78 S.E. 222 | N.C. | 1913
The plaintiff entered into a contract with his wife, the defendant Edith Howell, and the defendant G. A. Briggs, her father, that the daughter of the plaintiff, Lucy Howell, might remain with her mother, Edith Howell, at the home of said G. A. Briggs until said child should reach the age of 6 years, when she should be returned to her father. The plaintiff soon after said contract, obtained a divorce from his wife on the ground of her adultery, and the decree provided that the custody of the child should be left open for further orders of the court. There has been no decree fixing the custody of said child.
It is alleged in the complaint that a few days prior to the child's attaining 6 years of age, the defendant, Edith Howell, with the (284) advice and assistance of her codefendant, G. A. Briggs, spirited the child away beyond the State to some place unknown to the plaintiff.
The complaint asks judgment against the defendant G. A. Briggs for damages, and against both defendants for the custody of said child, if she can be located, and for a rule upon the defendant Briggs requiring him to disclose the present whereabouts and residence of the plaintiff's child.
Abduction is usually prosecuted on the criminal side of the docket. But there are many cases in which damages have been recovered for wrongful abduction. The court having dismissed the action upon the pleadings, we must take the statements in the complaint to be true, because by the dismissal of the action, the plaintiff has been debarred the opportunity of proving his allegation to be true. The question is whether the complaint states a cause of action.
In Harris v. Harris,
It is true that at common law abduction of a female for immoral purposes was not an offense (S. v. Sullivan,
At the common law, abduction of a child was not an offense. S. v.Rice,
In Cooley on Torts (3 Ed.), 482, 483, it is said that an action for damages for abduction of a child will lie in favor of the parent. (286) In Rice v. Nickerson, 91 Mass. (9 Allen), 478, it was held in a case much like this, that the plaintiff might recover actual damages for expenses incurred in the pursuit of his child which had been abducted. The Court also indicated that upon proper allegations, such as have been made in this case, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover punitive damages for the wrong inflicted upon him. Among other cases sustaining an action for damages for abduction of a child are Bradleyv. Shafer, 71 N.Y. (64 Hun), 428; Hills v. Hobert, 2 Root (Conn.), 48; Dobson v. Cothran,
In Brown v. Crockett, 8 La. Ann., 30, it is held that in an action for the wrongful abduction of a minor the jury has a right to award damages for mental anguish as a part of the compensatory damages for such wrong. InBaumgartner v. Eigenbrot,
In Steele v. Thacher, 1 Ware (U.S., 85), it was held that "A parent may maintain a libel in admiralty for the wrongful abduction of his child, being a minor, and carrying him beyond the sea." This has been cited with approval in 22 Fed. Cases, 13, 348, where the above case is reprinted. The subject is very interestingly discussed in Everett v. Sherfey,
The most usual case in which this action is brought has been upon the abduction of a daughter for marriage or immoral purposes. But the modern authorities, as we have said, have advanced, and now the parent can recover damages for the unlawful taking away or concealment of a minor child, and is not limited to cases in which such child is heir or eldest son, nor to cases where the abduction is for immoral purposes, nor are the damages limited to the fiction of "loss of (287) services." This Court pointed out in Hood v. Sudderth,
The law is summed up with citations of numerous authorities in 1 A. E. (2 Ed.), 167, as follows: "A father has a right of action against every person who knowingly and wittingly interrupts the relation subsisting between himself and his child or abducting his child away from him or by harboring the child after he has left the house."
It can make no difference that the child at the time she was carried away was not in the immediate custody of the father. She was temporarily with her mother, but he was legally entitled to her custody or to have it adjudged by the court, and to take her out of the jurisdiction of the court, or secrete her, was an injury for which he was entitled to damages. The allegation of the complaint that the defendant Briggs "procured, aided, assisted, and advised the taking off of the child and conceals its whereabouts and has thereby caused the plaintiff great and agonizing distress of both mind and body," states a good cause of action against him.
The judgment dismissing the action is
Reversed.
Cited: Howell v. Solomon,