Shalit v. Shalit

138 A. 70, 126 Me. 291, 1927 Me. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 29, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 138 A. 70 (Shalit v. Shalit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shalit v. Shalit, 138 A. 70, 126 Me. 291, 1927 Me. LEXIS 55 (Me. 1927).

Opinion

Deasy, J.

The wife of Harold M. Shalit brings this suit against -his mother. In her writ the plaintiff declares that the defendant did “by arts, enticements and inducements alienate the affections of the said Harold M. Shalit from her, said plaintiff.” The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for seven thousand dollars. The case comes to this Court on two motions, one general and the other grounded on newly discovered evidence.

The record is voluminous. Not to speak of depositions, letters and documents the oral evidence taken out before the jury filled 735 pages. Much of it is sharply conflicting. Such material facts as are unquestioned may be summarized thus:

Harold M. Shalit of Portland, married Alice White of Boston on July 3rd 1923. Soon after their marriage they established their home in the Marlborough apartment house at Portland, owned by the defendant. For a time the wife’s relations with her husband and his mother were harmonious. The elder Mrs. Shalit treated the son’s wife kindly and generously. Harold was dependent upon his mother. She paid him fifty dollars per week. This was largely a gratuity, though he performed some service for her in looking after the apartment house. Later the family life- became unpleasant. The unpleasantness seems to have culminated when Mrs. White, the plaintiff’s mother, came to Portland to visit her daughter. After some troubles unnecessary to describe in detail Harold employed an officer to order Mrs. White to leave the premises. She left and on January 3rd, 1924, plaintiff went back to her former home in Boston. From that time on the plaintiff lived with her parents in Massachusetts, while her husband, continued to reside in Portland. On June 15th, 1924, in Boston, the plaintiff gave birth to a child. The defendant provided three hundred and fifty dollars for expense of confinement. For some period, both before and after this, the husband paid his wife an allowance of at least twenty-five dollars per week. For a time the payment of this allowance was suspended. Harold says that by the suspension he hoped to induce his wife to return to Portland. At the instance of the plaintiff or her father Harold was indicted and arrested in Boston for non-support. Proceedings to compel support were also instituted in the Probate Courts of Maine and Massachusetts. Later the' instant suit was brought against the mother. The plaintiff has always had custody of the-child. Shortly [293]*293after the child’s birth it was given over to a Mrs. Casey to keep and care for.' The husband made unsuccessful efforts to find and see it. Omitting many details, the above are the salient undisputed facts.

Much of the other testimony is conflicting. According to the plaintiff’s evidence the six months of family life which began harmoniously and gaily, later on became intolerable to her by reason of the indifference and cruelty of her husband. He assaulted her, she says, and caused not her mother alone but herself to be evicted.' She relates many incidents, some of trivial character and others more important, tending to show that her husband was under the complete control of his mother, the defendant, and that her influence brought about the estrangement and separation.

The law applicable to this phase of the case is well settled. The burden is upon the plaintiff to show that the mother maliciously alienated the son’s affections from his wife. Malice is not presumed. It must be proved, but it may be shown by proof of wrongful and unjustifiable conduct.

The mother may in good faith, influenced by maternal solicitude for her son’s happiness and peace of mind, advise him in his conjugal relations. Even if it appear that the parent’s advice, arguments or persuasions caused the plaintiff to lose the consortium, i. e., the society, affection and aid of her husband, there is no legal remedy unless it be shown that the parent acted with hostile, wicked or malicious intent. If loss so caused and such intent appear an action lies. Oakman v. Belden, 94 Maine 280; Wilson v. Wilson, 115 Maine 341; Multer v. Knibbs, 193 Mass. 556; Woodhouse v. Woodhouse, (Vt.) 130 Atl. 758; Thomas v. Lang, (Wash.) 238 Pac. 625; Roberts v. Cohen, (Ore.) 206 Pac. 293; Porter v. Porter, (Mo.) 258 S. W., 76; 30 C. J., 119; 13 R. C. L., 1471.

Applying these legal principles to. the facts as above summarized we think that the verdict is not against law nor manifestly against the weight of evidence. The jury saw and heard the plaintiff and her witnesses and were not bound to dis-believe their testimony, though much of it was flatly contradicted. From the plaintiff’s testimony, if believed, they were justified in returning a verdict for her. The defendant does not in her motion allege that the verdict is excessive.

[294]*294 Newly Discovered Evidence.

The defendant offers, relying upon it as newly discovered, the testimony of Dr. John T. Williams. The significance of the Doctor’s evidence appears from the following outline:

The plaintiff testified that at the time of her child’s birth she was badly injured internally; that thereafter she was in a poor state of health, unable to nurse her baby, and that by advice of her physician she put the child out to be nursed and cared for.

Upon a new trial Dr. Williams will testify, so it appears from his deposition, that he was the plaintiff’s attending physician at childbirth and saw her at frequent intervals while she was in the maternity hospital and twice afterwards; that there was nothing unusual, no complications in the case; that she was able to nurse the child and that “the patient had taken the baby off the breast against my advice and put it out to board.”

In order that newly discovered evidence may warrant a new trial these things' must appear:

1. That the new evidence is not merely cumulative. There is observable a recent tendency to qualify this requirement. See also R. S., Chap. 94, Sec. 4, relating to petitions for review. But Dr. Williams’ testimony is not cumulative.
2. It must “seem to the Court probable that on a new trial with the additional evidence the result would be changed.” Drew v. Shannon, 105. Maine 562.

Besides that of Dr. Williams the defendant presents as newly discovered the evidence of Julius Langsdorf. It is unnecessary to speak of this testimony further than to say that if heard by a jury it would probably not change the result.

But Dr. Williams’ testimony, if believed, would in all likelihood affect a jury verdict, at all events, as to the amount of the verdict. It would probably change the result.

3. That the moving party is not chargeable with want of due diligence in failing to discover the new testimony earlier and have it at the first trial.

The story of the plaintiff told on the stand first disclosed the materiality and importance of Dr. Williams’ evidence. Nothing in the [295]*295pleadings forewarned the defendant that it would be needed. The Doctor was beyond the Court’s jurisdiction. After the plaintiff had given her testimony it was apparently not practicable to produce Dr. Williams’ evidence at the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
138 A. 70, 126 Me. 291, 1927 Me. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shalit-v-shalit-me-1927.