Wallace v. Wallace

70 N.C. App. 458 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1984

WELLS, Judge.

The sole issue we decide in this case is whether the trial court erred in failing to grant defendant’s motion for a directed verdict on the issue of adultery. We decide this issue in defendant’s favor and reverse.

The difficult issue of adultery has been the subject of two recent opinions of this court.

In Owens v. Owens, 28 N.C. App. 713, 222 S.E. 2d 704, disc. rev. denied, 290 N.C. 95, 225 S.E. 2d 324 (1976), defendant husband asserted a defense of adultery to plaintiff wife’s claim for alimony. Defendant’s evidence tended to show that plaintiff wife had lived with another man for two months. The trial court refused to submit an issue as to plaintiff wife’s adultery. In reversing, the Owens court discussed at some length conflicts among the authorities on the level of proof required to establish adultery, concluding that while adultery may be proven by circumstantial evidence, such evidence must be more than that which raises a suspicion or conjecture and must show more than mere opportunity. The court summed up its holding as follows:

We consider it unwise to adopt general rules as to what will or will not constitute proof of adultery, but the determination must be made with reference to the facts of each case. In some cases evidence of opportunity and incriminating or improper circumstances, without evidence of inclination or adulterous disposition, may be such as to lead a just and reasonable man to the conclusion of adulterous intercourse. ... If so, the evidence should be submitted on an issue of adultery to the jury so that it may judge the probative force of the evidence. [Citation omitted.]

In Horney v. Horney, 56 N.C. App. 725, 289 S.E. 2d 868 (1982), plaintiff wife, in her action for divorce, asserted adultery on the part of defendant husband. Plaintiff wife’s evidence tended to show that defendant husband had a friendly relationship with another woman, with whom he was alone together on several occasions in the woman’s office and on at least one occasion in the woman’s home; defendant husband refused to sleep with plaintiff wife and was often away in the evenings; and defendant husband once offered plaintiff wife $10,000.00 if she would let him see his *461girl friend. The jury found the issue of adultery in favor of plaintiff wife. In reversing, the court in Homey recognized that circumstantial evidence may be sufficient to support a finding of adultery, but concluded that the lack of a clear evidentiary standard in such cases had resulted in trial by “suspicion and conjecture.” The court’s comments in Horney upon Owens v. Owens, supra, can only be regarded as placing Owens in the trial by “suspicion and conjecture” category.1

Following its discussion of what it perceived to be the unsatisfactory state of affairs in the law of adultery, the court in Homey concluded:

Given the highly emotional nature of the subject matter, and the degree to which individual jurors’ attitudes regarding propriety may vary, we feel a more definite line must be drawn between permissible inference and mere conjecture. In the case at bar, the husband was shown to have been alone with another woman on a few occasions in her office and once or twice at her home. There was no evidence showing that they were found together very late at night, in a state of undress or under otherwise suspicious circumstances. Nor was there any evidence of feelings of “love” or of affectionate behavior between the two. All we apparently have are bits and pieces of circumstantial evidence from which the jury concluded that an adulterous affair had taken place. We cannot find that this was enough evidence on which to adjudicate the parties’ legal rights. Indeed, to hold otherwise would be to subject virtually all friendships between men and women, however innocent, to legal scrutiny.

It is our opinion that this attempt by the court in Homey to draw a more definite line, while commendable, failed to achieve that degree of certainty required in such cases. For instance, the suggestions in Homey that “being found together very late at night” or “under otherwise suspicious circumstances” might provide the basis for a finding of adultery, still leaves far too much to conjecture. We cannot agree that in modern society, where *462adult persons follow widely diverse schedules of work and other activities throughout the day and night, that being alone together late at night is any more or less significant than being alone together at any other time. A standard incorporating “otherwise suspicious circumstances” tends to make the line less, not more, definite.

We are persuaded that the “more definite line” needed to be drawn in adultery cases is to require that in order to establish adultery, the evidence, whether circumstantial or direct, must tend to show both opportunity and inclination to engage in sexual intercourse and that when the evidence shows no more than an opportunity, an issue of adultery should not be submitted.

In this case, taking plaintiffs evidence as true, considering such evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff and giving plaintiff the benefit of every reasonable inference to be drawn from that evidence, Koonce v. May, 59 N.C. App. 633, 298 S.E. 2d 69 (1982), we hold that plaintiffs evidence supports only an inference that defendant on three occasions had an opportunity to engage in adulterous conduct, but allows no reasonable inference of inclination on defendant’s part to engage in such conduct. Under these circumstances, it was error for the trial court to deny defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. Accordingly, the judgment below must be and is

Reversed.

Chief Judge VAUGHN and Judge Hedrick concur.

. Judge Clark, who wrote the opinion in Owens v. Owens, 28 N.C. App. 713, 222 S.E. 2d 704, disc. rev. denied, 290 N.C. 95, 225 S.E. 2d 324 (1976), concurred in Horney v. Horney, 56 N.C. App. 725, 289 S.E. 2d 868 (1982).

midpage