Taylor v. Rann

80 P.2d 376, 106 Mont. 588, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 43
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1938
DocketNo. 7,757.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 376 (Taylor v. Rann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Rann, 80 P.2d 376, 106 Mont. 588, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 43 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

HONORABLE CHARLES B. ELWELL, District Judge,

sitting in place of MR. JUSTICE STEWART, disqualified, delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, Bessie Taylor, against the defendant, Clyde W. Rann, to recover damages, actual and punitive, on account of an alleged seduction of the plaintiff by the defendant, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for both actual and punitive damages.

*590 The evidence of the plaintiff disclosed that the plaintiff was the niece of the defendant’s wife; that the defendant and the aunt of plaintiff had married in 1934, and had at all times since .been husband and wife, and that the families of plaintiff and defendant lived only a few miles apart. In support of her allegation as to the seduction, the plaintiff testified that during her fifteenth year, and shortly before her sixteenth birthday, the defendant began to pay attention to her, and from then on kissed and petted her, gave her various gifts, including money and a ring, told her that he was leading a loveless life and wished to marry her. The plaintiff admitted, of course, that she at all times knew of the marriage of the defendant. The first act of sexual intercourse was testified to have occurred in September, 1932, while plaintiff was in her twentieth year. The plaintiff taught school much of the time thereafter, and numerous acts of intercourse are related from then on up to about the first of November, 1935. Plaintiff testified to the continuation of the promises of marriage, secret meetings, trips, and plans for a divorce by defendant from his wife, the plaintiff’s aunt. Voluminous correspondence was introduced to substantiate her statements. Matters progressed to a point where defendant sold out his business, made a very substantial settlement with his wife, apparently without divulging to his wife his intention of seeking a divorce or his exact purpose. A divorce action was actually started about the first part of November, 1935, by the defendant, and about the same time plaintiff lost her position as a school teacher and set out to find the defendant, who appeared to be in hiding from his wife and had given the plaintiff some information as to his probable whereabouts. The wife of the defendant was prostrated when served with the papers in the divorce action. The defendant learned of this, returned to his wife, and a reconciliation took place. It is unnecessary to relate the scenes which took place between the two families immediately following this, but within a few days thereafter this action was filed by the plaintiff. The plaintiff was married to Harold McDowell on February 20, 1936, subsequent to the filing of this action and prior to the time of trial.

*591 The record and exhibits are voluminous, and there are thirty-assignments of error. Many of them are more or less a matter of repetition, and many of them need not be noted here.

The defendant and appellant assigned error upon the refusal of the trial court to dismiss the action for the reason that the plaintiff had married between the time of the commencement of the action and the trial, and that she was still a married woman at that time. Appellant bases this contention upon section 9073, Revised Codes, which reads as follows: “An unmarried female may prosecute as plaintiff an action for her own seduction and may recover therein such damages, pecuniary or exemplary, as are assessed in her favor. ’ ’ The contention of appellant is that the legislature, by using the word “prosecute” in this section, barred the plaintiff from continuing with her action after marriage, although it did not preclude her from filing it before her marriage. In short, appellant contends that the action abated immediately upon plaintiff’s marriage.

In construing a statute substantially the same as our section 9073, the supreme court of Indiana held that the term “unmarried,” as used in the statute, related to plaintiff’s status at the time of the seduction, and not the time of the filing of the action or the trial of the action. (Dawling v. Crapo, 65 Ind. 209.) We do not feel that our present-day laws favor abatement of actions once a cause has accrued, and our statute covering abatement of actions, section 9086, Revised Codes, does not lend any assistance to appellant’s contention.

One of the most serious questions in the case is presented by appellant’s plea of the statute of limitations. Section 9032, Revised Codes, paragraph 3, provides a two-year limitation in actions for libel, slander, assault, battery, false imprisonment or seduction.

While the plaintiff claims certain relationship with the defendant and certain promises and representations made by the defendant to the plaintiff as far back as her fifteenth year, there is no act of seduction shown until her twentieth year, or in September, 1932. The defendant and appellant contends that the seduction took place at that time; that the statute of *592 limitations then started to run, and that therefore the action was barred. Plaintiff and respondent, on the other hand, contends that there were continuing acts of seduction, induced by the promises of marriage, the last act being about the first of November, 1935, and that the statute of limitations did not start to run until plaintiff and defendant broke off their relationship. Under respondent’s contention, this particular action would not be barred until over five years after the first act by which she claims to have been seduced, although as a matter of fact the action was brought within a week or so after the breaking off of the relations between the parties, but more than three years after the first act of intercourse took place.

The matter is one of first impression in the state of Montana. There are two distinct lines of decisions, — one supporting the appellant’s contention, and the other supporting the respondent’s position.

While the ease of Rockwell v. Day, 101 Wash. 580, 172 Pac. 754, is not strictly in point for the reason that in the case in question there had been a breaking off of the relations and a subsequent resumption thereof by the parties, and the statutory period had run from the time of the breaking off of the first relationship of the parties, still there is a well considered discussion of the two lines of decisions, worthy of repetition here: ‘ ‘ Plaintiff insists that the better rule is that the statute does not begin to run where improper relations are begun under a promise of marriage, so long as the relations are continued or until the last act of intercourse; that all the acts of intercourse are one transaction; and that a continued promise of marriage is implied from time to time. She relies on Davis v. Young, 90 Tenn. 303. * * * The general rule as most text-writers agree, is that the statute begins to run from the time of the seduction where the action is maintained by the woman on her own behalf. (Wood on Limitations (2d ed.), see. 186.) * * * But whether we call the one or the other the general or the better rule, it must be admitted that there is a very marked conflict of authority. We could base our opinion on either rule and sustain it by sound reason, for if the one rule *593

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Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 376, 106 Mont. 588, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-rann-mont-1938.