Sargent v. Robertson Et Ux.

160 A. 182, 104 Vt. 412, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 4, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 A. 182 (Sargent v. Robertson Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent v. Robertson Et Ux., 160 A. 182, 104 Vt. 412, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 159 (Vt. 1932).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

The defendants are the parents and the plaintiff the husband of Margaret A. Sargent. The plaintiff and his wife were married March 22, 1929, and ceased to live together as husband and wife on October 24, 1930, when she left him. A son was born to them on December 30, 1929. At all times material, the defendants lived in a hotel which they owned and operated in East Thetford, and the plaintiff and his wife, until she left him, lived with his parents on a farm in Thetford about three miles away.

The action is tort .for the alienation of the affections of the plaintiff’s wife. The defendants’ answer is a general denial. There was a trial by jury and a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. At the close of the evidence the defendants moved for a directed verdict. The motion was overruled and the defendants excepted. The substance of the ground's of the motion is that there is not evidence sufficient to support a verdict for the plaintiff.

The defendants argue that it must be remembered that they are the parents of the plaintiff’s wife and that this imposed upon the plaintiff the burden of overcoming the presumption that they acted under the influence of natural affection and for what they believed to be the real good of their daughter. But the case is not one where the evidence tends to show that the separation was brought about by acts of the parents done in good faith and without malice, and the counsel given and the' persuasion used by the parents were such as they fairly and honestly considered to be called for by the interests of the child. The defendants and the plaintiff’s wife, who was a witness for them, not only denied that they influenced her to leave the plaintiff, but they and she testified that they never talked with her about him.

It is also true, as claimed by the defendants, that the plaintiff has the burden of showing that the conduct complained of was actuated by malice; but express malice need not be proved. Malice in the sense used in actions of this kind implies no more than the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse. Direct evidence of the parents’ wrongful motives is not required, but malice may be inferred from wrong *415 ful and unjustifiable conduct which causes alienation. Woodhouse v. Woodhouse, 99 Vt. 91, 108, 130 Atl. 758.

Nor is it necessary that the acts of the parents should be the sole cause of the alienation, because even if the wife had no affection for her husband the defendants had no right to interfere to cut off all chance of its springing up in the future. Fratini v. Caslini, 66 Vt. 273, 29 Atl. 252, 44 A. S. R. 843; Lewis v. Roby, 79 Vt. 487, 65 Atl. 524, 118 A. S. R. 984; Jenness v. Simpson, 84 Vt. 127, 140, 78 Atl. 886; Woodhouse v. Woodhouse, supra, 99 Vt. at page 115, 130 Atl. 758.

It appears from the record that the defendants disliked the plaintiff before he married their daughter and that dislike has continued to the present time. Mr. Robertson ordered him out of their home before the marriage and thereafter the plaintiff was never permitted to enter it. They opposed the marriage, and Mrs. Robertson told her daughter that she could choose between them and the plaintiff, but she would never enter their home again if she married him. She resented their attitude toward the plaintiff and felt bitterly toward them, and after her marriage, until about the first of July, 1930, she never entered their home except on two occasions when she got some of her personal things, nor did she have anything' to do with them. Neither of the defendants visited her during that time or had anything to do with her and the plaintiff.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that he and his wife lived happily together until sometime in July, 1930, when she began to visit her parents, and thereafter there was a complete change in her attitude toward him and them. She did not seem to be so happy and contented as she had been. She frequently made disagreeable remarks to or about him and acted as though she were trying to start a. quarrel. This attitude continued until she left the plaintiff on October 24, 1930, taking the child with her.

Her resentment toward her parents disappeared completely. Sometime in July, 1930, she began visiting their home once or twice a week. The plaintiff, who was then working on the highway, carried her and the child there when he went to work in the afternoon and got her when he returned from his work. On none of these occasions was he invited into, or permitted to enter, the defendants’ home. He told her several times that he *416 thought her parents were trying to get her away from him. She never denied this, but would give an evasive answer. Each time when she returned from visiting her parents she seemed to be in a “brown study.” She ate but little food during the two weeks before she left, grew thin, and acted as though there was something on her mind that worried her.

She never told the plaintiff or any member of his family that she was going to leave him, and when she left she and the child were alone at the Sargent home. She engaged a taxi at White River Junction which carried her to the home of a Mrs. Saunders in Enfield, N. H., who was a friend of her and her parents. Her father paid the taxi fare two or three days later. The plaintiff did not know that she had left him until he returned home that afternoon, and he did not learn where she was until he traced her telephone call for the taxi and talked with the driver who carried her to Enfield. He went to Enfield that evening and tried to persuade his wife to go home with him. She would not go, and he was not permitted to see his son until he obtained the assistance of a policeman. The latter asked her why she left the plaintiff, and, after some hesitation, she replied, “Nonsupport.” The plaintiff told her that she could not get a divorce because she had no grounds for one. She replied that she knew that and she did not want a divorce.

Before the plaintiff ascertained where his wife was, he went to the defendants’ home and asked Mrs. Robertson if his wife was there. She replied, “Why no, has she gone away?” He then asked her if she knew where his wife was and she replied that she did not. He told her that he was worried as he did not think his wife had enough money to go very far, and Mrs. Robertson replied, “Well I guess you needn’t worry. I guess she has plenty.” Mrs. Robertson testified that on this occasion she did not know where the plaintiff’s wife was; but there was evidence from which the jury could fairly infer that she was not telling the truth, as Mr. Robertson talked over the telephone with plaintiff’s wife before she left plaintiff’s home, and he then learned that she was leaving and where she was going. The plaintiff’s wife left Enfield after staying there a short time. Where she went, did not appear in evidence. -The plaintiff was not able to locate her, and the defendants refused to tell him where .she was. He wrote her several letters but she did not *417 answer any of them. She and the child returned to her parents’ home shortly before Christmas, 1930, and they have lived there since then.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 A. 182, 104 Vt. 412, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-v-robertson-et-ux-vt-1932.