Pollard v. Ward

233 S.W. 14, 289 Mo. 275, 20 A.L.R. 936, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 19, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 14 (Pollard v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollard v. Ward, 233 S.W. 14, 289 Mo. 275, 20 A.L.R. 936, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 17 (Mo. 1921).

Opinions

The plaintiff recovered judgment in the the Circuit Court of Linn County, Missouri. A motion for new trial filed by defendant was sustained by the trial court, and from that order the plaintiff has appealed. *Page 280

The petition charges that the plaintiff has been damaged because of criminal conversation of the defendant with the plaintiff's wife, and alienation of her affections. The answer of defendant, after a general denial, pleads estoppel. It alleges that the wife of the plaintiff, Hope Pollard, on February 24, 1917, instituted a divorce proceeding in Ray County, Missouri, against the plaintiff herein; that in June 1917, a decree of divorce was granted to said Hope Pollard, the finding of the judgment being that the defendant therein, Earnest Pollard, was the guilty party, and the said Hope Pollard was the innocent party; that the alleged facts recited in plaintiff's petition, as to the unfaithful acts and conduct of Hope Pollard toward her husband, were reported to plaintiff and within his knowledge long before the 24th day of February, 1917, and by reason of plaintiff's acts and conduct his failure to answer the petition of the said Hope Pollard, and by the judgment in the divorce proceeding, plaintiff is estopped from maintaining his action herein. The suit was brought in Caldwell County; change of venue was granted to Linn County, where the trial was had, beginning on the third day of June, 1919.

At the time of the occurrences complained of the plaintiff, Pollard, thirty-eight years old, lived on his farm in Caldwell County with his wife and four children. He separated from his wife January 29, 1917. Another child was born to his wife two or three months afterward. The defendant, William Ward, then a single man, lived with his parents about a quarter of a mile from the Pollard home.

A volume of evidence was introduced by the plaintiff tending to prove improper intimacy between the plaintiff and the defendant's wife, which ran over a peiod of two or three years before the separation, January 29, 1917. A number of witnesses, including neighbors and others, testified that they saw the defendant visit plaintiff's home during plaintiff's absence, and apparent secret meetings between Hope Pollard and the defendant. *Page 281 Some of the witnesses swore to seeing acts of a criminal nature between them.

On January 28, 1917, plaintiff became convinced that a clandestine meeting had taken place between his wife and Ward, and procured bloodhounds which traced the tracks of someone to Ward's house. Plaintiff separated from his wife the next day. It is unnecessary to state the evidence any further than to say it is sufficiently clear and substantial to support the allegations of the petition.

The defendant denied all charges, and introduced evidence to show his good character. He introduced the pleadings and judgment in the divorce proceeding begun by Hope Pollard a short time after the separation from her husband. Other facts necessary in consideration of the points to be determined will be noted later in the opinion.

The jury in their verdict assessed the plaintiff's actual damages at five thousand dollars and his punitive damages at seven thousand dollars. The motion for new trial was sustained on the ground that the matters charged and put in issue by the petition in the divorce proceeding "were largely if not entirely matters involved in the present trial." The trial judge clearly stated his reason for sustaining the motion, thus:

"Under these facts the court is of the opinion that having failed to deny the allegations of the said divorce petition and having made a money settlement upon the charges confessed in it, and having confessed the truth by having failed to answer, plaintiff in this case is estopped from further asserting the infidelity of said wife and ought not in good conscience be permitted to maintain this action."

The petition in the divorce proceeding alleged that the defendant in that suit, Earnest R. Pollard, had offered his wife, Hope Pollard, such indignities as to make her condition intolerable. The indignities enumerated consisted of several specifications of cruel and barbarous treatment, abuse and villification. The petition *Page 282 then alleged that on the evening of January 28th, the plaintiff, Hope Pollard, left the house for a few minutes and when the defendant saw his wife coming back he charged her with meeting a man "out there," and . . . "repeatedly said and accused plaintiff of having met the son of Mr. Ward that night, . . . and plaintiff says that the defendant has repeatedly since then accused the plaintiff of improper relations with other men and has ordered her to leave him."

The judgment in the divorce proceeding recites a finding that during all the time plaintiff faithfully demeaned herself and discharged all of her duties to the defendant as his wife, "but that the defendant cursed and abused her at divers times and did such other and improper conduct towards her as his wife as to render her condition intolerable as set forth in plaintiff's petition." Alimony to the plaintiff was allowed in the sum of four thousand dollars, and she was required to execute a quit-claim deed to defendant for all the land of defendant. The acknowledgment of the receipt of such deed is recited in the decree.

I. The general rule is that a decree of divorce does not bar an action for previous alienation of affections, or criminal conversation or seduction. [21 Cyc. 1626; DeFord v.Estoppel by Johnson, 251 Mo. 244, l.c. 253 to 256, and casesJudgment. there cited.] This court in the opinion by GRAVES, J., in that case, said at page 255, speaking of cases cited:

"They declare the general doctrine that although the jury may believe that plaintiff's wife obtained a divorce from him, and that she made plaintiff's misconduct ground for obtaining said divorce, yet if the jury believe that notwithstanding such misconduct on the part of the plaintiff, his wife would not have separated or remained apart from him, or sued him for a divorce if it had not been for the acts, conduct and influence of defendant toward her; and that defendant purposely and intentionally, by such acts, conduct and influence, *Page 283 induced her to so separate or remain apart from plaintiff, or sue him for a divorce; then, the fact that plaintiff's wife obtained such a divorce on account of plaintiff's misconduct, does not, of itself, constitute any defense to this suit."

This is quoted from Modisett v. McPike, 74 Mo. l.c. 646. The DeFord case is reported in 46 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1083, with copious notes citing numerous cases where the subject is illustrated. There is no direct allegation in the petition for divorce which puts in issue the criminal conversation of Ward with the plaintiff's wife alleged in this case, so that it could be said to have been adjudicated in that case.

The point made by the defendant, and the point in the mind of the court in sustaining the motion for new trial, is that the plaintiff could have defeated his wife's suit for divorce by proving the facts as to her relations with the defendant; that the very issues presented for determination in this case must have been determined there, because plaintiff failed to present a defense to that divorce proceeding, which was complete if true; the judgment, therefore, is conclusive that his wife was not guilty of misconduct.

In taking that position the respondent assumes that a judgment in a divorce proceeding is different from other judgments in that it is binding upon others than parties to it. There was such a holding in the case of Gleason v. Knapp,

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 14, 289 Mo. 275, 20 A.L.R. 936, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-ward-mo-1921.