Kujek v. . Goldman

44 N.E. 773, 150 N.Y. 176, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 968
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 44 N.E. 773 (Kujek v. . Goldman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kujek v. . Goldman, 44 N.E. 773, 150 N.Y. 176, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 968 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

YAxic, J.

The verdict of the jury has established as the facts of this case, beyond our power to review, that the plaintiff married Katie Moritz in the belief that she was a virtuous girl, induced by the representations of the defendant to that effect, when, in fact, she Avas at the time pregnant by the defendant himself. The case was submitted to the jury upon the theory that if Goldman, knoAving that Katie was unchaste, by false representations that she was virtuous induced the plaintiff to marry her, he was entitled to recover damages, *178 and the jury found a verdict in his favor for $2,000. While no precedent is cited for such an action, it does not follow that there is no remedy for the wrong, because every form of action when brought for the first time must have been without a precedent to support it. Courts sometimes of necessity abandon their search for precedents and yet sustain a recovery upon legal principles clearly applicable to the new state of facts, although there was no direct precedent for it, because there had never been an occasion to make one. In remote times, when actions were so carefully classified that a mistake in name was generally fatal to the case, a form of remedy was devised by the courts to cover new wrongs as they might occur so as to prevent a failure of justice. This was called an “ action on the case,” which was employed where the right to sue resulted from the peculiar circumstances of the case and for which the other forms of action gave no remedy. (26 Am. & Eng. Encye. of Law, 694.) For instance, the action for enticing away a man’s wife, now well established, was at first earnestly resisted upon the ground that no such action had ever been brought. In an early case the court answered this position by saying: The first general objection is that there is no precedent of any such action as this, and that, therefore, it will not lie; and the objection is founded on Lit. s. 108 and Co. Lit. 81, b., and several other books. But this general rule is not applicable to the present case; it would be if there had been no special action on the case before. A special action on the case was introduced for this reason, that the law will never suffer an injury and a damage without a remedy, but there must be new facts in every special action on the case.” ( Winsmore v. Greenbank, Willes, 577, 580.) As was recently said by this court in an action then without precedent: “ If the most that can be said is that the case is novel and is not brought plainly within the limits of some adjudged case, we think such fact not enough to call for a reversal of the judgment.” (Piper v. Hoard, 107 N. Y. 78, 76.)

The question, therefore, is not whether there is' any prece *179 dent for the action, hut whether the defendant inflicted such a wrong upon the plaintiff as resulted in lawful damages. The defendant, by deceit, induced the plaintiff to enter into a marriage contract whereby he assumed certain obligations and became entitled to certain rights. Among the obligations assumed was the duty of supporting 1ns wife in sickness and in health, and he discharged this obligation by expending money to fit up rooms for housekeeping, in keeping house with his wife and caring for her during confinement, when she bore a child not to him but to the defendant. Among the rights acquired was the right to his wife’s services, companionship and society. By the fraudulent conduct of the defendant, he was not only compelled to expend money to support a woman whom he would not otherwise have married, but was also deprived of her services while she was in child-bed. He thus sustained actual damages to some extent, and as the wrong involved not only malice but moral turpitude also, in accordance with the analogies of the law upon the subject, the jury had the right to make the damages exemplary. By thus applying well-settled principles upon which somewhat similar actions are founded, this action can be sustained, because there was a wrongful act in the fraud, that was followed by lawful damages in the loss of money and services.. The fact that the corruption of the plaintiff’s wife was before he married her does not affect the right of action, as the wrong done to him was not by her defilement, but by the representation of the defendant that she was pure when he knew that she was impure, in order to bring about the marriage. It is difficult to see why a fraud, which, if practiced with reference to a contract relating to property merely, would support an action, should not be given the same effect when it involves a contract affecting not only property rights, but also the most sacred relation of life. Fraudulent representations with reference to the amount of property belonging to either party to a proposed marriage, made by a third person for the purpose of bringing about the marriage, are held to constitute an actionable wrong and the *180 usual remedy is to require the person guilty of the fraud to make his representations good. (Piper v. Hoard, supra; Montefiori v. Montefiori, 1 Wm. Blackstone, 363; Atherly on Marriage Settlements, 484.) In such cases the injury is more tangible and the measure of damages more readily applied than in the case before us, but both rest upon the principle that he who by falsehood and fraud induces a man to marry a woman, is guilty of a wrong that may be remedied by an action, the amount of damages to be recovered depending upon the circumstances of the particular case.

We have thus far considered the right of action as resting upon some pecuniary loss, which, although, trifling in amount, may be recovered as a matter of right, leaving it to the jury in their sound discretion, as in a case for the seduction of a child or servant, to amplify the damages by way of punishment and example. We think, however, that the action can be maintained upon a broader and more satisfactory ground, and that is the loss of consortium, or the right of the husband to the conjugal fellowship and society of his wife. The loss of consortium through the misconduct of a third person has long been held an actionable injury, without proof of any pecuniary loss. (Bennett v. Bennett, 116 N. Y. 584; Hutcheson v. Peck, 5 Johns. 196; Hermance v. James, 32 How. Pr. 142.) As has been well said by a recent writer: To entice away, or corrupt the mind and affection of one’s consort is a civil wrong, for which the offender is liable to the injured husband or wife. The gist of the action is not in the loss of assistance, but the loss of consortium of the wife or husband, under which term are usually included the person’s affection, society or aid.” (Bigelow on Torts, 153.) The damages are caused by the wrongful deprivation of that to which the husband or wife is entitled by virtue of the marriage contract. They rest upon the loss of a right which the marriage relation gives and of which it is an essential feature. Whether that right is wrongfully taken away after it is acquired, or the person entitled to it is wrongfully prevented from acquiring it does not change the effect or lessen the injury. While the plain *181

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.E. 773, 150 N.Y. 176, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kujek-v-goldman-ny-1896.