Cooley v. Davis

286 S.W. 412, 221 Mo. App. 748, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 169
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 412 (Cooley v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooley v. Davis, 286 S.W. 412, 221 Mo. App. 748, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 169 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

Action in damages for alleged alienation of the affections of plaintiff’s wife by defendant.

The petition alleges that plaintiff and Della B. Cooley were married August 20, 1915, and that from that date until May 11. .1924, they lived together as husband and wife; that while plaintiff and his wife were so living together, defendant, being their family physician, took advantage of the confidential relations growing out of his said professional employment, and wrongfully, wickedly and maliciously, and with wrongful, malicious and wicked intent, caused the wife of said plaintiff to leave and abandbn him; and by his wrongful, wicked and malicious acts and conduct, extending over a period of one or more years prior'to May 13, 1924, defendant did completely alienate the affections of plaintiff’s wife, and on said date, pursuant to his wrongful, wicked and malicious intent, did entice, influence and' induce plaintiff’s said wife to abandon him; and that his said wife, being so influenced and induced, did leave and abandon plaintiff and *750 has ever since remained away and separate and. apart from him. Actual damages are asked in the sum of $20,000 and punitive damages in the sum of $5000.

The answer is a general denial.

Suit was instituted in the circuit court of Randolph county and was taken to Boone county on change of venue where it was tried, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $6000 actual damages, at the hands of the jury, and judgment therefor was entered accordingly.

Motions for a new trial and in arrest were unavailing and defendant appeals.

The facts of record are that’ plaintiff and Della. E. Penrose were married at Butte, Montana, and that they lived in Montana for about two years and then went to Colorado; that plaintiff worked in a mine and also on ranches. In June, 1921, plaintiff and his wife went to Jacksonville, Randolph county, Mo., to live with and take care of the father of plaintiff, J. E. Cooley, who had been a paralytic for several years and who, shortly before, had lost his wife by death. It is shown that defendant was the family physician of J. E. Cooley and it was at his home where plaintiff and his wife were living in December, 1921, that plaintiff’s wife first met defendant who was calling professionally on J. E. Cooley. In February, 1923, plaintiff’s wife became ill and the defendant was called to attend her professionally. The evidence shows the defendant, a physician forty-one years of age, married and having a daughter eleven years of age, moved to Jacksonville in October, 1917; that he resided there and practiced his profession until May 16, 1924, when he moved to Macon, Macon county, Mo., being shortly after this suit was filed.

A few days after his first professional call on the wife of plaintiff and under his advice, she was sent to McCormick Hospital in Moberly, Mo., for an operation, and that an abdominal operation was there performed by Dr. F. L. McCormick. Mrs. Cooley remained at the hospital about sixteen days when she returned to Jacksonville. She needed medical attention because the incision received at the hospital failed to heal and was draining, and defendant was called to attend the necessary dressing thereof. This dressing of the incision consisted in removing the old gauze and replacing it with fresh gauze which was held in place with adhesive strips. For a time this dressing was done at the home of J. E. Cooley, but about the middle of March, 1923, defendant told plaintiff it would be cheaper if Mrs. Cooley would come to defendant’s office for the treatments: in company with her husband, Mrs. Cooley then began going to the doctor’s office for the treatments; but plaintiff, being at work, after a few visits, could not go to defendant’s office with his wife. The wound continued to drain and it was necessary that the dressing be done *751 frequently. In the process of dressing, it was necessary for Mrs. Cooley to lie down and expose her person.

Mrs. Cooley, testifying for plaintiff, stated that after she had been going to defendant’s office for about a month, defendant began to make improper advances toward her; talked about having a secret with her, put his arm around her; several times helped her off the table after the dressing; that at one time he put his arm around her and raised her up so that she could see the wound; told her that he loved her and could not bear to hear her husband call her “dear;” that he wanted her to leave her husband and tried every way to induce her to do so; that he wrote her notes which she destroyed so her husband would not see them; that this conduct on the part of defendant began about the middle of April, 1923, and at this time he was giving her tablets and capsules which he provided at his own office. Witness stated the incision ceased to drain in April but that defendant had her continue to visit his office every other day to be dressed until about the middle of May, 1923; that on one of the days on which she was not required to be at defendant’s office, she met him on the street and he told her to come to his office that day between 11 and 12 o’clock and stated that his office girl was at lunch at that time. Witness testified that in May, 1923, when she was in defendant’s office, he dressed her wound jrpon a sofa in the office and there illicit relations began between her and defendant and that these relations continued until May, 1924.

The witness testified that during the year from May, 1923, until May, 1924, she went to defendant’s office frequently, and that he told her her husband need not know about it; that it would be a secret between the witness and defendant; that she cared for him — had learned to care for him; that after she began to care for defendant she did not care to be with her husband and told defendant she could not be happy with her husband; that at first she resented defendant’s advances, but later learned to care for him and that she was in love with him; that the improper relations between them began about two or three weeks after such admissions; that during this year she went to defendant’s office, sometimes every day, sometimes once a week, or once in two weeks, but if she remained away as much as a week, defendant would arrange to see her and would beg her to come to his office; that he also had Her come to his barn on various occasions, where the improper relations were indulged.

Mrs. Cooley also testified that defendant urged her to'find some excuse to leave Jacksonville; told her he would p.ay her expenses to Chicago to learn to be a nurse, and he would then locate somewhere andl she could come to him and be with him; that he proposed to furnish her money with which she could return to her mother in Colorado. Along in May, 1924, Mrs. Cooley bad some difference with her *752 father-in-law over some laundry; she told plaintiff about it and said she was going to leave on account of it and that she would not take care of his father any longer; that while plaintiff was in the field at work, Mrs. Cooley left on the train going to Moberly; that before leaving she went to defendant’s office and showed him a telegram from her relatives at Salida, Colo., amdl told him she was going; that he said “You had better not go,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vaughn v. Wabash Railroad Co.
188 S.W.2d 352 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1945)
Tucker Ex Rel. Hayden v. Tucker
31 S.W.2d 238 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 412, 221 Mo. App. 748, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-davis-moctapp-1926.