Scharringhaus v. Hazen

107 S.W.2d 329, 269 Ky. 425, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 631
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 25, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 329 (Scharringhaus v. Hazen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scharringhaus v. Hazen, 107 S.W.2d 329, 269 Ky. 425, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 631 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

.Stanley, Commissioner—

Affirming.

In this action by Evelyn M. Hazen against Ralph P. Scharringhaus for breach of promise to marry the verdict was for $80,000, of which $65,000 is compensatory, and $15,000 exemplary damages. The review of the judgment has required the consideration of a very large record the trial having extended three weeks. In order to bring the opinion within fairly reasonable bounds, reference to much of the testimony relating to details and adding vivid color to the story of a shattered romance must be omitted.

The plaintiff was born November 8, 1899. After attending private school, she entered the University of Tennessee when not quite fifteen years of age, and there met the defendant who also was a freshman. He was three and a half years older. She was younger than her classmates, and apparently quite timid. Her college nickname was “Little Tim.” She was chosen as the prettiest or most popular girl on the campus, and as the sponsor for the Cadet Corps was given the honorary title of Colonel. She was first attracted to Scharringhaus because of his kindliness and because he did not tease her as did so many of the boys. He shielded her and took her part. Their courtship began in 1916. She looked upon him at the time as a “big brother” as well as a sweetheart, and her confidence in him progressively grew. He belonged to the same fraternity as her cousin; was serious-minded and interested in his church, of which she too was a member. She respected him for his character and ideals. During this college romance they saw much of each other and daily notes were left at the campus book store for one another; In the spring of 1917, they became engaged to marry. He gave her his officially registered fraternity pin, which he told her would stand for an engagement ring. He testified she refused to accept it on that basis because she was wearing the pin of another boy, and *428 agreed only to keep it for him until his return from the army. She produced the pin on the trial. During this period,- she testified, from time to time Ralph commented upon her innocence, and in a gentlemanly way told her he thought a girl of her age ought to know more about matters of sex. She had been sheltered at home and was wholly ignorant of such things. Then as an older brother or sister might have done to a child, he gave her ideas which she grasped and delicately explained the relations of the sexes, with the illustration of the pollination of flowers, and spoke of those relations as something sacred. Thereafter from time to time, with no purpose, as she is yet assured, other than for her protection and without any intention to be offensive, he spoke of these things. He told her he wanted her always to be innocent of those matters and not to learn of them from any one else. •

The time came during the summer of 1917 when he entered the officers ’ training camp at Fort Oglethorpe, ■ which was not far from Knoxville. He came home nearly every week-end. On one of those visits in October, 1917,' when she was not quite eighteen years old, while they were out riding, he suggested that they should be married then and she should go back with him to the encampment. They stopped at the courthouse to obtain a marriage license, but the bureau was closed. It was agreed they would be married the next day, but that morning he called to say he had to take his mother somewhere. Being Saturday, they found the marriage license bureau closed again that afternoon. That evening at her home he made most ardent love and spoke of how he hated to go back to the camp without her and probably that he would not be able to obtain another leave of absence before going to France. She was madly in love with him. He insisted that if she loved him as she said she did, she would yield to his desires. She resisted and reminded him of the advice he had given her, and he responded that it hurt him very much that she would not believe him. He insisted they would be married in the eyes of God, and that the only difference would be that the ceremony which they would later have would permit her to come to him -openly at the encampment. Because of these and other importunities, she yielded herself to him. After that, she testified, the matter of marriage seemed to be settled so far as he was concerned. He always said they were *429 married in the sight of God. She remained in college and he was transferred to another military camp in South Carolina. The defendant admitted the engagement and that they had gone one night to obtain a marriage license. However, he fixed the time as being in 1918. He testified that she had treated the matter as a joke and had refused to entertain seriously the idea of an immediate marriage. He denied the .circumstances, place, and time of the intimacy described by plaintiff. Particularizing, he denied having said anything about their being married in the eyes of God then •or at any time. He testified that through their kissing and petting they had drifted into the relation without any reference to marriage and that she had yielded herself voluntarily. But, this, he said, was in 1920. It is observed that this date put her age within the age of consent. He had given her an engagement ring in 1920.

The plaintiff testified to her great distress over what had occurred and its repetition when he would come back to Knoxville. He would “fall back on the religious and sacred aspect” and reprove her for not feeling the same way, that is, as regarding herself as being married. The defendant denied all of that. But his denials are contradicted by his own writings. Daily, letters passed between the parties, and a great many of his letters written during this period proclaimed an ardent love, expressed his loneliness and pictured the prospects of an early marriage and the beauty of a home with her. Thus in January, 1918, he wrote: “I love you very much, Evelyn, which is natural since I am going’ to marry you. ’ ’’ In March, 1919, he wrote: “I guess it is well we didn’t get married because I don’t believe you would live down here with me.” The plaintiff testified to having torn up some of his letters, which he had asked should be done. But several of those retained contain cryptic statements which, in the light of the developments, are easily decipherable and highly significant. These confirm the plaintiff as to the existing situation, and especially her distress.

After getting put of the army in the spring of 1919, Scharringhaus resumed his studies at the University and completed his course. He then went into business with his father, who was a wholesale dealer and manufacturer of clothing. Por a time he earned $400 a month, but insisted that he could not afford the respon *430 sibility of supporting a family. Miss Hazen had graduated in 1918 and begun teaching in the Knoxville High School in the following November. This, she testified, played into his hands, for the rules of the school board barred married women from the staff. She did not like teaching and was always ready to give up her place. In the alternative, she pleaded with the defendant for a secret marriage. Finally he allowed her to fix a wedding day in the fall of 1924. He postponed the wedding until spring because he did not think his parents would be pleased, but felt he could satisfy them in the meantime. Another day was definitely set in March,' 1925, and Miss Hazen chose her bridesmaids, began accumulating her trousseau, and made other plans.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 329, 269 Ky. 425, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scharringhaus-v-hazen-kyctapphigh-1937.