Jones v. Allen

127 P.2d 265, 14 Wash. 2d 111
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1942
DocketNo. 28561.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 127 P.2d 265 (Jones v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Allen, 127 P.2d 265, 14 Wash. 2d 111 (Wash. 1942).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

Plaintiff instituted this action seeking to recover from defendant damages in the sum of two hundred fifty thousand dollars for an alleged breach of promise of marriage. The cause was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for ten thousand dollars in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant’s alternative motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial were denied, and judgment was thereupon entered in the amount of the jury’s award. The defendant has appealed.

The trial of this action in the court below consumed nine days. The record presents a statement of facts of over a thousand pages, together with many exhibits. Among the exhibits is included respondent’s personal diary which alone covers eleven hundred ninety closely written pages purporting to narrate in chronological order the intimate events, and consequences thereof, growing out of the relationship formerly existing between the parties here concerned. We shall not attempt, nor is it necessary, to recite in detail the course of conduct of the parties during the continuance of that relationship as shown by the record, but will confine ourselves to a statement of only so much as is required for a proper understanding and determination *113 of the issues here involved. Moreover, in view of our disposition of this appeal, we shall base our statement upon the evidence adduced by respondent, upon which is predicated her claim for a recovery herein, although her testimony concerning any promise of marriage or any agreement having marriage as an objective was emphatically denied by appellant.

The parties met each other in 1909, when appellant was forty-one years of age and respondent was twenty-seven. Both were then married, the appellant to Laura Allen and the respondent to William F. Jones. Shortly after their meeting, the respondent and her husband, together with their seven year old son, moved into the vicinity of the Allen home. By 1911, the acquaintanceship between respondent and appellant had ripened into an infatuation, and they were meeting each other frequently in various rooms which appellant maintained for that purpose in the business section of the city of Seattle. Many of these meetings culminated in sexual intercourse between the parties. During this period, they orally agreed to divorce their respective spouses and marry each other. In the spring of 1911, respondent, having separated from her husband a short time before, instituted an action for divorce against him. Her action was contested but ultimately resulted in a final decree of divorce in November, 1912. Since that time, she has gone by her maiden name, Margaret M. Gable. Appellant, on the other hand, made no endeavor to procure a divorce from his wife, as he had agreed to do, but nevertheless, by extravagent promises and protestations of affection, induced respondent to continue the relationship above described.

From 1911 to 1916, except for a few months in 1914 when Mr. and Mrs. Allen were in Europe, respondent and appellant spent a part of almost every day to *114 gether, and he was paying the greater part, if not all, of her living expenses.

During this period, Mrs. Allen made strenuous efforts to break up this relationship, even going to the extent of publicly assaulting respondent on three different occasions. The last of these attacks took place in 1916, when Mrs. Allen broke an umbrella over respondent’s head. In consequence of that aggression respondent had Mrs. Allen arrested upon a charge of third degree assault. In the trial of that action, the matter of the relationship existing between the respondent and the appellant appears to have been revealed, and as a result of that exposure respondent promised that she would not see the appellant again. From the time of that trial in 1916, the parties did not meet or see each other until 1934, except for a single occasion in 1920 when appellant prevailed upon respondent to spend the night with him in a Seattle hotel.

From about 1920 until the summer of 1933, respondent resided in California, where she earned her own living as a beautician and cosmetic saleswoman. During that period she received no financial assistance from appellant and did not even communicate with him until the early part of 1933, when she was compelled to go on public relief. She thereupon wrote to her son, who was living in Seattle, asking him to see whether appellant would purchase some real estate which she then owned. Appellant indicated that he was not interested in the property, but he gave her son one hundred dollars, which the latter forwarded to his mother.

In August, 1933, respondent returned to Seattle, but at first made no effort to see appellant. On January 21, 1934, however, Mrs. Allen died, and within a few days thereafter respondent sent her son to make an appointment for her to consult appellant about some business *115 matter. Pursuant to that appointment, respondent called at appellant’s office. Following this, she made frequent visits at his place of business, with the result that in a short time the parties entered upon a relationship of intimacy similar to that which had existed between them twenty years previously. Appellant thereafter continually paid respondent’s rent and carried a key to her apartment, to which he had free access at any and all times. He also paid her doctor and hospital bills and defrayed most of her other living expenses, it appearing that she had little, if any, income other than the money he gave her. He sent her flowers, fruit, candy, liquor, and other luxuries, and often took her for a drive or to dinner. He frequently visited her apartment for rest, relaxation, refreshment, and companionship, and she sometimes rendered him the services of a manicurist and masseuse. However, he never introduced her to members of his family, and to but few of his friends. She therefore complained in her diary that he acted as if he were ashamed of her and that he seemed to regard her simply as his mistress. But at the trial of the present action she testified that he frequently avowed his affection for her, renewing from time to time his promise of marriage, and speaking of the future when they would travel and be happy together. At other times, however, they engaged in violent quarrels, which became more and more frequent and finally culminated in two severe beatings inflicted upon respondent by the appellant in 1936.

This general state of affairs continued until February, 1938. During the intervening period, respondent was twice injured in automobile accidents and brought two actions for damages, retaining the legal services of appellant’s law firm. These suits were both successfully terminated by the early part of 1938, and on *116 February 3rd of that year a final settlement with respect to the proceeds thereof was made between respondent and her lawyers.

By 1937, however, as disclosed by respondent’s diary, she had become thoroughly convinced that appellant did not intend to marry her, and she therefore attached no credit to his promises and continued expressions of affection. A number of entries in her diary reveal also that she had by that time firmly resolved to sue appellant for breach of promise as soon as her two personal injury actions should be determined.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P.2d 265, 14 Wash. 2d 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-allen-wash-1942.