195 S.E. 807 | N.C. | 1938
Civil action for alienation of affections.
The complaint alleges a cause of action by a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law for alienation of her husband's affections. Upon denial of liability and issues joined, the jury returned the following verdict: *256
"1. Did the defendant, Mrs. Alexandria G. Johnston, maliciously alienate the affections of the plaintiff's husband and cause him to abandon his wife, the plaintiff, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: `Yes.'
"2. If so, did the defendant, Alexandria G. Johnston, act from personal ill will towards the plaintiff or wantonly or oppressively or from reckless indifference to her rights? Answer: `Yes.'
"3. What amount, if any, of compensatory damages is the plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant, Mrs. Alexandria G. Johnston? Answer: `$10,000.'
"4. What amount, if any, of punitive damages is the plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant, Mrs. Alexandria G. Johnston? Answer: `None.'"
From judgment on the verdict the defendant appeals, assigning errors.
A married woman sues her mother-in-law for alienation of her husband's affections and recovers $10,000. That is this case. The record is replete with a story of domestic and family infelicity. It would serve no useful purpose to repeat it here. Suffice it to say the evidence adduced on the hearing was such as to require its submission to the jury. Cottle v.Johnson,
In passing, it may be observed that parents occupy a different position from a stranger in these matters. They, too, have a great interest at stake. Times of stress, with their attendant solicitude on the one hand and desire for aid on the other, naturally bring parent and child together for counsel and advice. This the law condones and does not condemn. Its one requirement is good faith. As said by Kent, Ch. J., in Hutcheson v. Peck, 5 Johns., 196, "A father's house is always open to his children; and, whether they be married or unmarried, it is still to them a refuge from evil, and a consolation in distress. Natural affection establishes and consecrates this asylum." Nor does the law deny to a child the right to appeal to its parent, in the language of Wister, actually or figuratively: "In this moment of uncertainty and doubt my heart turns intensely to thee from whom it has so often sought, from whom it has never failed to receive, support." On the other hand, the law will not tolerate peccancy, or officious intermeddling and malicious interference with the marital rights of others, either on the part of parents or any one else. The line of demarcation between the permissible and the unlawful in this connection is to be determined by the quo animo of the parent. The rights of parents end at the border of *257 good faith. The case was submitted to the jury under a charge enunciating the above principles, with the result as noted.
While some of the exceptions are not altogether free from difficulty, nevertheless, viewing the record in its entirety, the conclusion is reached that it contains no exceptive assignment of error upon which a new trial should be awarded. The case was made to turn on whether the defendant, in what she did, was actuated by natural parental regard for her son or by malice towards the plaintiff. Hankins v. Hankins,
It is urged for error that in enumerating the elements of damage "loss of his assistance" was included, without limiting such future loss, if any, to its present worth or present cash value. Lamont v. Hospital,
The verdict may be excessive. However, it is the rule in this jurisdiction that in the absence of some imputed error of law or legal inference arising in connection therewith the direct supervision of verdicts is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the trial court and is not reviewable on appeal. Cole v. R. R.,
Nothing appears on the record which would seem to warrant a disturbance of the judgment.
No error. *258