Edgren v. Reissner

396 P.2d 564, 239 Or. 212, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 486
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 396 P.2d 564 (Edgren v. Reissner) 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
Edgren v. Reissner, 396 P.2d 564, 239 Or. 212, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 486 (Or. 1964).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Evelyn Reissner, from a judgment of the circuit court for $12,000 in favor of the plaintiff, Bessie Edgren. The challenged judgment terminated an action instituted by the plaintiff which averred that the defendant wrongfully alienated the affection of plaintiff’s husband. Defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and in the alternative for a new trial was denied. The defendant-appellant presents nine assignments of error.

The complaint alleges (1) the marriage of the plaintiff to Oscar J. Edgren December 1,1933, (2) the continuance of that status until the filing of this action, (3) acts of misconduct with malicious intent on the part of the defendant, (4) that the acts occurred in the four months prior to Oscar’s divorce from the plaintiff and his marriage to the defendant, (5) that plaintiff’s husband’s affection was alienated, and (6) that the acts of the defendant caused the alienation of Oscar’s affection. Defendant’s supplemental answer (a) denies all of the allegations of the complaint, (b) avers that the claimed marriage of the plaintiff to Oscar had terminated prior to the alleged cause of action, and (c) sets forth two affirmative defenses. The first of the affirmative defenses alleges that any *215 loss of affection that the plaintiff suffered was caused by her own misconduct and that she connived at and condoned Oscar’s withdrawal of affections from her. As a second affirmative defense the defendant alleges that she was deceived by Oscar into marrying him and that she acted in reliance and good faith on his false representations.

Plaintiff’s motions to strike from the answer the averment just summarized were denied. Plaintiff thereupon filed a reply in which she denied all the allegations of the first and second affirmative defenses.

We shall now consider the first four assignments of error and will consider them conjunctively; they are so presented in appellant’s brief. They relate to an alleged fatal defect and insufficiency in the plaintiff’s pleadings.

Paragraph I of the complaint reads:

“On December 1, 1933, plaintiff and Oscar J. Edgren were married and ever since said date plaintiff has been and is now the wife of said Oscar J. Edgren.”

Defendant’s answer states:

“The defendant denies each and every allegation therein alleged in Paragraph I of plaintiff’s complaint, and the whole thereof, and demands the proof thereof, and if the plaintiff married Osear J. Edgren on December 1, 1933, in Mexico, as claimed *216 by plaintiff, then said marriage was void, or was terminated, or was dissolved, long prior to July, 1961, and prior to the alleged cause of action in plaintiff’s complaint.”

Defendant argues that her answer presents new matter not stricken nor denied, and that, therefore, defendant’s allegation that the marriage had not continued must be taken as true (OES 16.620). Based upon those contentions the defendant argues that the complaint fails to state a cause of action.

OES 16.620 provides:

“Every material allegation of the complaint, not specifically controverted by the answer, and every material allegation of new matter in the answer, not specifically controverted by the reply, shall, for the purpose of the action, be taken as true * *

The definition of “material allegation” appears in OES 16.610:

“A material allegation in a pleading is one essential to a claim or defense, and which could not be stricken from the pleading without leaving it insufficient as to such claim or defense.”

Many of this court’s decisions illustrate the application of the definition contained in OES 16.610 and the consequences of the application of OES 16.620. *217 We note that the plaintiff alleges that her marriage continued and that the defendant denies that allegation. One may concede, without so deciding, that defendant set forth “new matter,” hut those averments are not material in the sense of ORS 16.610. The matter might have been stricken without making ineffectual the denial of Paragraph I of the complaint by the answer, or foreclosing proof on the issues of the alleged continuance of the marriage status. The averments upon which the defendant depends merely particularized the grounds for her denial. Not being a material allegation, the failure of the reply to controvert it did not make the plaintiff’s pleadings defective. These first four assignments of error are without merit.

Defendant’s fifth and sixth assignments of error present the issue as to whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant submission of the case to the jury. The elements of the alleged cause of action are wrongful conduct of the defendant, intended to cause and which actually did cause a loss to the plaintiff of the affection and consortium of her husband. Patterson v. Skogland, 1947, 181 Or 167, 180 P2d 108. To allow a case of this kind to be submitted to a jury there must be evidence of each element of the cause sufficient to raise a question of fact for the determination of the *218 jury. The evidence offered must be viewed in the light most f avorable to the plaintiff and a purely speculative inference or conclusion is not .substantial evidence. Anderson v. Sturm, 1956, 209 Or 190, 303 P2d 509. After a thorough examination of the evidence we have concluded that the record contains evidence which warranted submission of the case to the jury. There is testimony which .shows that the defendant made her financial resources available to Oscar in order that he could obtain a divorce from the plaintiff; that the defendant opened a joint bank account with him; that she showered her attentions upon him to the extent that he no longer stayed with his wife, the plaintiff, and did not deposit his earnings in the bank account with his wife as he had done for years previously. The inference that Evelyn, the defendant, intended to and did deprive the plaintiff of the affection, consortium, comfort and right to the society and aid of her husband is at least a permissible one from this evidence.

Defendant argues that the plaintiff’s testimony to the effect that she was not deprived of the affection and consortium of her husband in the months before they were divorced amounts to a judicial admission by her of facts which destroy any cause of action that she may have had. She cites Bookman v. Mitchell Bros. Truck Limes, 1958, 213 Or 88, 320 P2d 266. A quotation from that opinion is instructive. It quotes as follows from Harlow v. Laclair, 82 NH 506, 136 A 128:

“ ‘If a party’s testimony consists only of a narrative of events in which he participated or which he observed, there is an obvious possibility that he may be mistaken like any other witness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
396 P.2d 564, 239 Or. 212, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgren-v-reissner-or-1964.