Kuhn v. Cooper

87 S.E.2d 531, 141 W. Va. 33, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 27
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1955
Docket10694
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 S.E.2d 531 (Kuhn v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuhn v. Cooper, 87 S.E.2d 531, 141 W. Va. 33, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 27 (W. Va. 1955).

Opinion

Lovins, President:

This is an action of trespass on the case to recover damages for claimed alienation of affections of plaintiff’s husband. The action was brought by Virginia Hall Kuhn, hereinafter designated as plaintiff, against Myrtle Cooper, hereinafter referred to as defendant, in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County. A jury trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $12,500.00. The trial court, having overruled a motion to set aside the verdict, entered judgment for the amount of the verdict. The defendant prosecutes this writ of error.

The plaintiff and defendant were married women and prior to the alleged alienation lived with their respective husbands, the plaintiff at St. Albans and the defendant at or near Summersville, West Virginia. The defendant became acquainted with Clayburn C. Kuhn in March, 1952. At that time the plaintiff and her husband had three children. There is evidence showing that the plaintiff and defendant at the time of the trial had separated from their husbands.

It seems that after the plaintiff’s husband and the defendant met, they associated together. There are several episodes detailed in the record as well as purchases of *35 certain articles of merchandise by the defendant, after-wards used by the plaintiff’s husband, and also given to the plaintiff’s husband and daughter which substantiates this assumption. Among other things is a watch, a clock, a shot gun, a toilet kit or case, luggage, a ring, shoes and a jacket or vest. It is not clearly shown that all of these articles were given to the plaintiff’s husband. The defendant denies giving him the shot gun, the ring, the clock, watch, watch band and luggage. Defendant admits that being short of ready cash, she had used her credit to purchase various articles and then turned them over to the plaintiff’s husband, who would thereafter pay her cash for such articles. But she denies in the main any gifts to plaintiff’s husband.

The plaintiff’s husband and the defendant were named in two warrants charging them with adultery. On the trial on one of such warrants, they were acquitted. On the other, they were convicted and appealed the same to the Intermediate Court of Kanawha County where the charge was dismissed.

There is proof that the defendant and the plaintiff’s husband went to Washington, Virginia, for the purpose of purchasing an automobile, the plaintiff having theretofore driven her husband’s car to that state and had an accident on such trip. The cash payment required in such purchase in the amount of $450.00 was paid by the defendant and the title to the automobile was taken in her name, but later transferred to plaintiff’s husband. There is proof showing that the plaintiff and her children were staying at her father’s home near Washington, Virginia, at the time the automobile was purchased. After the trial on one of the charges of adultery, the defendant drove her automobile to St. Albans, West Virginia, parked at or near the residence of the plaintiff. The plaintiff was forbidden to go into her home by her husband and the defendant remained there with the plaintiff’s husband while plaintiff was forced to spend the remainder of the night with her next door neighbor. The plaintiff so testified and her testimony is corroborated to a certain extent *36 by the person who lives next door to plaintiff’s residence. On one occasion the defendant and plaintiff’s husband were arrested at defendant’s apartment on Truslow Street in the City of Charleston. True, the defendant denies that anything improper occurred there. The defendant, when answering a knock at her door, after a short delay, came to the door clothed in her night clothes with a house-robe on. The plaintiff’s husband was in the kitchen of the apartment ostensibly watching for persons who were engaged in pilfering or damaging the husband’s and defendant’s automobile. The defendant cooked morning meals and packed lunches for the plaintiff’s husband on numerous occasions. It seems that the husband of the plaintiff was accustomed to visiting next door at the home of friends of the defendant. On the occasion when the defendant and plaintiff’s husband were arrested, such friends testified that the plaintiff’s husband had only been in defendant’s apartment for about five minutes.

Relative to the trip to Washington, Virginia, the defendant introduced two witnesses who are husband and wife and who testified distinctly that they accompanied the defendant and the husband of the plaintiff to Washington, Virginia. According to these witnesses, as well as the defendant, the plaintiff’s husband left them and the defendant at a garage where the automobile was purchased. The defendant and these two witnesses started on the return trip to Charleston immediately.

■ It is proper at this point to say that after the taking of evidence had ended, these two witnesses testified in chambers in the presence of the trial judge and counsel for the parties that their testimony as to accompanying the defendant and the plaintiff’s husband to Washington, Virginia, was false. The trial court permitted such retraction to be read by the jury and also permitted cross examination by the defendant’s counsel. It is to be noted that the defendant’s testimony relative to the trip to Virginia coincides with the testimony of the witnesses who retracted their statements.

There- is other testimony showing that the plaintiff’s *37 husband called on the defendant on two or more occasions at her place of business near Summersville, West Virginia. One witness testified that on one of these occasions, the plaintiff’s husband hugged and kissed the defendant.

The defendant on her part denies any wrongdoing or intent to alienate the affection of plaintiff’s husband and makes explanation of the same as above noted relative to the purchase of merchandise and the automobile in that she says that plaintiff’s husband had no credit. She also denies that plaintiff’s husband caressed her at Sum-mersville. She testified that she has no designs on the plaintiff’s husband or intent to alienate his affections. She explains her association with the plaintiff’s husband by saying that he belonged to a secret order or lodge and that plaintiff’s husband was also a member of a secret order or lodge allied or associated with one the defendant belonged to and that their association began by reason of a custom in such secret order or lodge of selecting a “secret pal” which arrangement lasted for one year.

Concerning the trip to Virginia, the plaintiff offered a photostatic copy of a registration card at a hotel in Front Royal, Virginia. This photostatic copy was not admitted in evidence, but only identified. Likewise, a photostatic copy of a registration card in a motel near the City of Charleston was identified, but not admitted in evidence. These documents were rejected because of the failure to show that the defendant was connected with such registrations.

The defendant attempted to introduce proof to show that the plaintiff and her husband were married in haste after the divorce of the husband, ending a prior marriage, became effective and offered a letter to show that the plaintiff and her husband, prior to their marriage, associated together, although the husband of the plaintiff was then married to a woman other than the plaintiff.

The defendant’s husband testified in behalf of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E.2d 531, 141 W. Va. 33, 1955 W. Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuhn-v-cooper-wva-1955.