79 Vt. 487 | Vt. | 1907
This action is brought for the alleged alienation by the defendant o-f the plaintiff’s wife’s affections by seducing and having sexual intercourse with her. The exceptions are to the refusal o-f the court to charge as the defendant requested and to some portions of the charge as given.
The defendant’s 5th and 7th requests were as follows and were not complied with:
“If the jury find from the testimony that the affection or love of Effie E. Lewis was alienated from her husband by his own conduct, absence, neglect or other acts, and not by any act of defendant, the plaintiff cannot recover in this action.”
*490 “That if the jury find from the testimony that the plaintiff’s acts, conduct, abuse or neglect contributed in bringing about any alienation of the affections of his wife (if such af- ' fections were in fact alienated), then the plaintiff cannot recover.”
The defendant insists that if the affections of the- plaintiff’s wife were not alienated from him by any act of the defendant the plaintiff cannot recover; that if the wife’s affection for her husband had. been destroyed by his own conduct, there was nothing to' be alienated by the defendant’s adultery with her.
The defendant was not entitled to. have the jury instructed as requested. The instruction was correct, that the only question was whether or not the defendant had sexual intercourse with Mrs. Lewis, as alleged; that the plaintiff’s neglect of his wife would not justify the act, if committed; that nothing would then be a bar to an action for the tort except the plaintiff’s consent thereto. This has long been the rule of the common law — some authorities say “from time immemorial.” Blackstone says, Vol. 3 p. 139, that for criminal conversation with a man’s wife, “considered as a civil injury (and surely there can be no greater), the law gives a satisfaction to the husband in an action of trespass.” Brown v. Spaulding, 63 N. H. 622, 4 Atl. 394. Weeden v. Timbrel, 57 T. R. 357, cited by the defendant, supports this doctrine. 21 Cyc. 1626; 8 Am. & Eng. Ency., tit. Criminal conversation. The point made by the defendant’s 5th and 7th requests has been before courts in. other jurisdictions. In Dallas v. Sellers, 17 Ind. 479, it was held that though the wife has no affection for her husband, another person has no. right to. interfere to cut off all chance of its springing up. in the future. This is the doctrine in Prettyman v. Williamson, 12 Del. 224, 39 Atl.
Evidence of unhappy relations existing between husband and wife prior the alienation, want of affection between them, the husband’s negligence or immorality, can only be shown in mitigation of damages. The rule of law and the reason of it are well stated in the text in 8 Am. & Eng. Ency. 461: “Marriage is an institution of society having its foundation in a civil contract which imposes upon the parties certain duties and invests them with corresponding rights. A fundamental right which flows from this relation, and one which the well-being of society requires should be maintained inviolate, is that of exclusive marital intercourse which each acquires with the other. It follows, then, that whoever commits adultery with either of the parties, commits a trespass upon the rights of the other.”
Judgment affirmed.
PETITION FOR NEW TRIAL.
The plaintiff based his right of action upon proof of the defendant’s adultery with his wife, and for that proof he relied upon the testimony of his father, Henry Lewis, and that of Alexander Everett in respect to seeing the defendant and Mrs. Lewis on several occasions go ff> her room, together and hearing their voices there. The witness Cole testified that he saw them on the evening of August 21, 1904, in the act of adultery, but the alleged act was after the suit was brought, and the evidence was offered and admitted, not as furnishing a ground of recovery, but to show an adulterous disposition between the parties and to malee it probable that on the oc
i. In support of the petition for a new trial the affidavits of Mrs. Lewis, George Ely and his wife are produced, which are in substance that Mrs. Lewis was not at her own house on the evening of August 21, that she went to the house of Mr. Ely before dark and remained there that night. Mrs. Lewis testified at the trial that Cole told her on an evening that some men were around her house and that she requested him to engage some one to assist him to- watch and ascertain what it was for; that she discovered people around her house and that she went out and fired her revolver two or three times. In another connection she testified that she went to the Elys and stayed several nights and that she went “at the time they wereawatching,” evidently meaning that night. Cole and the defendant testified that they watched the Louse for a while, then met at a point near the house, separated, and, as Roby testified, went to their respective homes. Cole testified that he went to Mrs. Lewis’ house and from the porch, through an open window, saw Roby and Mrs. Lewis in criminal intercourse. 1
Witnesses are liable to be mistaken about dates. If on this occasion Mr. and Mrs. Ely chanced to be mistaken about Mrs. Lewis going there before dark, then she may have been at her own house for a while in the evening — as she testified she was and that she fired her revolver there — and have then gone to Ely’s house and stayed that night. Mrs. Lewis does not say that she went to Ely’s house before dark. Cole may have been mistaken about the day of the month and correct about the main facts in his testimony. The time was immaterial except as it affected the reliability of his testimony.
2. The affidavit of Whitcomb is that Cole related to' him the events of the evening in question and only stated that he went into Mrs. Lewis’ house after the watching and found Roby sitting there with Mrs. Lewis, and that he spoke of no improper conduct between them. Cole makes affidavit that he related to Whitcomb all that he testified to at the trial, so the two affidavits are at variance. But if the affidavit of Whit-comb is literally true, there is not enough relative to the circumstances in which the incidents were related by Cole, nor of the relations existing between him' and Whitcomb for us to decide that the story he then told was so contradictory of his testimony given at the trial that his testimony in another trial would be likely to be affected by it.
3. Henry Lewis testified at the trial that he had seen the defendant and Mrs. Lewis go to her room together twenty-five to- thirty times. At the trial for divorce held at the next term of court he said ten or fifteen times. It was a loose way of testifying about so grave a charg'e as adultery, but the witness evidently meant to be understood that he had seen them go toi her room together many times. There is not such a discrepancy in the testimony given by Lewis at the two< trials as would warrant setting .the verdict aside.
4. The fact that the plaintiff failed to obtain a bill of divorce from his wife for adultery with Roby does not help to support this petition. Elach case was tried upon the evidence there presented. The only question now is whether the newly discovered evidence is sufficient to warrant the granting of a new trial. Mrs. Lewis and Roby denied the charge of adultery fully and explicitly. Mrs. Lewis testified upon every point in the case, including" the alleged occurrences
The rule is: “If the verdict can be supported upon any rational view of the evidence, it should stand; and it never has been considerd a sufficient ground for a new trial that the verdict is merely against a preponderance of the testimony, or that the court from a consideration and examination of the testimony might have arrived at a different result.” See Thayer v. Cen. Vt. R. R. Co., 60 Vt. 214, 13 Atl. 859, and cases cited in the opinion.
Petition denied.