120 Me. 479 | Me. | 1921
This is an action for alienation of the affections of her husband brought by the plaintiff against her father-in-law. The presiding Justice sustained the defendant’s motion to dismiss and the plaintiff alleged exceptions. The only question involved is whether such an action can be maintained by a married woman against a man. In the very recent case of Farrell v. Farrell, 118 Maine, 441, this court held that such a suit cannot be maintained against a male defendant, but the plaintiff in the pending suit frankly asks the court to overrule that decision, as well as the preceding decisions upon which that is based, as being opposed to both reason and authority. This we are not inclined to do.
The course and scope of legislation and judicial decision on the point at issue may be briefly reviewed. An exhaustive discussion
It is conceded that at common law a wife would have no standing in court in such a case. The earlier statutes in this State empowered a married woman to maintain an action in her own name for the preservation and protection of her property and the recovery of wages for personal labor not performed for her own family. These various acts are condensed in R. S., 1857, Chap. 6, Sec. 3. But it was held that these statutes did not give the wife the right to sue in tort in her own name, as for instance in an action for malpractice, Ballard v. Russell, 33 Maine, 196, (1851) nor of malicious prosecution, Laughton v. Eaton, 54 Maine, 156, (1866). Ten years later the right was extended so that the former statute as amended by Public Laws 1876, Chapter 112, reads as follows:
‘ ‘She may prosecute and defend suits at law or in equity either of tort or contract in her own name, without the joinder of her husband, for the preservation and protection of her property and personal rights or for the redress of her injuries, as if unmarried, or may prosecute suits jointly with her husband.” This language has continued unchanged to the present time and is now R. S., 1916, Chap. 66, Sec. 5. Upon this section the plaintiff rests her claim in the case at bar, contending that it is sufficiently broad to authorize the pending suit.
It is a familiar principle that statutes in derogation of the common law should be strictly construed. The court is to go no faster and no farther than the Legislature has gone. Mindful of this principle our court has had occasion to construe the meaning and scope of this section under consideration.
In Hobbs v. Hobbs, 70 Maine, 381, it was held that a wife could not maintain an action of assumpsit against her husband while the marriage relation was still subsisting. In construing the force and effect of the enlarging statute of 1876, the court says: “It relates to .cases when, by the very assumption, the husband may be a party with the wife or not at her election. The design is to protect her from all marital interference in suits commenced by the wife alone or jointly with her husband and to prevent his maintaining alone any action respecting his wife’s property.”
If this marks the limit of the enlarged powers of the wife under this statute, then clearly the present action cannot be maintained, because an action for the alienation of the husband’s affections by his father could be brought neither by the husband alone, nor by the husband jointly with the wife. Such an action, based upon the wrong doing of the father but aided by the connivance of the husband, could not be maintained by the husband. It would be incongruous. His interests would lie with the defense rather than the prosecution.
This doctrine has been consistently followed and applied in cases strictly in point.
In Doe v. Roe, 82 Maine, 503, it was held that a wife cannot maintain an action against another woman for debauching and carnally knowing her husband. The statute in question was not specifically discussed in the opinion, but it could not have escaped the attention of both counsel and court. In Morgan v. Martin, 92 Maine, 190, the same question arose in an action by a married woman against another woman for alienating the affections of the husband of the former, and Doe v. Roe was affirmed. So stood the law as the settled doctrine in this State until 1913, when the Legislature granted additional rights to married women in these words:
‘ ‘Whoever, being a female person more than eighteen years of age, debauches and carnally knows, carries on criminal conversation with, alienates the affections of, the husband of any married woman, or
This act opens the door to an action by a married woman against a female defendant more than eighteen years of age, but no farther. It gives no right against a male defendant. If the plaintiffs theory is correct that the Act of 1876 gave ample authority for the maintenance of such an action by the wife against any person so offending, the passage of the Act of 1913 was wholly unnecessary. It added nothing to the existing rights. The Legislature apparently thought otherwise and enlarged the rights so far as women defendants were concerned, but no farther. It could have gone farther and have granted the right against all defendants, but it did not see fit to do so. The inclusion of women was the exclusion of men defendants. The court must stop where the Legislature stopped. To go beyond would be judicial legislation. The Act of 1913 has been very recently construed by this court and the precise question raised in the pending case was there raised and decided adversely to the plaintiff. Farrell v. Farrell, 118 Maine, 441, (1920). The law, therefore, is firmly established in this State and we see no reason to overrule this long line of decisions.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff calls attention to the radical changes, in the position of woman before the law since the olden days, all of which is true; but the question presented to us is, not what should be, but what is; and to quote the conclusion of the opinion in Laughton v. Eaton, 54 Maine, supra: “The argument. would be appropriately addressed to the Legislature. The present state of the law requires that the entry in this case should be
Exceptions overruled.”