37 Ind. App. 210 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1905
The appellee, June J. Gregg, sued the appellant, her mother-in-law, Sarah M. Gregg, to recover damages for the alienation by the appellant of the affections of the appellee’s husband, George M. Gregg. The complaint was in one paragraph, to which the appellant
The appellant has assigned error in sustaining the motion to amend the complaint and error in overruling the motion in arrest of judgment. She has also assigned that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against her.
In the complaint it was alleged that the appellee, November 16, 1898, at the residence of her father, in Kentucky, intermarried with George M. Gregg; that they lived together as husband and wife until June 15, 1901, when she was compelled to, and did, leave him, on account of his cruel and inhuman treatment of her, as in a subsequent part of the complaint more fully alleged; that he is the only child of the appellant and her husband, deceased in 1900; that at the time the appellee and George M. Gregg were married he was twenty-five years of age, and was then, and all his life had been, living with his father and mother at'their home, as a member of the family, in the city of Crawfordsville, Indiana, where these parents had resided for more than twenty years, and they each possessed considerable real and personal estate; that the appellant owned a valuable farm, worth $15,000, in Montgomery county, and other real and personal property, and appellant’s husband possessed a large and valuable residence in Orawfordsville, in which he and the appellant lived, and in which said son was reared; that appellant’s' husband also owned a valuable business block in that city, and other valuable real estate and considerable personal estate, and
The means alleged to have been unlawfully, falsely and maliciously employed by the appellant for the purpose of separating her son from the appellee, and of alienating his affections from her, are set forth at length, being means adapted to such a purpose. It is alleged that all the unlawful, false and malicious statements, declarations and reports before set forth were often repeated and stated by the appellant to appellee’s husband, and that, gradually induced by said false, malicious and wrongful statements, language and conduct of the appellant, the appellee’s husband’s affections for the appellee began to grow cold, and
In Jonas v. Hirshburg (1897), 18 Ind. App. 581, it was held that in a complaint for alienating the affections of the plaintiff’s wife it was not necessary to allege that the husband and wife were living together peaceably and happily, facts to the contrary being matter of defense.
Judgment affirmed.