222 Mass. 198 | Mass. | 1915
The only questions on the record are whether the defendant’s requests for rulings, that the evidence is insufficient to overcome the presumption that in all the defendant said and did he acted under the influence of natural affection and for what he conceived to be the real good of his son, and that “upon all the evidence in the case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover,”
The question ordinarily is one of fact. If not expressly conceded, the following facts were uncontroverted. The plaintiff’s husband, a man of mature years,
We shall not review the testimony in detail. It comprises
We need go no further. The jury manifestly would have been warranted in finding that through the defendant’s efforts, inspired by ill will toward the plaintiff, her husband’s affections were alienated and that he was induced to abandon his home and to live separate and apart from her. It follows that the requests for rulings were denied properly, and that the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.
“At the time of the marriage, both husband and wife were about thirty-three years of age.”