Sharon Wildey v. Richard A. Springs, Cross-Appellee

47 F.3d 1475
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1995
Docket94-1453, 94-1454
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 47 F.3d 1475 (Sharon Wildey v. Richard A. Springs, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharon Wildey v. Richard A. Springs, Cross-Appellee, 47 F.3d 1475 (7th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

This case involves an appeal from a jury’s determination that a woman was entitled to recover various elements of damage because her fiance broke off their engagement. The plaintiff, Sharon Wildey, brought suit under Illinois’s Breach of Promise Act, 740 ILCS 15/1 et seq. (1993). She alleged that the broken engagement harmed her in several ways, and consequently sought recovery for medical expenses, lost business profits and pain and suffering. The jury returned a $178,000 verdict in her favor. The district judge remitted that amount by $60,000, concluding that the lost business profits were not fairly attributable to the broken engagement. The district judge left the remainder of the verdict intact, however. The parties now appeal, alleging various points of error. We agree with the suggestion that the ease should have been dismissed because Sharon failed to provide her fiance with notice of each element specified by the statute. We therefore reverse.

I.

Sharon Wildey and Richard Springs enjoyed a relationship early in 1992. When Richard broke off the engagement at the end *1477 of April, Sharon became quite distressed. She eventually decided to sue under Illinois’s Breach of Promise Act, 740 ILCS 15/1 et seq. (1993).

Sharon is an attorney in Chicago, and Richard is an Oregon cattle rancher. Introduced by a mutual friend, the two began their long-distance relationship over the telephone. After a number of telephone calls, Richard decided to visit Sharon in Chicago in January of 1992. The relationship apparently went well because Richard visited Chicago on two more occasions during January and February. The parties decided that a Florida vacation was in order.

At the end of the five-day Florida trip, the parties agreed to be married. While waiting for a plane in the Orlando airport, Sharon suggested that she and Richard consider marriage. Although Richard agreed to her suggestion, he expressed doubts about the couple’s ability to overcome the practical difficulties of a long-distance relationship. Sharon wanted to stay in Chicago until her children got out of school; Richard did not intend to leave his Oregon ranch. The parties eventually decided on a “commuter-type” marriage for a five-year time period, leading to an eventual relocation for both in Florida or the Caribbean. They then flew back to Chicago, and Richard returned to Oregon.

Richard again visited Sharon later in March. Once in Chicago, he began shopping for engagement rings and eventually purchased one. When the ring was ready, Richard got down on one knee and formally proposed. The couple set a wedding date and planned a Chicago ceremony. All of these activities occurred in Chicago.

The couple spent more time together during April. Early in the month, Sharon visited Richard’s ranch in Oregon. She and Richard later attended her son’s wedding in Los Angeles. Afterwards, Sharon and her daughters flew to Oregon to spend several days on Richard’s ranch. In another week or so, everyone flew to Chicago to spend time there. 1

After the last weekend in Chicago, however, Richard began having second thoughts about the marriage. On a flight to Florida on April 27, 1992, Richard decided to break the engagement. He composed a letter to Sharon explaining his doubts about the marriage. He also suggested that she keep the engagement ring and some money he had placed in a Chicago bank account. Pl.Ex. 1.

Sharon responded with a letter. She stated that the broken engagement had caused her to become “extremely depressed and anxious,” and she asked for financial help. Pl.Ex. 3. Richard wrote back, defending himself and writing that he felt that he had fulfilled any obligations he may have had. Pl.Ex. 2. Sharon drafted a second letter in which she apprised Richard of her intent to sue. Pl.Ex. 4.

Sharon’s second letter contains the date that the parties had planned to be married. It also references several elements of damage, such as medical bills from counseling and lost income, that Sharon believed she suffered as a result of the broken engagement. Sharon further wrote that she had spoken with an attorney and intended to file suit. She also stated that she had been willing to marry Richard and gave him the option of discussing the matter with her. Sharon did not, however, include any of the dates upon which the parties had exchanged marital promises. 2

Sharon filed suit soon afterwards. She contended, among other things, that the bro *1478 ken engagement had occasioned large expenditures on medical care and had also caused her to lose business income. She additionally sought recovery for pain and suffering. The jury returned a verdict totaling $178,000 in Sharon’s favor. Of this amount, $25,000 was awarded for past and future medical costs; $60,000 was awarded for lost business profits; and $93,000 was awarded for pain and suffering.

At Richard’s request, the district court remitted the award to $118,000, concluding that lost business profits were not attributable to the broken engagement. The court affirmed the verdict as to the other elements of damage, however. The district court also refused to reverse the verdict on various other grounds that Richard suggested. It concluded that Illinois law, rather than Florida law, had properly governed the issues at trial. It also determined that the notice Sharon provided in her second letter had been adequate; “substantial compliance” with the notice provision, in the district court’s view, was all that Illinois law required.

II.

Richard now appeals. We agree with the district court that Illinois law properly governs this case. We do not agree, however, with that court’s notice analysis. We believe instead that the omission of the date that the parties became engaged is fatal to Sharon’s claim. The plain language of the Breach of Promise Act requires that a potential plaintiff include several items in the notice that must be sent to a defendant. The date that the parties became engaged is clearly one of these items. Although the strict construction that we rely on may seem unwarranted, several factors render it appropriate in this case. First, the history behind actions for the breach of a promise to marry argues in favor of a strict construction; the strictures of the Promise Act exist because these actions were unpopular and subject to abuse. Further, the date of the engagement, though plausibly insignificant when the fact of the engagement is not disputed, was potentially dispositive here. An admission concerning the date the parties became engaged determined the place of that engagement; for reasons that will become clear in the choice-of-law analysis, this fact threatened Sharon’s ability to maintain her suit. In addition, we note that Sharon is a seasoned attorney. She had consulted with counsel when she drafted the second letter. In light of these considerations, and of the clarity of the Statute’s requirements, we reverse. 3

A.

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47 F.3d 1475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharon-wildey-v-richard-a-springs-cross-appellee-ca7-1995.