Berkshire v. Harem

178 P.2d 133, 181 Or. 42, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 151
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 133 (Berkshire v. Harem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berkshire v. Harem, 178 P.2d 133, 181 Or. 42, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 151 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, C. J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment based upon a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $5,000 general damages and $2,500 punitive damages. The action was instituted by a complaint which charged that the appellant alienated from the respondent the affections of the latter’s wife.

The appellant presents thirteen assignments of error. Eleven challenge rulings which respectively 1) overruled the appellant’s motion for a nonsuit; 2) overruled objections made by the appellant to the reception of evidence concerning incidents that transpired after the complaint was filed; 3) sustained the respondent’s objections to the receipt in evidence of his deposition;. 4) overruled objections based upon contentions of immateriality made by the appellant to questions put to a Mrs. Pierce, who was a witness for the respondent; 5 and 6) overruled motions made by the appellant which sought to strike out testimony given by the aforementioned Mrs. Pierce and other testimony given by a Mrs. David, also a witness for the respondent; 7, 8, 9,10 and 11) overruled objections to the receipt in evidence, through the medium of a deposition, of answers given by one Bergman, a witness for the respondent. The twelfth is predicated upon an exception which the appellant took to an instruction to *46 the jury upon the subject of ádultery. The thirteenth is based upon an exception which was saved to an instruction which authorized a verdict for the respondent even though the jury believed that a “lack of affection” existed between him and his wife before the appellant began his alleged wrongful conduct.

The respondent and his wife Frances vere married in Eugene September 5, 1922, and are the parents of four children. At the time of the trial the respondent was 51 years of age and his wife was 43. Upon becoming married they made their home for a while upon a farm with the respondent’s parents. A year later the couple bought a dairy farm and moved upon it. In 1934, when $2,300 of the purchase price of the farm remained unpaid, the mortgage proved that it was mightier than the deed, with the result that the family was compelled to find another home. For a while they lived in a structure to which the respondent referred as “a shack”. In 1937 he built what he described as “a rough house” and the family moved into it. Shortly they abandoned that place and took up their abode in an old house near Creswell, the occupancy of which was given to the family in consideration for the respondent’s services in feeding the owner’s cows. A few months later the family was on the move again. This time they removed to a place called Mable where they remained for several months and then took up their home in a four-room house three miles outside of Eugene. A couple of years later the respondent undertook the purchase of a 45-acre tract several miles from Eugene and, with the assistance of his wife, built upon it a modest house. The family moved into it in 1941 and was living there when the events transpired which ushered in this lawsuit. During all of the period which we have just described the husband, according *47 to Ms testimony, “followed logging, sawmilling and farming.” However, about tbe time that the family moved upon tbe 45-acre tract he became a millwright and received good wages. In the period before he became a millwright the story reflected by the evidence is “the simple annals of the poor.”

In the span of years covered by the foregoing narrative the family home was visited upon two occasions by serious illness, and at another time Mr. Berkshire was the victim of an industrial accident wMch kept him idle for many months. The evidence mentions periods when the family’s sole income was unemployment compensation. Husband and wife had no charge account and, according to the former, he “gave her money to buy groceries or clothing for the children, if I had it.” Notwithstanding the fact that the family purse was a slender one, the children were regular attendants at school and blessed the home with dutiful and affectionate dispositions. According to the husband, no difficulties transpired in the passing years between him and his wife of any greater consequence than “a little spat now and then.” The words just quoted were taken from Ms testimony and relate to a time which preceded the events to which we will presently proceed. Beferring to the same period and also to his wife, the respondent said, “She thought the world of me.”

Mrs. Berkshire did not concede that her married life was happy. She mentioned a purported incident of a serious nature which she said occurred some years ago, but dwelled largely upon the fact that she “couldn’t have things at home” and that she was compelled to live in houses wMch were poorly equipped for convenient living. She complained particularly about her scant wardrobe. However, our purpose in *48 giving this' narrative is not- to indicate which side of the controversy is supported by the truth, but only to afford a basis for determining the merits of the assignments of error.- We- shall, therefore, leave unmentioned evidence at variance with that produced by the respondent.

In the early part of October, 1944, Mrs. Berkshire accepted-employment as a housekeeper in a home many miles distant from that of her family. It lasted a month and a half. At its termination she stayed home for a short time and then worked as a domestic in other homes. About seven months after the first of these jobs she met the appellant. • Until she' met him the family always knew the place of her employment and visited her frequently.

A few days prior to April 25, 1945, Mrs. Berkshire was not employed but was home with her family. On April 25, when Mr. Berkshire returned home at the end of his day’s work, his wife was not there. She had left no explanation for her going and no indication as to where she could be found. No one had information of her whereabouts. From that day, except for a ten-day period in October, 1945, which will later receive our attention, Mrs. Berkshire was never again in the family home. The appellant admits that he met Mrs. Berkshire April 24. Whether or not his acquaintance with her influenced her to go into hiding April 25 is a matter of conjecture.

When Mrs. Berkshire did not return home, the respondent and his children began a search for her. June 15, 1945, they discovered that she was working in the home of a family named David. Before the' respondent located his wife his search for her took him, on May 28, to a Eugene hotel, of which the appellant was the proprietor and which was known as *49 Central Eooms. It had thirty-six rooms. Until May 28 the respondent and the appellant had never met. When he went to Central Eooms the respondent was accompanied by a Mrs. Pierce, who was Mrs. Berkshire’s sister. The two showed the appellant photographs of Mrs. Berkshire and asked him whether or not he had seen her. His replies were in the negative.

As a matter of fact, Mrs. Berkshire had been a guest in Central Eooms and had actually worked there for the appellant prior to May 28. The answers which he gave to the respondent and Mrs. Pierce were not true. Whether or not they were knowingly false was one of the issues at the trial. The appellant met Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 133, 181 Or. 42, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berkshire-v-harem-or-1946.