Root v. Root

31 F. Supp. 562, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3421
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedFebruary 5, 1940
DocketNo. 21185-W
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 F. Supp. 562 (Root v. Root) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Root v. Root, 31 F. Supp. 562, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3421 (N.D. Cal. 1940).

Opinion

WELSH, District Judge.

On April 6, 1939, plaintiff, Elvira Root, instituted this action against the defendant, Louise Brown Root, for the alleged alienation of the affections of plaintiff’s husband. At the time of the commencement of this action, California Civil Code, 'Section 49, provided in part as follows:

“The rights of personal relations forbid:

“1. The abduction of a husband from his wife * * *.”

During the pendency of this action, which has not yet proceeded to judgment, the portion of California Civil Code, Section 49, quoted above was repealed by the legislature and, effective at the same time as the repeal of the above quoted portion of the code section, there was added to the California Civil Code, Section 43.5 which provided in part as follows:

“No cause of action arises for:

“(a) Alienation of affection. * * * ”

The defendant now moves to dismiss this action because of the repeal of the herein quoted portion of Section 49 of the California Civil Code and the enactment of Section 43.5 of the California Civil Code, St.1939, p. 1245, having the effect of abolishing all rights of action for alienation of affection. Defendant’s motion is predicated upon the theory that plaintiff’s alleged cause of action was based entirely upon a statutory right. And that with the repeal of the statute conferring the right upon her, her cause of action, not having then been reduced to final judgment, was extinguished. Plaintiff, on the other hand, claims that her right to recover for the alleged alienation of her husband’s affections is not merely a statutory right. That it is a right recognized at common law. And that the accrual to her of this right before the statutory changes in California abolishing causes of action for alienation of affection became vested property in her of which she could not by statute become divested.

In the determination of the question whether plaintiff’s right is purely statutory, or one recognized at common law, the court may look to but is not bound by the English cases interpreting the common law. The decisions of the courts of this country interpreting the English common law can be followed even though they be directly contrary to the decisions of the English courts on the precise question. Callet v. Alioto, 210 Cal. 65, 290 P. 438.

Defendant has referred us to but one English case as support for her contention that no right of action in favor of a wife for the alienation of her husband’s affections was known to the English common law. That case is Lynch v. Knight, 9 H.L. Cas. 577, 11 Eng.Rep. 854. It appears that in that case, the action was one of slander of a married woman brought in the name of herself and her husband. The case was decided adversely to the plaintiffs but upon a ground of no interest here. And the question whether such an action may ever be brought by a wife for the loss of the society and affection of her husband resulting from slanderous words spoken of her was left open. As a moot question, the judges were divided in their opinions. The Lord Chancellor expressed the view that if in such an action the wife could show loss and injury, the action should lie; that loss of consortium or conjugal society [564]*564should not be considered a loss which would give a cause of action to a husband alone. His opinion, considering the reasoning on which it is based, would seem to favor the existence of a common law right in a wife to recover for the loss of the conjugal society of her husband resulting from the alienation by a third party of his affections. Defendant, in her brief, refers to certain language in this decision'to the effect that no cause of action arises in favor of a wife for criminal conversation against the seducer of her husband; that in such case, a wife is not injured by her husband’s adultery, as he would be by conjugal infidelity on her part. Defendant has also referred us to a line of authority holding that at common law, although a husband had a cause of action for criminal conversation, a wife had no such cause of action. The theory underlying this discrimination was that criminal conversation on the husband’s part would not injure the wife, whereas, criminal conversation on her part would throw a suspicion of illegitimacy on the children and expose him to the danger of supporting another man’s children.

Whatever the common law rule may have been in regard to a wife’s right to recover for criminal conversation, it does not serve as authority for the denial of a common law right in her to recover for the alienation of the affections of her husband. Criminal conversation and alienation of affections are two distinct torts. The theory of the common law, as propounded in the case of Lynch v. Knight, supra, that a wife could not recover for the adultery of her husband since she suffered no injury thereby, does not hold good when sought to be applied to a cause of action for alienation of the husband’s affections. In an alienation of affection suit, the gravamen of the action is the loss of the conjugal society, affection and fellowship of the plaintiff’s spouse, a loss suffered in equal degree by a wife upon her husband’s abduction as by a husband upon the alienation of his wife’s affections! If a wife at common law was incapable of recovering for the alienation of her husband’s affections, the reason was not that she suffered no injury thereby. Whether or not she had a right of action at common law for alienation of affections was not determined by the case of Lynch v. Knight. Nor does there seem to be any other English decision' touching the question. In America, however, there is a conflict of authorities. But there is substantial authority holding that at common law, the wife did have a right of action for the alienation of her husband’s affections, but her power to enforce the right was suspended during coverture because of the disabilities imposed by the common law upon a married woman. 30 Corpus Juris, 1119, 1120, footnotes 15, 16 and 17.

One of the most recent cases recognizing this right in the wife at common law is Holmstrom v. Wall, 64 S.D. 467, 268 N.W. 423, 424 (June 29, 1936), in which the court stated tha't “since the enactment of the statute removing the disability of coverture, there exists a present day ‘common-law right’ in the wife to maintain an action for the loss of the husband’s society, affection, or consortium. This right exists independent of any statute”.

In California, there seems to be no direct authority for this court to follow. However, it is apparent from the language contained in the case of Humphrey v. Pope, 122 Cal. 253, 54 P. 847, that the courts of the State of California, when and if called upon to decide the question now before this court, will follow that line of authorities developed in the United States which holds that at common law a married woman had a right of action for the alienation of her husband’s affections, although her coverture imposed a disability upon her which operated as a bar to any remedy to enforce the right. In the case of Humphrey v. Pope, supra, the court decided that a wife could maintain an action of this kind because the right to sue in her own name is given her by Section 370 of the California Code Civ.Proc., and Section 49 of the California Civil Code gives her the right of action. This decision does not purport to hold that her right of action is purely statutory, based solely on Section 49 of the Civil Code.. On the contrary, the court discusses the existence of a wife’s right to maintain an action for alienation of affections independently of statute. On page 257, of 122 Cal., 54 P.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F. Supp. 562, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/root-v-root-cand-1940.