Martin v. Elliotte

47 Va. Cir. 59, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 274
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedJune 5, 1998
DocketCase No. (Law) 160440
StatusPublished

This text of 47 Va. Cir. 59 (Martin v. Elliotte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Elliotte, 47 Va. Cir. 59, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 274 (Va. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

By Judge Gerald Bruce lee

This matter came before the Court on Defendant Bruce Elliotte’s Motion to Strike the Plaintiffs Evidence and for entry of judgment in favor of the Defendant. The issue presented is whether the Defendant is liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress or negligent infliction of emotional distress for engaging in an adulterous affair with the Plaintiff’s wife while simultaneously providing the Plaintiff, his friend, with advice about how to save his marriage.

Plaintiff, Keith A. Martin, contends that the Defendant is liable in tort under the facts of this case. Specifically, Plaintiff contends that Defendant is liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress or negligent infliction of emotional distress for intentionally misleading him with advice about saving his marriage, while sneaking into Plaintiffs home at night to have sexual relations with Plaintiff’s wife as Plaintiff and his children slept upstairs in the marital residence. Plaintiff contends that as a result of his discovery of Defendant’s adulterous affair with Plaintiffs wife and betrayal of their friendship, Plaintiff suffered severe emotional distress that impacted his health and his business. Plaintiff testified at trial that he did not file this lawsuit against his former “friend,” the Defendant, for money, but he did so to vindicate his feelings and to hold the Defendant accountable for his actions.

Defendant contends that he is not civilly liable for his admitted affair with Plaintiffs wife because such causes of action are barred by the Virginia Heart Balm Statute, § 8.01-220 of the 1950 Code of Virginia, as amended. [60]*60Defendant further denies that the Plaintiff suffered legally cognizable emotional distress such as to fall outside of the proscription of the Virginia Heart Balm Statute. Alternatively, Defendant contends that the Plaintiff’s evidence of intentional infliction of emotional distress or negligent infliction of emotional distress is insufficient as a matter of law and drat the Defendant’s motion to strike at the close of Plaintiff’s evidence should be granted.

After consideration of the evidence at trial, the parties’ arguments, and the authorities cited therein, the Court grants Defendant’s Motion to Strike, vacates the verdict in favor of the Plaintiff, and enters judgment in favor of the Defendant. The Defendant’s Motion to Strike is granted for the reasons that follow.

I. Factual Background

The evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff at the close of the evidence is recited in the Factual Background.

Plaintiff and Defendant and their respective spouses were close friends and next door neighbors. As couples, they frequently socialized and vacationed together. The parties often spent time in each other’s homes. In fact, each had a key to the other’s home and could enter the other’s home freely. The parties’ children also freely moved in and out of the others homes. Plaintiff and Defendant and their spouses had a bond of friendship and trust.

One day in October 1996, Plaintiff’s wife unexpectedly asked him for a divorce. Stunned by his wife’s sudden decision to seek a divorce, Plaintiff sought out his “friend,” the Defendant, to talk about the shocking news and what he should do. Initially, Defendant expressed dismay at the situation. Defendant then offered to talk to Plaintiff’s wife to see if he could find out the cause of her discontent and to encourage her to preserve the marriage. Defendant told Plaintiff that he would suggest marital counseling to Plaintiff’s wife.

Plaintiff and his wife pursued marital counseling together, and, from December 1996 until February 1997, Plaintiff pursued marital counseling individually. However, Plaintiff testified that he was still depressed by the idea of a divorce and the possible loss of relations with his wife and children. He stated that he did not feel like working and could not eat or sleep. Plaintiff saw his family physician and was prescribed Valium once between December and January 1997.

Between October 1996 and February 1997, Plaintiff continued to share confidential conversations about Ms marriage with Defendant and Defendant continued to listen to his friend’s concerns. Plaintiff, in conversation with [61]*61Defendant, brought up the idea that maybe Plaintiffs wife was having an affair. Defendant dismissed the idea of an affair. Plaintiff then asked his wife whether she was having an affair, and she denied it. During marriage counseling, Plaintiffs wife again denied that she was having an affair.

The relationship between Plaintiff and the Defendant changed abruptly on February 4, 1997, when Plaintiff discovered that Defendant was having an affair with Plaintiffs wife. In or around December 1996, Plaintiff began to suspect that his wife and Defendant were having an affair. Plaintiff hired a private investigator to conduct surveillance of his wife. During this time ñame, Plaintiffs wife moved out of the marital bedroom into the basement of the marital home. The private investigator placed a hidden camera in her basement bedroom. On February 4, 1997, Plaintiff removed the videotape from the camera, drove to his parent’s home, and watched the videotape for the first time with his mother. The videotape showed the Defendant and Plaintiff’s wife engaged in sexual relations in her bed in the basement of the marital home. The evidence revealed that, at the time of the videotaped sexual liaison, Plaintiff and his children were asleep upstairs in the marital home.

Plaintiff testified that, as a result of seeing the taped evidence of infidelity, he experienced severe emotional distress. He said that, upon viewing the videotape, he was “sick to his stomach.” He testified that he felt betrayed and that he found his wife’s and the Defendant’s conduct to be “disgusting, sickening, and reprehensible.” Plaintiff testified further that, as a result of the Defendant’s affair and betrayal, he suffered depression and did not feel like working. He stated that he experienced sleep disturbance and weight loss of approximately 19 pounds following fixe discovery of the affair. Plaintiff testified that after he learned of the affair, his wife and the Defendant persisted in their illicit relations publicly, which made him feel worse. Plaintiff’s marriage counselor testified that, when she saw Plaintiff after February 7, 1997, he was extremely sad, depressed, distraught, and agitated by the betrayal. After February 7, 1997, Plaintiff did not see a psychiatrist or other mental health professional, other than the marriage counselor.

Plaintiff testified further that his business was affected by the Defendant’s adulterous affair with his wife. Plaintiff had been a successful entrepreneur who managed six food service businesses and a retail business in family-owned corporations, and he also had engaged in sales. After February 7,1997, however, he lost his desire to work and was distracted. He missed some sales appointments and was not highly productive. Plaintiff moved down from being the number one salesman to being number three in sales in the family business. He failed to pay some sales taxes and the businesses were assessed penalties by the state. Plaintiff and his father testified that Plaintiff failed to timely [62]*62renew a business lease option, which cost the family business $80,000 to renegotiate. Plaintiffs wages were not reduced during this time period, and he did not sustain any monetary wage loss.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Va. Cir. 59, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-elliotte-vaccfairfax-1998.