McLain v. Burdette

192 S.W. 648, 174 Ky. 592, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 13, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 648 (McLain v. Burdette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLain v. Burdette, 192 S.W. 648, 174 Ky. 592, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 221 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

This was a suit hy Don McLain, the appellant, against D. Burdette and his wife, the appellees, to recover damages on account of the alleged alienation hy them of the affections of his wife. On the trial of the case the court directed a verdict in favor of D. Burdette, but let the case go to the jury as to Mrs. Burdette. The jury found a verdict in her favor, and from the judgment on this verdict, as well as the ruling of the court in directing a verdict as to D. Burdette, this appeal is prosecuted.

Some twenty years before this suit was brought McLain, who. was a farmer, married a younger sister of Mrs. Burdette, and there was born of this marriage six ■children. The eldest, whose name was Henry, ran away from home in January, 1915, when he was nineteen years old and went to the state of Iowa. The other children remained at home. The Burdettes lived several miles from the McLains, and the relations between the families appear to have been friendly and in every way agreeable until some time in the early summer of 1915. Mrs. Burdette and her younger and only sister, Mrs. McLain, were especially intimate, and as was natural the younger looked to the older for advice and counsel. Nor does the record disclose any noticeable unpleasantness in the McLain family until after the boy Henry left home, but his departure, and the manner of it, which McLain attributed to his wife, seem to have been the cause of much discord between them, culminating, in June, 1915, in a suit brought by Mrs. McLain for divorce. This divorce suit is not in the record, nor does the record show the grounds on which it was based or the disposition made of it. But counsel for appellant in his brief mentions the fact that an absolute divorce was denied and a divorce from bed and board granted.

In this connection it might also be mentioned that it appears that shortly after the suit was filed an injunction [594]*594was issued by the circuit judge on the motion of Mrs. McLain restraining him from interfering with or injuring her or disposing of bis personal property, and that on July 7', 1915, Mrs. McLain signed an agreement so modifying the restraining order as to permit McLain to remain on the farm and cultivate the crops. It may also be here said that there is no evidence that D. Burdette took.any part in attempting to alienate the affections of Mrs. McLain, if they were alienated, and the court properly directed a verdict in bis favor.

The evidence as to the interference of Mrs. Burdette in the domestic affairs of the McLains is confined chiefly to four letters that she wrote to Mrs. McLain after the divorce suit was filed. These letters exhibited an unfriendly spirit towards McLain and mentioned bis name in very disrespectful and uncomplimentary terms, and also advised against any adjustment that might result in the dismissal of the divorce suit. It also appears that in July she wrote a threatening letter to McLain, warning him of the punishment that be would receive if he was not careful in bis conduct.

It should, however, be kept in mind that these letters were written some time after the divorce suit bad been brought by Mrs. McLain, and this divorce suit as well as the judgment therein establish the fact that the affections of Mrs. McLain bad been alienated from her bus-band before Mrs. Burdette actively espoused the cause of her sister, and endeavored, as the letters show, to prevent a reconciliation between her sister and her husband.

McLain was the only material witness in bis own behalf, and, as we have stated, the letters written by Mrs. Burdette, and offered as evidence through him, constituted the substance of the case be sought to.make out against her.

Mrs. Burdette testified, in substance, that in May, 1915, which was before the divorce suit was filed, she received a letter from her sister, which letter appears in the record, illustrating the unpleasant relations that then existed between Mrs. McLain and her husband, and setting out a number of grievances that Mrs. McLain bad against him on account of bis misconduct. Other letters written by her to Mrs. Burdette in July and August, 1915, further serve to show the bad state of feeling and the disagreeable relations that existed between McLain and bis wife.

[595]*595It further appears in her evidence that the letter from Mrs. McLain to her in May was written before she had written any of the letters produced in the evidence of McLain, and the other letters written by her to Mrs. McLain were in response to letters received from her. She further said that before the divorce suit was brought Mrs. McLain told her that McLain used very abusive language toward her and had struck her on several occasions, and after hearing through the letter of May 30th, and in conversations with her sister afterward, about the behavior of McLain, at her sister’s request she accompanied her to see the attorney who brought the divorce suit. She also testified as to the intimate relation that had always existed between her and her sister and said that her sister through life frequently advised with her. That she had no ill feeling towards McLain until her sister told her how he mistreated and abused her, and then she naturally took her sister’s part and did what she could to help in the divorce suit. That she did not initiate the trouble between her sister and McLain or have any part in bringing it about. That the relations between her family and McLain had always been agreeable until his conduct toward her sister caused her to dislike him.

Three of the children of the McLains testified in behalf of Mrs. Burdette and related various acts of McLain toward their mother indicating ill treatment.

With the evidence substantially in the condition stated, the court gave to the jury instructions similar to those approved in Hostetter v. Green, 150 Ky. 551, and although the instructions given are complained of by counsel for appellant, we do not think the objection to them is well taken.

It is also urged that the court committed error in failing to give instruction “A,” reading as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that defendant, Edna Burdette, by herself or in conjunction with others, wantonly or maliciously, by personal interviews or by letters, wilfully undertook to break up plaintiff’s home by alienating the affections of plaintiff’s wife or by intimidating plaintiff, and by such means did break up plaintiff’s family and his home, they will find for plaintiff.”

The idea embraced in this instruction was, we think, embodied in more correct form in the instructions given.

It is also insisted that the court should have given the following instruction based on the threatening letter written by Mrs. Burdette to McLain: “If the jury believe from the evidence that defendant, Edna Burdette, [596]*596with the intent to intimidate plaintiff and to drive him. from his home and family, wrote and sent to him an anonymous letter threatening him with serious bodily harm or death unless he should desert his home and 'family, they will find for plaintiff.”

This instruction had no place in the case, and the court properly refused to give it. The cause of action relied on by plaintiff was the alienation by the defendants of the affections of his wife, and to this cause of action the evidence as well as the instructions should have been confined. If Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 648, 174 Ky. 592, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclain-v-burdette-kyctapp-1917.