Moulin v. Monteleone

115 So. 447, 165 La. 169, 1927 La. LEXIS 1896
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1927
DocketNo. 28466.
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 115 So. 447 (Moulin v. Monteleone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moulin v. Monteleone, 115 So. 447, 165 La. 169, 1927 La. LEXIS 1896 (La. 1927).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

This is a suit for damages for alienation of a wife’s affections. It is said to be the first instance where such a cause or right of action has ever been asserted in Louisiana. The suit was dismissed on an exception of no cause or right of action, and the plaintiff has appealed from the decision.

There is no positive law to be found on the subject, in the Civil Code, or in any statute or in the jurisprudence of this state. There is no suggestion or intimation of such a right of action to be found anywhere in the provisions of the Civil Code on the subject of marriage, or of the relative rights and obligations of husband and wife, or the dissolution of the contract of marriage, or the causes or the consequences thereof, or on the subject of damages, arising either ex delicto or ex contractu. Articles 119 and 120 of the Code declare that the husband and wife owe to each other fidelity, support and assistance; that the wife must live with her husband and follow him wherever he chooses to' reside; and that he, in turn, must provide for her wants according to his means. It seems strange that the law, in saying what the husband and wife owe to each other, does not mention love and affection; perhaps it is because the law undertakes only to control and regulate human conduct — not human nature. As Ralph Waldo Emerson observed, laws do not make men; men make laws.

There are several very obvious reasons why none of the great lawyers who have graced Louisiana’s ' bar has ever heretofore thought that an action for damages for alienation of a wife’s affections would be consonant with the system of law peculiar to Louisiana. In the first place, the damages which are allowed in those jurisdictions where the offense constitutes a cause of action for damages are declared to be — and they are essentially — punitive or exemplary damages. And, as this court has said many times, “Our law does not authorize the infliction of punitive damages in civil cases.” Serio v. American Brewing Co., 141 La. 291, 74 So. 998, L. R. A. 1917E, 516; Vincent v. Morgan’s La. & T. R. R. & S. S. Co., 140 La. 1027, 74 So. 541; Burt v. Shreveport Railway Co., 142 La. 308, 76 So. 723; Lee . Lumber Co. v. Union Naval Stores Co., 142 La. 521, 77 So. 131; Dunson v. Baker, 144 La. 167, 80 So. 238; Howell v. Vicksburg, S. & P. Ry. Co., 144 La. 428, 80 So. 613; Hanna v. Otis, 151 La. 851, 92 So. 360; Selser v. Revol, 152 La. 454, 93 So. 675; Janssen Catering Co. v. Abadie, 157 La. 357, 102 So. 428; Mundy v. Phillips, 157 La. 445, 102 *173 So. 519; Spearman v. Toye Bros. Taxicab Co. (No. 28141, 164 La. 677, 114 So. 591.

Tbe idea of allowing punitive damages, in a civil action for tort, is perhaps a relic of the obsolete remedy called “appeal,” which Blackstone, vol. 4, p. 383, says “was an accusation by a private subject against another for some heinous crime, demanding punishment on account of the particular injury suffered, rather than for the offense against the public.” “It had its origin,” says the author, “in those times when a private pecuniary satisfaction called a weregild was constantly paid to the party injured, or his relations, to expiate enormous offenses.” Wereffild meant the money value of a human being. The remedy called “appeal,” in the early periods of- the common law, was discouraged and virtually abolished by a statute of Westminster II, 13 Edward I, c. 12, requiring that, if the appellee should be acquitted, the appellant should suffer a year’s imprisonment and pay a fine to the king, besides damages to the appellee, etc. 4 Blackstone, 316. In Louisiana, if a public wrong causes personal or private injury to an individual, the one wrong is not confused with or swallowed up in the other, but the public wrong is dealt with alone in the courts exercising criminal jurisdiction, and the private wrong in the courts exercising civil jurisdiction.

The case of Massy v. The Marquis of Headfort, in County Clare, Ireland, in 1804, for damages for alienation of a wife’s affections, is one of the most memorable in Anglo-Saxon annuís. It was made so, not so much by the prominence of the parties, as by the greatness of Curran’s speech to the jury, and by the tragic background for it, in that Curran had only recently lost his own wife in the same terrible way. Although he represented the plaintiff in the case, and spoke for damages, and personified his client’s cause in his own life, he gave utterance, perhaps'unconsciously, but in a way almost gigantic,- to the fundamental proposition that compensation in money is not the right remedy for loss of a wife’s affections. Turning from the jury to the presiding judge, Curran said:

“Oh, what woe would have been saved if you. my Lord, had met the adulterer when he arrived at the bank of the river with the. ill-fated fugitive, and had spoken to him thus: ‘Pause, my Lord, while there is yet a moment for reflection. What are your motives, what your views, what your prospects, from what you are about to do? You cannot look to the chance of marrying this wretched fugitive. Between you and such an event there are two sepulchers to pass. [The Marquis of’ Headfort had a wife, and Mrs. Massy, of course, a husband.] What are your inducements ? Is it love, think you? No. Do not give that name to any attraction you can find in the faded refuse of a violated bed. Love is a noble and generous passion; it can be founded only on a pure and ardent friendship, on an exalted respect, on an implicit confidence in its object. Could you repose upon her faith Í Look in her face, my Lord; she is at this moment giving you the violation of the most sacred of human obligations as the pledge of her fidelity. She is giving you the most irrefragable proof that as she is deserting her husband for you, so would she without scruple abandon you for another.’ ”

The damages sought by the Reverend Charles Massy from The Marquis of Headfort were not compensatory, but punitive or exemplary, damages. That was acknowledged in the speeches by all of the- great array of counsel who appeared, and was repeated in Baron Smith’s charge to the jury, when he said;

“The principle is that this sort of action partakes of the nature of a penal prosecution, and that large and exemplary damages are usually awarded.”

Another reason why, in Louisiana, a suit of this kind is untenable is that, as to the rights of the parties:

“The law considers marriage in no other view than as a civil contract.” Rev. Civ. Code, art. 86.

And it is well settléd, in Louisiana, that there is no right of action for damages ex de *175 licto against one who induces another to violate his or her contract with a third person. See Kline v. Eubanks, 109 La. 241, 33 So. 211, and B. J. Wolf & Sons v. New Orleans Tailormade Pants Co., 113 La. 388, 37 So. 2, 67 L. R. A. 65, quoting, Cooley on Torts (2d Ed.) p. 581, viz.:

“An 'action cannot, in general, be maintained for inducing a third person to break his contract with the plaintiff; the consequence, after all, being a broken contract, for which the party to the contract may have Ms remedy by suing on it. But if the third person was induced to break his contract by deception, it may be different.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 447, 165 La. 169, 1927 La. LEXIS 1896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moulin-v-monteleone-la-1927.