticement, or inducement, caused or contributed to the abandonment of the marriage and/or the loss of affections by active interference.
Id.
¶ 41. Alienation of affection is a common law tort, never enacted by the legislature, but judicially recognized by this Court as early as 1896 in the case of Tucker v. Tucker,
¶ 42. Because I would affirm the chancellor’s denial of summary judgment to Dr. Brent, I respectfully dissent.
CHANDLER AND KING, JJ., JOIN THIS OPINION.
. "Whereby he lost the services (of his servant).” Black's Law Dictionary 1323 (10th ed. 2014).
. According to Stone, that statute was "section 720, Code of 1906 (Section 514,' Hemingway's 1927 Code).” Stone, 122 So. at 95. The current version of this statute is Mississippi Code Section 11-7-11 (Rev. 2004) ("A parent may bring an action for the seduction of a child, although such child be not living with nor in the service of the plaintiff, and though there be no loss of service....")
