Under the first count, the plaintiff sought damages from the named defendant and his mother for the alienation of the affections of the plaintiff’s former wife. In a second count, against the named defendant only, damages were sought for seduction and criminal conversation. Alienation of affections flowing from the criminal conversation was alleged in the second count under the rule of cases such as
Valentine
v.
Pollak,
Both defendants assign error in two rulings on evidence and in the denial of their motion to set aside the verdict “because the damages are excessive.” We consider the latter assignment first. Apparently it refers to the verdict under each count, although that on the second count, as already noted, ran against the named defendant only. Since no assignment of error is addressed to the charge, we assume that it was adequate and legally correct.
Lisa
v.
Yale University,
The court’s action in refusing to set aside the verdict must be tested by the narrative of the evidence, not by the finding.
Pierce
v.
Albanese,
144
*669
Conn. 241, 256,
In support of their claim that the verdict was excessive, the defendants rely particularly on the fact that some two months after the named defendant, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, had taken the plaintiff’s wife to his home, a marital settlement was arranged between the plaintiff and his wife by which the plaintiff paid her $1500 and she in turn instituted a divorce action in Alabama, obtained a valid decree of divorce and shortly thereafter married the defendant. The defendants quite properly do not claim that the fact of the divorce, as alleged in the third special defense, was a bar to the institution of an action either for alienation of affections or for criminal conversation occurring prior to the divorce. Restatement, 3 Torts § 689 & comments a, b;
Prettyman
v.
Williamson,
Cases concerning the effect of a divorce on the right or extent of recovery in an action of alienation of affections or of criminal conversation are collected in an annotation in
The defendants claim that the mere fact that the parties were divorced is sufficient to preclude the allowance of any damages for loss or impairment of the consortium occurring after the date of the divorce. The usual rule is that future sufferings and disabilities may be a proper element of damages in an action of alienation of affections.
Palladino
v.
Nardi,
The effect of the fact of the divorce is limited to the issue of damages. Where, as here, the fact is specially pleaded, it may enhance them. 1 Harper & James, Torts, p. 615; Restatement, 3 Torts § 689, comment b. “If . . . the alienation of affections is accompanied or followed by loss of services in the home, a separation or divorce, . . . such harms may be included by the jury in assessing the amount of damages recoverable.” Restatement, 3 Torts § 683, comment k; see
Amellin
v.
Leone,
The jury might have found, under either count or both, that the divorce was a proximate consequence of an alienation of affections and that the plaintiff’s apparent acquiescence in it was a mere acceptance *673 of the inevitable. Under these circumstances, the divorce, coupled with the marriage of the wife to the defendant, would establish that whatever impairment or destruction of the consortium had proximately resulted from the defendant’s alienation of affections under either count was permanent and complete and that any possibility of a reconciliation was destroyed. Amellin v. Leone, supra, 480. What, if any, merit the defendants’ claim might have if the divorce could not have been found on the evidence to have been a proximate consequence of the defendant’s tort is a matter which we are not called upon to decide.
The evidence was conflicting as to the extent of the affections of the plaintiff’s wife for the plaintiff prior to her acquaintance with the defendant, and it thus became a question of fact for the jury. The jury could have found, as the verdict indicates they did, that the defendant’s conscious misconduct was of a wanton, brazen and cruel type which increased the injury to the plaintiff’s feelings.
Keyes
v.
Churchward,
The damages under the second count were clearly not excessive, even for the adultery alone, and the motion to set aside the verdict rendered on that count is without merit.
Doroszka
v.
Levine,
There remain the two rulings on evidence assigned as error. These occurred during the direct examination of the defendant, called as a witness by the plaintiff. The first question asked was whether the defendant, in December, 1955, during the time he was seeing the plaintiff’s wife, was in love with his former, divorced wife. The defendant answered in the negative. Another question was whether he was then discussing with her the possibility of a remarriage. He answered that this was possible. These questions were objected to as irrelevant. While neither question seems of much importance, the state of the defendant’s feelings toward the plaintiff’s wife could not be said as matter of law to be irrelevant to the issue of alienation of affections.
Reynolds
v.
Vroom,
Also on the direct examination by the plaintiff of the defendant, the latter was asked various questions about his relationship with a woman who had served as his secretary while he was employed as a civilian with the United States forces in Germany after World War II, some ten years before. One of the questions was whether he had testified in another proceeding that this woman had been his mistress. This question was objected to, solely on the ground of irrelevancy. The question was allowed, and the defendant acknowledged having so testified. Thus, the prior testimony became available to the jury as an admission. The court in its discretion could permit the plaintiff to impeach the defendant if, as quite obviously was the case, he had been shown to be hostile.
Carney
v. Hennessey,
Whether particular acts of misconduct are relevant to lack of veracity depends on whether they
*676
have a logical tendency to indicate a lack of veracity. See
Delmore
v.
Polinsky,
Only a few types of sexual misconduct, in and of themselves, are indicative of a lack of veracity,
*677
however much they may he indicative of bad moral character. Note,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
It should be pointed out that statements in the pleadings in the divorce action, or testimony of witnesses therein, may be admissible as admissions, if made by a party to an action of alienation of affections or criminal conversation, or as inconsistent statements, if made by a witness in such an action, under the ordinary evidentiary rules relating to admissions and inconsistent statements. See, for instance,
Sears
v.
Curtis,
Some of the questions asked in
State
v.
Perelli,
Although it is the general rule that whatever is relevant is admissible unless it falls within some particular exclusionary rule, a court, in applying the general rule, may exclude evidence which, though relevant, has such slight probative value that under all the circumstances its admission would tend to confuse and impede, rather than illuminate and advance, the just determination of the litigation. See cases such as
State
v.
Sebastian,
