Luick v. Arends

132 N.W. 353, 21 N.D. 614, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 137
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 132 N.W. 353 (Luick v. Arends) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luick v. Arends, 132 N.W. 353, 21 N.D. 614, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 137 (N.D. 1911).

Opinion

Goss, J.

This action is for damages for defendant’s alienation of the affections of plaintiff’s wife. The complaint charges defendant with alienating the wife’s affections, and that this resulted in the separation of plaintiff’s family. Plaintiff recovered a judgment ordered on a verdict for $3,300. More than two weeks were occupied in the tidal of the case, and the record is very voluminous, containing nearly four hundred assignments of error. The following statement, with the facts appearing in the opinion, will sufficiently explain the law governing the case:

Plaintiff and wife were married in 1887; have three children living, whose ages range from seven to fifteen years. They lived in Iowa until 1900, when plaintiff came to Richland county, his wife and family joining him there in the spring of 1901; there they remained until their separation on February 27, 1904, when the wife, Mary Luick, after a division of the property between husband and wife then had, removed to Iowa, taking the children with her, plaintiff remaining. The wives of plaintiff and defendant were half-sisters. Defendant is, and always has been, a resident of Iowa. Mary Luick’s mother resides in Iowa, and it was to her place that the wife went on her leaving the home of plaintiff.

Plaintiff and wife had little domestic trouble until they came to North Dakota, although there is some testimony of isolated instances of alleged mistreatment of the wife by the plaintiff during their residence in Iowa. On the trial the wife testifies to many exhibitions of temper by her husband toward her from shortly after her marriage, and charges him with frequently applying toward her vulgar and obscene epithets, and that this, with their frequent disagreements, caused her loss of affection for him prior to her removal to North Dakota. That thereafter she frequently wrote to her relatives in Iowa, among them her brother, mother, and defendant’s wife, complaining to them of plaintiff’s treatment of her, and stated her intention of leaving plaintiff. Defendant and plaintiff had always been friends and dealt in a business way with each other, in the course of which transactions defendant purchased lands in plaintiff’s neighborhood in North Dakota. Defend[621]*621ant had been at plaintiff’s home here on several occasions. On the 22d of February, 1904, plaintiff’s wife’s brother, accompanied by the defendant, appeared at plaintiff’s residence, and shortly afterward announced that they had come to settle up matters between plaintiff and his wife and assist the wife and children back to Iowa. As to what occurred from this point on the testimony is very conflicting, plaintiff testifying to facts which, if true, show an interference by the defendant in plaintiff’s family affairs, ending with the separation of plaintiff and wife, and in the preparation, execution, and delivery of articles of agreement effecting the division of the property and custody of the children, the wife securing deeds to the lands, and removing with the children to Iowa, accompanied by her brother and the defendant. After the expiration of one year and three days, or practically as soon as the wife had acquired the one-year’s residence required by the statutes of Iowa before commencing an action for divorce, she instituted such an action against the plaintiff, charging him with cruel and inhuman treatment endangering her life during a period covering practically their entire married life, and asking a divorce, alimony, and custody of the children. The plaintiff appeared in the divorce proceedings and charged his wife with desertion, based on her leaving his home in North Dakota, February 27, 1904, and litigated on the merits the matters so put in issue in the divorce case in Iowa. The trial court granted the wife the custody of the children, alimony, and a divorce from the plaintiff, on the grounds of his cruelty alleged, finding against the plaintiff on his cross bill charging her with desertion. Plaintiff appealed to the supreme court of Iowa, which appeal was pending at the time of the trial of this case against defendant, Arends, in district court, but has subsequently been decided, as reported in 132 Iowa, 302, 109 N. W. 783, in favor of the wife by an affirmance by the Iowa supreme court of the trial court’s decision.

This case, Luick v. Arends, was commenced in January, 1905, prior to the commencement of said divorce proceedings, and before the year’s residence had been acquired by plaintiff’s wife in Iowa. The trial of this action was had, commencing in February, 1906. The defendant pleaded the foregoing divorce proceedings, excepting the affirmance by the supreme court of Iowa of the decree of the district court, as a bar to the action and as estopping plaintiff from recovery, claiming the divorce on the merits in Iowa was an adjudication of all facts found and issues determined in such action, against plaintiff’s alleged cause [622]*622of action in this case, and an estoppel by judgment precluding plaintiff’s recovery. On tbe trial defendant, in support of his answer, offered tbe Iowa decree of divorce, and tbe same was received in evidence; be also offered in evidence properly exemplified copies of the-summons, complaint, and answer of tbe parties litigant in tbe Iowa divorce case; this after the court bad received in evidence the Iowa, statutes as a foundation for tbe offer of the said pleadings. On plaintiff’s objection, such offer of proof was rejected and the proof excluded by the trial court. The decree of divorce received did not state tbe grounds upon which tbe same was granted, and defendant maintains that tbe pleadings upon which tbe decree was granted are admissible; that tbe same would, when construed with tbe decree, operate as a bar to this action, and are also admissible as independent evidence tending to refute tbe averments of plaintiff’s complaint, and substantiate tbe defense that tbe wife left plaintiff because of her loss of affection occasioned by plaintiff’s cruelty toward her.

At tbe outset then, we are confronted with tbe question whether the-decree of divorce granted tbe Avife from her husband, tbe plaintiff, upon tbe court’s findings of cruel and inhuman treatment of her by tbe plaintiff, endangering her life, covering tbe identical period of time embraced within tbe pleadings and eAÚdence in this action between plaintiff and a third person, is res judicata or an estoppel by judgment on those questions and plaintiff’s treatment of bis wife, under investigation in this case against Arends, who was a stranger to tbe divorce action. Tbe result of tbe divorce action was a judgment against this plaintiff, finding him at fault in tbe disrupting of bis family relations, and adjudging tbe dissolution of tbe marriage because thereof, and justifying her action in leaving him. If tbe findings and judgment in tbe divorce proceedings are binding upon tbe plaintiff in this case, they absolutely preclude bis recovery, and further discussion of tbe case and errors alleged Avould be needless.

Tbe authorities are practically unanimous in their holdings that tbe decree is admissible, and is res judicata as against tbe world, only to tbe extent of judicially establishing tbe prior existence of tbe marriage and its dissolution and the status of tbe parties thereafter under tbe decree. To this extent only is tbe divorce judgment a judgment in rem and res judicata in this action; tbe divorce decree establishes its own existence only, and thereafter tbe status of tbe former husband [623]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 353, 21 N.D. 614, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luick-v-arends-nd-1911.