Bishop v. Glazener

96 S.E.2d 870, 245 N.C. 592, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 6, 1957
Docket18
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 S.E.2d 870 (Bishop v. Glazener) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. Glazener, 96 S.E.2d 870, 245 N.C. 592, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 624 (N.C. 1957).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

Plaintiff is now 50 years of age; his wife 43. In 1939 plaintiff was working in a filling station at Saluda, North Carolina, and there met his wife, a daughter of defendant, who at that time was a teacher in the Saluda Public Schools. They were married on 8 March 1941, and have two children; a boy, now twelve, and a girl, now six. At the time of the marriage defendant’s daughter was living with him in his home in Rosman, North Carolina, and working at the Ecusta Paper Plant at Brevard, North Carolina. After the marriage plaintiff and his wife lived in his father-in-law’s home in Rosman for about seven years, and during this time plaintiff paid about half of the bills. Mrs. Bishop resumed teaching in January 1942, and continued to do so, until a short time before the first child was born 17 January 1944. About two years thereafter she resumed teaching in the public schools of the county, and continued to do so until she and plaintiff separated in 1954. While living in Rosman, plaintiff was employed by the Ecusta Paper Plant. Plaintiff testified, “Mr. Glazener (the defendant) told me I had a job at Ecusta; he may have helped get it for me.” Plaintiff has worked at this plant since then.

Both were working, they had two small children, and they employed a housekeeper, while the mother taught school.

*594 In 1949. plaintiff bought a lot on Carolina Street in the Town of Brevard, and built thereon a house. His wife paid a small part of the cost of construction of the house. The house had a $2,500.00 mortgage on it. He and his wife lived in this home with their children until their separation 17 September 1954. Since then they have lived apart.

When the house was built in Brevard, plaintiff invited the defendant, his father-in-law, to come and live with them in the house, which invitation he accepted. They used in the house two beds, several chairs and a refrigerator belonging to the defendant. Plaintiff bought the rest of the furniture. The defendant paid $100.00 for concreting the basement in the house and $350.00 for installing a furnace therein. The defendant paid $50.00 for screening the house, he bought the concrete blocks for a garage, and he paid $25.00 or $30.00 for the construction of a driveway. Defendant loaned plaintiff $100.00 to install a sewer line, which plaintiff has not repaid, because defendant owed him for Venetian blinds left in the home at Rosman worth $100.00. While they were living together at Brevard, defendant bought “a deep freeze” for the house, a hindquarter of beef, a ton or two of coal, paid the electric bill for one year and eight months, and worked in their garden. Defendant lived in this house with plaintiff and his wife for five years. Plaintiff paid the bills, though defendant spent some money on the house.

During the five years the defendant lived in plaintiff’s house in Brevard, difficulties and “clashes of opinion” developed between them. Plaintiff testified, “it was my house and he (the defendant) would set up the standard way I should live and expected me to take orders from him, and I didn’t like it. . . . He never did like the way I ran things, he wanted to run them.” Defendant was constantly cursing in the presence of the children. Plaintiff did not like it, and remonstrated with the defendant about it. They had arguments about the defendant trimming the shrubbery on the lot. Defendant in the daytime played the radio very loud, walked through the house “like a horse,” and raked and sawed under plaintiff’s bedroom, when plaintiff was trying to sleep, after working on the night shift. They had arguments about defendant putting trash on an adjacent lot. In July 1954 plaintiff saw the defendant with a big bucket, and asked him, “have you been dumping trash and stuff on that man’s lot?” Defendant said, “I will do as I please.” Plaintiff replied, “If you can’t do what I want around here, you can get your things and leave.” Defendant replied, “I will go, but I will ruin your home.” Defendant moved out, and went to live in the Lawrence Apartments in Brevard.

While defendant was living in plaintiff’s home, he made disparaging remarks about plaintiff to Lawrence Hipp, a neighbor. He told Hipp, “Frantz Bishop was so damned contrary nobody could get along with *595 him, and he didn’t see why his wife stayed there with him. ... he would get up and leave, take off.” Defendant also made uncomplimentary and profane remarks about plaintiff to other neighbors.

Mrs. Bishop and her children continued to live with plaintiff in their home from the time her father left in July 1954 until they separated 17 September 1954. During this time Mrs. Bishop visited her father nearly every day. About a week or two after defendant left, Mrs. Bishop brought suit against her husband for alimony, while living in the house with him. Plaintiff begged his wife not to leave him. She replied, “if my father cannot live here, I won’t.” On 17 September 1954 Mrs. Bishop and the children left their home and went to the Lawrence Apartments to live.

After leaving Mrs. Bishop brought another suit against her husband for support. This suit was heard in Hendersonville, and resulted in a separation agreement, which was signed 22 September 1954, in which plaintiff sold their home to his wife for $4,000.00, which her father paid. The separation agreement is not in the Record. On 1 October 1954, after the sale, plaintiff vacated the house, and Mrs. Bishop, her children, and her father moved in. Mrs. Bishop and the children lived there, until 24 August 1956, when she moved to South Carolina “to improve her B Certificate” as a teacher. She is now there with her children and father.

After defendant left the Bishop home, a sister of plaintiff had a conversation with Mrs. Bishop, and asked her to stay with the plaintiff and keep the home together. Mrs. Bishop replied, “if my father can’t stay here, I won’t.” Plaintiff’s sister told her she cared more for her father than she did for her husband, and she said that was her business.

Plaintiff testified: “At the time I married my wife, I was in love with her, and she was in love with me. We lived together in peace and happiness in our home until the time of the separation. My wife showed affection for me all during that time, and I showed affection for her. . . . Since our separation my wife has shown no affection for me whatever and no love for me whatever. ... I would like to have her back. I still love her.” Plaintiff further testified he gave his wife no cause to leave.

The existence of a cause of action for damages in favor of a husband against one who wrongfully and maliciously alienates the affections of his wife depriving him of his conjugal rights to her consortium has long been recognized in England and this country. This is a fundamental common law right. Barbee v. Armstead, 32 N.C. 530, 51 Am. Dec. 404; Cottle v. Johnson, 179 N.C. 426, 102 S.E. 769; Rose v. Dean, 192 N.C. 556, 135 S.E. 348; 27 Am. Jur., Husband and Wife, sec. 522.

The essential elements of an action for alienation of affections are the marriage, the loss of affection or consortium, the wrongful and *596 malicious conduct of the defendant, and a causal connection between such loss and such conduct. Cottle v. Johnson, supra; Rose v. Dean, supra; Hankins v. Hankins, 202 N.C.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.E.2d 870, 245 N.C. 592, 1957 N.C. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-glazener-nc-1957.