Stanton v. Cox

139 So. 458, 162 Miss. 438, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 137
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1932
DocketNo. 29458.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 139 So. 458 (Stanton v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanton v. Cox, 139 So. 458, 162 Miss. 438, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 137 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Bita Cox exhibited her declaration against Mrs. Dorothy Stanton, seeking to recover damages of the latter for the wrongful, malicious, and oppressive alienation of her (Mrs. Bita Cox) husband’s affections, charging that Mrs. Stanton had thus destroyed all the love, devotion, and affection which Mrs. Cox’s husband, I. H. Cox, had for her (the said Mrs. Bita Cox), and by the aforesaid acts broke up the home of appellee and her husband.

The declaration set forth, in great detail, the circumstance of the alleged alienation of affection.

This case is unique in several particulars. The two women involved, Bita Cox and Dorothy Stanton, were the wives of lawyers, one of them practicing in Oklahoma, and the other in Montana; and although Mrs. Stanton has since married one Campbell, she is represented in this case by her former husband, Stanton, from the state of Montana.

The record in the case is rather volumnious, but the facts essential to be stated for an understanding of the case are substantially as follows: About the year 1909, I. H. Cox, the spouse of appellee, and Dorothy Porter, later Stanton, and still later Campbell, were engaged to be married. Mrs. Stanton broke the engagement with Cox and married Stanton, and in a. short time Cox married the appellee, Bita Cox.

As a result of the union between the Stantons there were born three children; and to Cox and wife there was born one son.

*445 According to the record here on appeal, there was no communication between Cox and Mrs. Stanton, save a casual meeting at her father’s house in Chicago in 1917, until November, 1924, when Cox, being on a professional visit to Memphis, went from that place to Pass Christian, Mississippi, where Mrs. -Stanton was living, and spent a day or two there, being constantly in company with Mrs. Stanton. Mrs. Stanton had removed from Montana to Pass Christian, Mississippi, in 1922; and although she had not been divorced from her husband, the record discloses that Stanton and his wife contemplated such act. After this visit, in 1924, on the part of Cox to the home of Mrs. Stanton, there sprang up between them a lively, amorous correspondence, there being in evidence a number of letters written by Mrs. Stanton to the husband of Mrs. Cox, the appellee.

In February, 1926-, Cox, being ill with the “flu,” dropped a letter from his pocket from Mrs. Stanton to him, which the appellee, Mrs. Cox, read, and thereupon she procured his office keys, went to his office, and found stored there about two hundred letters from the appellant (Dorothy Stanton) to Cox, the husband of appellee, which revealed to her the love affair in lively progress. She took from her husband’s office forty or fifty of Mrs. Stanton’s letters to Cox, and thereupon he admitted his fondness for Mrs. Stanton, and announced to his wife that he desired her to get a divorce from him. While such discussion was in progress, Mrs. Rita Cox was called to a distant state on account of the illness of her son, then in school; and when she returned Cox had evidently repented and sought a reconciliation, to which she readily assented, one of the conditions of the reconciliation being that she turn over to him the letters from Mrs. Stanton. In the meantime, Mrs. Cox had carried the letters to the office of a relative, who was a lawyer, for safekeeping, who had phostostatic copies made of the letters, and Mrs. *446 Cox also liad a stenographer make typewritten copies of certain letters from Mrs. Stanton, which she identified and swore to as being correct copies. When Mrs. Cox delivered the letters to her husband, he burned them in her presence.

During the Christmas holidays in 1924, Cox brought home with the Christmas mail a picture of Mrs. Stanton, which Mrs. Cox admired, remarking that Mrs. Stanton was a handsome woman; she did not suspect, at that time, the relations between Mrs. Stanton and I. H. Cox. Mrs. Cox testified that their married life, until just before the discovery of the letters, had been happy and pleasant; that her husband had provided her with an automobile, spent money on trips, and their home was a very happy one; but that just before the discovery of the letters she had observed that his attention to and affection for her had waned to a marked degree. After the reconciliation in 1926, the marital relations were for a while resumed, and were as pleasant as before the disagreement, until she became convinced that Cox was still in correspondence with Mrs. Stanton; and during his absence she found in her husband’s office letters, telegrams, and a bill for roses sent by him to Mrs. Stanton from a florist in New Orleans.

Including the visit in 1924, the record shows that Cox, who lived in Okmulgee, Oiklahoma, visited Mrs. Stanton four or five times at her home in Pass Christian, Mississippi, for a day or two at a time. A number of letters were introduced, which we shall not set forth at length, but only extracts to show their tenor. Mrs. Stanton usually addressed Cox as “Darling,” and in most of the letters expressed her love for him, and the letters were usually signed “Affectionately, Dorothy.” This correspondence began immediately after Cox’s visit to Pass Christian in November, 1924, and continued until about February, 1928. In an undated letter she used this language : “I trust none of my effusions are in the hands q£ *447 some quite disinterested bystander — or even worse, in interested hands — you might be ruined. ’ ’ In this letter she spoke of a garment which a woman wears close to her body, in connection with the killing of her pet cat, and concluded with these words: “Oh my darling, please, please know I love you always and am simply existing until I can be in reality. Yonr Dorothy.”

In another letter she admonished him that whatever they did must be done calmly and judiciously, no matter how difficult, saying, “But we both know what we hope and pray to accomplish — having a definite goal is a help. Some day I trust I can pour out all my thoughts and we can be really without barriers — it’s certainly the closest approach to divine communion one could hope for on this earth. ’ ’

On July 27, 1925, she expressed a desire to see him on the following Saturday, insisting on his visit in several letters. On August 27, 1925, after his visit to her, she wrote expressing her delight and desire- for another trip soon. And in more than one letter she referred to the fact that they were both planning to be divorced, and her pleasure at the consummation of their desire.

In March, 1926, she said in a letter to Cox: “You must be seeking a loophole of escape;” assuring him of her mother’s resignation in the matter, and concluded with, “You will have to find another loophole — that is all I have to say. ’ ’ She complained because he talked about money, and said they could not wait until they were a hundred and ten years old, saying; “I can do without lots and want to, but you keep on talking, putting it off until I cannot look on you as anything but a lukewarm lover. . . . G-osh, I wish you’d get vehement just once so I could put it in my ‘line a day book’ — I haven’t any — don’t be worried.” She spoke of his living in the same house with Rita, and said she (Dorothy Stanton) could not feel nice and happy while loved like that.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 458, 162 Miss. 438, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanton-v-cox-miss-1932.