66 Wash. 351 | Wash. | 1911
The plaintiff brought this action against the defendants to recover damages on account of alleged alienation of the affections and loss of consortium of her husband. She recovered a judgment in the court below, and' the defendants have appealed.
At the trial of the case, defendants moved the court for a. nonsuit at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence moved for a directed verdict. These motions were denied. A number of errors are assigned, but our view upon the question hereinafter noticed is conclusive of the case, and we shall therefore not notice the other questions presented.
It is argued by the appellants that the action was barred by the two-year statute of limitations; but, if the three-year statute applies to a case of this kind, that the evidence conclusively shows that the action was not begun within three years after the cause accrued. The respondent concedes that the action was not begun within two years, but it is claimed that the action did not accrue until February 2, 1907, and was therefore well within the three-year statute, which applies to this case. It is not' necessary to decide which statute appliés, for we are clear that the action was not commenced until after the expiration of three years from the time it accrued.
The plaintiff and John R. Mullins were married in Butte, Montana, on November 28, 1905. John R. Mullins was the son of the defendants. After the marriage, and on April 10, 1906, the plaintiff and her husband came from Butte to North Yakima, to make their home with the defendants. The plaintiff at that time was pregnant. They lived with the defendants at their home until some time in June, 1906, when the two families moved into a new hotel constructed and owned by the defendants. The son, ‘John R., was employed in the management of the hotel. In August, 1906, the plaintiff’s mother, who then lived in St. Paul, Minnesota, was invited by the plaintiff and her husband to come
After the baby came, and some time in October, 1906, plaintiff and Mrs. Mullins, her mother-in-law, had some difficulty, and plaintiff slapped Mrs. Mullins in the face. Thereupon the defendant Patrick Mullins told plaintiff she would have to go. She thereupon had her clothes packed and she and her mother, on November 3, 1906, left for St. Paul. The plaintiff and her husband had not gotten along well prior to this time, and she had refused to live with him. Plaintiff’s husband, however, did not want her to go to St. Paul. After the plaintiff had gone to St. Paul, she and her husband corresponded. In February she sent her husband a telegram, stating that the baby was sick and for him to come. He started immediately, but did not reach St. Paul until after the baby died. On the day of the funeral, plaintiff and her husband consorted together and the next day, which was February 21, 1907, plaintiff’s husband endeavored to effect a reconciliation with her. She testified that he cursed her and abused her and she refused to live with him as his wife. It was then agreed that he return to this state and procure a divorce. He returned but did not seek a divorce. Later, in the month of April, 1907, she came to this state and brought an action for divorce upon the ground of cruelty. Her husband resisted the divorce, which was granted on
It is apparent from the evidence of the plaintiff in this case that, whatever the defendants said or did to alienate the affection of plaintiff’s husband was said and done prior to October 30, 1906, and it is also apparent that, if her husband ceased to love and consort with her, he ceased to do so many days prior to October 30, 1906. The evidence is clear that the last thing that defendants or either of them said or did to separate the plaintiff and her husband was about October 15, 1906, when they ordered the plaintiff to leave the premises. It is apparently not claimed, and could not well be claimed from the evidence, that defendants did anything after that time, for the separation was then complete. But plaintiff contends that because her husband came to St. Paul on or about February 20, 1907, and consorted with her for one day, the statute did not begin to run until that time. But her testimony is clear to the point that she then refused to live with her husband who solicited her to do so. If the conduct of his parents had previously incited him against her so that he was cruel to her and abused her so that she could no longer endure him, there is no evidence to show that they did anything new at that time. Whatever they did was done previously to that time; and if she lost the affection or consortium of her husband, it was lost prior to that time and she knew it. If she had then gone to live with the husband, and in good faith had endeavored to regain his affection, and if the defendants thereafter had incited him against her, no doubt the cause of action would begin to run from the last wrongful act of the defendants. But that state of facts did not occur. The plaintiff’s husband sought her to live with him, but she refused, and they then agreed to be divorced — not on account of what occurred there, but of what had previously taken place. The wrong of the defendants, if any, was committed more than three years prior
The trial court for this reason should have sustained the motion for nonsuit made by the defendants. The judgment is reversed and the cause ordered dismissed.
Dunbar, C. J., Parker, and Gose, JJ., concur.