Panther v. McKnight

1926 OK 937, 256 P. 916, 125 Okla. 134, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 23, 1926
Docket17374
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1926 OK 937 (Panther v. McKnight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Panther v. McKnight, 1926 OK 937, 256 P. 916, 125 Okla. 134, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 13 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

JARMAN, C.

This was an action by Belle McKnight against Clark Panther for the recovery of damages based upon two causes of action, resulting in judgment for plaintiff on both causes of action, from which the defendant has appealed.

As the first cause of action, the petition of the plaintiff alleges that on or about July 1, 1923, the plaintiff and the defendant entered into a marriage contract, and thereafter the defendant procured plaintiff to go with him to Joplin, Mo., on or about August 9. 1923, where the defendant obtained a marriage license and a marriage ceremony was performed, and the plaintiff, in good faith, believing that the defendant and she were lawfully married, entered into* the marriage relation with the defendant, and cohabited with him as his wife from that date until September 23, 1923, when the defendant abandoned the plaintiff and instituted suit to annul said marriage; that after said marriage ceremony and the plaintiff had cohabited with the defendant as his wife, she learned that the defendant, at the time of the performance of said marriage ceremony and entering into the marriage relation, had not been divorced from his former wife for a period of six months as required by law, and that said marriage was void; that the plalintiff advised defendant that shfe had learned of this condition, and the defendant thereupon agreed that upon the expiration of six months from the date of his divorce from his former wife he would enter into a new and legal marriage with the plaintiff, to which the plaintiff agreed; that the defendant failed and refused to marry the plaintiff after the expiration of said six months’ period; that after said marriage ceremony, and believing that she was the lawful wife of the defendant, she continued to live with the defendant, who held her out to the public generally as hi-s wife, and introduced her as such, and upon learning that she was not legally married to the defendant and upon his desertion of her, she was gretatly humiliated and suffered mentjal anguish, and by1 the failure and refusal of the defendant to fulfill his promise and agreement to legally marry the plaintiff, after the expiration of six months from the date of his divorce from his former wife, the plaintiff was deprived of the society, affection, comfort, and support of the defendant, and all to her damage in the sum of $20,000.

As the second cause of action, the petition of the plaintiff alleges that, as a result of her cohabitation • with the defendant, under the belief that she was his wife, the defendant communicated to her a certain venereal disease, thereby seriously and permanently impairing her health and necessitating- undergoing painful medical treatment, resulting in a condition which will ultimately require a serious operation; that by reason thereof she has been damaged in the sum of $10,000.

The first assignment of error urged by the defendant is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to plaintiff’s petition on the ground of misjoinder of causes of action. Defendant insistp that the cause of action for breach of promise to marry is founded on contract, and the remaining cause of action, that defendant communicated to plaintiff a venereal disease, is one. based on tort; and that such causes of action cannot be joined in the same petition.’

Section 226, O. S. 1921, provides that the “plaintiff may unite several causes of action in th'e same petition * * * where they all arise out of * * * the same transaction.” It is well settled that tort and contract may be joined in separate counts in the same petition when they arise out of thé same transaction. Aylesbury Merc. Co. v. Fitch, 22 Okla. 475, 99 Pac. 1089. The determining question, therefore, is whether the two causes of action above referred to arose out of the same transaction. The term ‘.‘transaction,” as employed in said section 266, supra, has inference to all the acts which go to make up one entire group, system, or plan. Stone v. Case, 34 Okla. 5, 124 Pac. 960. The group, system, or plan, out of which the said causes of action arose in the instant casé, was the attempted marriage of the parties *136 at Joplin, Moj, and their subsequent cohabitation, a concomitant of marriage; the cause of action for communication of venereal disease, a tort, .and the cause of action for 'breach of promise of marriage, based on contract, arose and grew out of the same transaction, and, therefore, were properly joined.

The defendant insists that the court erred in rendering judgment against him on plaintiff’s first cause of .action, for the reason that the verdict was not supported by the evidence and was contrary to law. Under this assignment, defendant contends that the evidence shows that defendant’s promise to remarry plaintiff, after the expiration of the six months’ period, was based upon the immoral consideration that the parties should continue their illegal cohabitation until the time arrived when they could be married legally. If the consideration for the promise to remarry was based upon the consideration of future illicit cohabition, an immoral consideration, such promise is void. The jury was instructed to this effect, but, by the verdict, the jury found that the promise to remarry was not based upon such consideration. and the evidence fully supports the verdict on that issue.

As a second proposition, under the assignment that the verdict is not supported by the evidence and is contrary to law, the defendant contends that plaintiff was incapacitated from entering into a contract of marriage for the reason that she was afflicted with a venereal disease. Defendant bases this contention on section 9008, C. S. 1921, which provides that any person who shall, after becoming an infected person marry any other person or expose any other person by the act of cohabitation or sexual' intercourse to such venereal disease, shall be guilty of a felony, and upon conviction shall be punished ,by confinement in the penitentiary for not less than' one nor more than five years. It is sufficient to say in disposing of this contention that the venereal disease with which the plaintiff was suffering was communicated to her toy the defendant, and the defendant will not be permitted to take advantage of his own wrong to escape liability on the contract.

• The defendant insists that the plaintiff cannot recover on her second cause of action .for the reason that the disease complained of was communicated during the time • she ¡illegally cohabited with the defendant.. The defendant insists that the plaintiff violated the law of this state, by illegally cohabiting ¡with the defendant, and invokes the ¡rule that, where a party suffers an injury while violating a public law, the other party being also a transgressor, he cannot recover for the injury if the unlawful act was the cause thereof. White v. Shawnee Milling Co., 94 Okla. 260, 221 Pac. 1029. There is a well-recognized exception to the foregoing rule, however, which recognizes that the parties must be in pari delicto in order for the rule to obtain. 1 C. J. 960. If the parties to a transaction which is in violation of a public law are in pari delicto with each other, each is estopped to take advantage of his own wrong for the purpose of recovering damages for an injury sustained by the wrongful act of the other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 937, 256 P. 916, 125 Okla. 134, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panther-v-mcknight-okla-1926.