83 N.Y.S. 528 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The learned trial judge during the trial and also upon the motion for a new trial treated this action as one of criminal conversation only. In this we think he erred.
The complaint alleges that the defendant “ contriving and wick
This complaint, while perhaps containing sufficient for an action •of criminal conversation, includes also all the essential elements of a ■complaint for the alienation of the affections of the wife. (Hollister v. Valentine, 69 App. Div. 582.) To paraphrase, the complaint charges that the defendant intentionally undertook to estrange the wife of the plaintiff from him and by the exercise of improper .influence accomplished his purpose. One of the means by which ■this design was effected was the carnal connection with the wife. 'The prominent charge in the complaint is that the defendant has -weaned from the plaintiff the love and affection which the wife had hitherto entertained for him and consequently deprived him of the -chief blessing of the married state.
The essence of the marriage contract is the conjugal fellowship .-following its consummation. If one wrongfully entices away the wife of another he is liable to respond in damages to the husband :f or the injuries sustained by the latter in the deprivation of the. society and comfort of his wife. Sexual intercourse is not a necessary element of this action although it is quite apt to accompany •the enticement and is an aggravation of the damages inflicted. The pith of the action for the alienation of affections of the wife is the loss of her society, of consortium by the husband without justifiable reason. (Kujek v. Goldman, 150 N. Y. 176, 180 ; Billings v. Albright, 66 App. Div. 239 ; Barnes v. Allen, 1 Keyes, 390, 394 ; Heermance v. James, 47 Barb. 120.) The basis of the action i$
The plaintiff’s wife as a witness for the defendant denied adulterous intercourse with said defendant. The plaintiff had testified that his wife in his presence wrote a letter addressed to the defendant at the latter’s residence, acknowledging criminal connection with him, and insisting that he must have no further intercourse of any kind ; with her. The plaintiff further testified that he mailed this letter to the defendant, who denied receiving it, and it was not produced' upon the trial. For the purpose of contradicting the wife a copy of this letter in her handwriting was offered in evidence, but excluded! On the ground that it was a confidential communication to her husband. (Code Civ. Proc, § 831.) If the plaintiff’s version of the transaction is correct the letter was addressed not to him but to the defendant.. A communication is not confidential which the person making intends shall be disclosed. (Rosseau v. Bleau, 131 N. Y. 177, 183 ; Doheny v. Lacy, 168 id. 213, 223 ; Bartlett v. Bunn, 56 Hun, 507.)
The wife was presented as a witness on behalf of the defendant and was not exempt from any reasonable cross-examination tending to impeach her testimony. If she had made oral declarations to others contrary to her sworn statements the plaintiff would have been entitled to prove them to discredit her. The controversy had been largely directed to the charge of her alleged illicit connection with the defendant, and she denied this accusation. If the letter was written by her and to the defendant it was a disclosure to him that she had revealed their criminal relations to her husband, and, like any admission, was competent as impeaching testimony. Its exclusion, therefore, deprived the plaintiff of evidence which may have been important.
The copy offered was competent because the original, if full credit was to be given to the plaintiff’s testimony, was in the possession of the defendant, thus rendering secondary proof of its contents admissible. The letter itself was the communication, and the fact the copy was retained by the plaintiff did not impart any privileged character to that copy. Its admissibility depended upon the competency of the letter mailed.
We have re-examined the que.'rdons involved in the decision of
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide event, upon questions of law only, the facts having been examined and no error found therein.