Lanigan v. Lanigan
This text of 222 Mass. 198 (Lanigan v. Lanigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The only questions on the record are whether the defendant’s requests for rulings, that the evidence is insufficient to overcome the presumption that in all the defendant said and did he acted under the influence of natural affection and for what he conceived to be the real good of his son, and that “upon all the evidence in the case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover,” [200]*200should have been given. The plaintiff sues her father-in-law for alienation of her husband’s affections and for enticing him to leave her home whereby she lost his “ company, society, aid, and assistance.” To entitle her to go to the jury she was required to show that the defendant’s conduct was actuated by malice, and that through his efforts her husband’s affections were alienated, and he was induced to separate from her. A father from parental affection may advise his son to discontinue the marital relation, and no action lies if such advice, honestly given, results in a separation. But if because of hostility and ill will to his son’s wife he procures the separation, her conjugal rights are invaded, justification fails, malice is proved and damages may be recovered. Geromini v. Brunelle, 214 Mass. 492, and cases cited. Nolin v. Pearson, 191 Mass. 283.
The question ordinarily is one of fact. If not expressly conceded, the following facts were uncontroverted. The plaintiff’s husband, a man of mature years,
We shall not review the testimony in detail. It comprises [201]*201nearly twenty-eight quarto pages. A reference to the material portions will suffice. The jury could find that for nearly six years the plaintiff and her husband dwelt in harmony and contentment. A change, however, in their relations then took place, initiated by the husband. Reproached by his wife, she testified, that “he told me the reason of the coldness was on account of his father; that he had to please one or the other, and that they were always nagging him to leave me, and it was not his fault; that he was between two fires; that he did not know just what to do; he did not know which one to please, the father or I.” It appeared that, although there was no open matrimonial rupture, an interview with counsel purporting to act for her husband shortly followed. What then took place was for the jury. They could say that she was asked to consent to a divorce or some form of separation “in order to please his father.” And that at a subsequent meeting her husband, when blamed for his conduct, replied that “he was forced to do it by his father.” Nor does it seem to have been disputed that thereafter the husband and wife occupied separate rooms, and he began to absent himself for long periods. The defendant contended that his absence became necessary because of engagements as a travelling salesman. But the jury were at liberty to believe the plaintiff who testified that, upon asking the defendant where her husband was, he replied that “that was his business and not mine;” and that when in town during the last two years preceding his death he did not return to his home, but lived at his father’s house where he sickened and died. It was also for the jury to determine whether after denying that his son was with him, and in response to the plaintiff’s request that her husband should be sent back because “when he is sick, his place is at home,” the defendant said, “he is mine, and I will keep him.”
We need go no further. The jury manifestly would have been warranted in finding that through the defendant’s efforts, inspired by ill will toward the plaintiff, her husband’s affections were alienated and that he was induced to abandon his home and to live separate and apart from her. It follows that the requests for rulings were denied properly, and that the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.
“At the time of the marriage, both husband and wife were about thirty-three years of age.”
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222 Mass. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanigan-v-lanigan-mass-1915.