48 A. 132 | Md. | 1900
This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant on March 31, 1900, by her next friend, Grafton C. Harper, but it was subsequently amended by striking out the next friend. The declaration alleges that the defendant wrongfully enticed and procured the husband of the plaintiff, unlawfully and without the consent and against the will of the plaintiff, to depart and remain absent from her home and society, whereby she lost the society, support and protection of her husband. There are two counts which are similar, excepting the first alleges that *139 the act complained of was done on the 25th day of December, 1899, while the second fixes no time. A demurrer was filed on the ground that the declaration stated no cause of action, under the law of this State, which was overruled. During the progress of the trial, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, two exceptions were taken to rulings of the Court in excluding certain testimony offered by the defendant. The defendant appealed from the judgment and the questions presented for our consideration are the rulings of the Court on the demurrer and the offers of testimony embodied in the two bills of exception.
1. This is the first time a suit of this character has been before this Court. There has been but little, if any, difference of opinion as to the right of a husband to sue for what is termed "the loss of consortium," that is, the loss of his wife's society, affection and assistance, and when any one, by the alienation of her affections, deprives him of his conjugal rights, he is liable to respond in damages. Indeed, such right has been sustained at least as far back as the case of Winsmore v. Greenbank, Willes' Reports, 577. The authorities are not so harmonious as to the right of the wife to sue for injuries sustained by her by being unlawfully deprived of the society, affection, etc., of the husband. But whatever differences now remain relative to it, are, for the most part, as to the source from which she acquired the right, rather than whether such right exists at all. In countries and States where the common law has prevailed, members of the bench and bar have been accustomed in the past to consider the rights and liabilities of married women as they existed under its rules, and although statutes have been passed from time to time enlarging their rights and increasing their liabilities, they have in many jurisdictions, including our own, been for the most part kept strictly within the lines fixed by legislative enactment. The tendency of modern legislation has been to greatly increase their powers and in many States of this country such rights are conferred and such liabilities imposed on them as will probably furnish Courts difficult problems to solve in determining *140 who is the head of the house. But whatever their legal rights have been in the past, they have, as a rule, surpassed their husbands in their capacity to appreciate and enjoy domestic happiness. When, then, the marital rights of a woman are unlawfully invaded so as to cause this "loss of consortium," why should she not be entitled to have the wrong done her redressed by the law, as her husband would be, under such circumstances? If entitled to it, refusal to grant such redress can only be excused, if at all, on the ground that, by reason of her peculiar status as a married woman, no remedy had been or could be provided her, and hence we must inquire into and determine that question.
We have seen it stated that there are only two States in this country in which the question has arisen where the right of a married woman to maintain such an action is still denied. Whether that be correct or not, we cannot say, but in our investigation of the authorities we have only found two, Wisconsin and Maine, although most of the decisions are based on statutes. InDuffies v. Duffies,
But there are many authorities which sustain this character of suit. That of Foot v. Card,
Under our statute (section 5 of Art. 45 of the Code, as amended by Act of 1898, chap. 457), married women have the power "to sue for the recovery security or protection of their property, andfor torts committed against them, as fully as if they wereunmarried." As it is applicable to this case, there would seem to be no room to doubt that the appellee can, in her own name, maintain this suit. That, in our opinion, she had a cause of action is apparent from what we have already said. Whether or not it was possible for her to enforce such a claim at common law while still married is not now material. We have frequently held, that for personal injuries to a wife, she must at common law sue jointly with her husband, but if he died before judgment, the action did not abate, but could be prosecuted by the widow; and even if he died after judgment, without disposing of it, it survived to her. "Independently of his wife the husband had no cause of action whatever for personal injury to her." Clark v.Wootton,
2. The defendant offered to prove by a witness that she "heard the defendant, Mrs. Wolf, tell Frank, the plaintiff's husband, to leave her home and not to come there any more, and that she saw the defendant push the said Frank out of the kitchen door on different occasions." That was objected to, and having been ruled out by the Court, its action is brought before us by the first bill of exceptions. Under some circumstances such testimony might be relevant, as reflecting upon the question as to whether the defendant did entice and procure the husband to abandon the plaintiff, but there is nothing in the record to show under what circumstances or when these things occurred. Every occasion referred to may have been after this suit was brought, so far as the offer shows, and all *145 that did take place may have been done for the very purpose of building up a defense to the plaintiff's suit. The occurrences were not said to have taken place in the presence of the plaintiff, and unless it was shown that it was a bona fide effort on the part of the defendant to keep the husband away from her home, reflecting upon the question as to whether she was responsible for his absenting himself from his own home, it could not have aided the jury in reaching a proper conclusion. All that was proffered to be proven may have been the result of a quarrel between them and did not meet or explain the testimony offered by the plaintiff; that he had continued to live at the defendant's house from December, 1898, to the time of trial. If she did not want him there it would have been an easy matter to get rid of him. No error is shown by the record to have been committed in that ruling.
3. We think, however, there was error in the ruling as presented in the second bill of exceptions. The defendant offered the testimony of a witness that the plaintiff had had improper relations with one Kieffer, in October, 1898, and offered to prove knowledge of such fact by the plaintiff's husband. Whilst that would not be a bar to the action, unless it was followed up by proof that the husband left his wife by reason of her unfaithfulness and not by the procurement of the defendant, it would have been proper to be considered by the jury in mitigation of damages. The plaintiff had proven that on the 27th day of December, 1898, the husband of the plaintiff had his trunks and clothes removed from the home of the plaintiff and went to the home of the defendant to live and has been with her ever since. That was only about two months after the alleged improper relations by the plaintiff with Kieffer and it might, in the opinion of the jury, have been the cause of his leaving the plaintiff at that time, but, if the jury had believed the statement, it certainly might have affected the amount of damages awarded to her. It is impossible to fix any definite rule in cases of this character to guide the jury as to the quantum of damages to be allowed. The loss of the society, affection, etc., of a husband to a true *146
wife is necessarily greater than to one who, herself, has not been faithful to her marriage vows. When a devoted wife, free from blame herself, has been deprived of the society, affections, etc., of her husband, by the intrigues and acts of another, she stands in a very different light before the law and before any intelligent jury from that of a woman who has been unfaithful herself. As we said in Shufeldt v. Shufeldt,
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded, the appellee to paythe costs.
(Decided December 13, 1900.)