5 Ohio 530 | Ohio | 1832
delivered the opinion of the court:
If the grounds of the action be, as contended, for enticing away the plaintiff’s wife, it is misconceived. It should have been case, not trespass. If the injury complained of be upon the person of the wife, she should be joined with him in the suit. If the wife has, through persuasion or fraud, become the instrument of the defendant, in any direct injury upon, the plaintiff’s person or his property, trespass may lie, but there is no evidanee applicable to-such a state of things. The proof is, that the wife voluntarily left her husband because he had brutalized himself. She sought shelter under the roof of her father, and he has received her, and given her the protection and support refused by the husband; a protection dictated alike by the best feelings of the heart, the natural affection, and the common sense of the world. Does such an act make the father a trespasser? We think the law affords no countenance to a position so shocking to humanity and pro
The proof in this case falls short of what is requisite to sustain the action of trespass. . The plaintiff has not made a case for the jury. A nonsuit is ordered.