Tice v. Mandel

76 N.W.2d 124, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 108
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1956
Docket7558
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 76 N.W.2d 124 (Tice v. Mandel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tice v. Mandel, 76 N.W.2d 124, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 108 (N.D. 1956).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an action for alienation of affections. The plaintiff recovered judgment against the defendant for $5,000 compensatory damages, and $10,000 exemplary damages. A motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or in the alternative for a new trial was made by the defend *128 ant. The trial court entered an order, dated. August 10,. 1955, granting the defendant a new trial, unless the plaintiff, within twenty-days, consented to a reduction of the exemplary damages to $2,500. This reduction was accepted and the judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $7,500. Thereafter the trial court entered an order denying the motion for a new trial. The defendant appeals to this court from the judgment and the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The complaint in this action is so similar to the complaint set forth in the decision of this court in the case of Rott v. Goehring, 33 N.D. 413, 157 N.W. 294, L.R.A.1916E, 1086, as to appear to have been patterned thereon.

The defendant interposed an answer in which he neither admits nor denies some of the allegations of the complaint and puts the plaintiff on his proof in that connection. Otherwise he denies generally the allegations of the complaint and asserts that the plaintiff and his wife, Jennet Tice, were in collusion to entrap him into a compromising situation by use of a clever trick, scheme, and device in the nature of a conspiracy whereby the plaintiff would be in a position to sue the defendant for a large sum of money.

The appellant sets forth forty-nine specifications of error, five specifications of the insufficiency of the evidence, to sustain the verdict, seven specifications of fact that he says are “conclusively established and not established”, and twelve ultimate specifications of error. He argues these matters under seven separate headings:

1. Nature of action for alienation of affections.
2. Intent and motive.
3. Insufficiency of the evidence.
4. Exemplary damages.
5. Sequestration of witnesses.
6. Excessive damages.
7. Swearing of witnesses.

We will deal with the matters argued and presented in the order enumerated.

Appellant’s first contention is that Alienation of affections and criminal conversation are separate and distinct wrongs. He sets forth numerous citations of authority from other jurisdictions in' support of this argument. We need not consider these authorities as the law has been established in the case of Rott v. Goehring, supra, in this state. The appellant made the same contentions at the opening of this trial in the district court at which time the appellant objected to the selection of a jury on the ground that the complaint in the action set forth more than one cause" of action. The trial court construed the complaint and ruled that it was solely based upon alienation of affections. In Rott v. Goehring, supra [33 N.D. 413, 157 N.W. 295], this court said:

“Counsel differ as to the nature of the action, appellant’s counsel stating that' it is for alienation of affections alone, while respondent’s counsel assert that it is both for alienation of affections and for criminal conversation. In our judgment it matters little which is technically correct, for in this jurisdiction forms of action are expressly abolished, Section 7355, Comp.Laws (this is now Section 32-0109 NDRC 1943). And if the facts alleged in the complaint, when properly established, entitle plaintiff to any relief under the law, she may recover.”

After setting forth the contents of the complaint the court further observed:

“It will be observed that the very pith a'nd marrow of the complaint is that the defendant alienated the husband’s conjugal affections from the wife by persuading and inducing him to deny his conjugal society to her and by enticing him to lavish on her his adulterous affections and society, and that she succeeded in repeatedly enticing and persuading him to have carnal intercourse with her.”

This also is the gist of the complaint in the action at bar.

*129 The main burden of the appellant’s argument rests on the fact that the association, of the defendant with the plaintiff’s wife did not cause an abandonment of the marriage relationship of the plaintiff and his wife, nor disrupt it in any manner; .that during the entire period she worked for the Mandel Department Store and the Mandel Fur Company, at which time the incidents complained of took place, they lived together as husband and wife, and were living together at the time of the trial, and that, therefore, there was no basis for an action of alienation of affections.

“A cause of action for alienation of affections consists of three elements; (1) Wrongful conduct of the defendant; (2) loss of affection or consortium; and (3) a causal connection between such conduct and loss.” 27 Am.Jur., Husband and Wife, Section 523, p. 125.

In this state it is established that an action for alienation of affections will lie even though the plaintiff has not abandoned his spouse. The rule was announced in Rott v. Goehring, supra, as follows:

“An action by a married woman against an unmarried woman for alienation of her husband’s affections will lie, even though plaintiff’s husband has not completely and in a literal sense abandoned her.”
In this connection the court said:
“Conceding therefore, for the sake of argument, that the action at bar is one solely for alienation of affections, as appellant’s counsel contend, we are to decide whether the fact that the plaintiff’s husband did hot actually and in the literal sense of the term abandon her will operate to defeat her right to recover. We are clear that it will not. To hold otherwise would, in our opinion, be a travesty on justice. To hold that the flagrant wrongs inflicted upon plaintiff’s marital rights cannot be redressed in the courts, unless the wrongdoer has actually succeeded in destroying the home by causing an actual abandonment thereof by the husband,, is contrary not only, to common sense, but to, our notions of natural justice. If counsel’s contention is correct, what becomes of .the maxims in the jurisprudence of this state ‘no one should suffer by the act of another,’ and that, ‘for every wrong there is a remedy?’ Wherever there is a valuable right and an infringement thereof causing damage, which is susceptible of ad-measurement, the law will afford the injured person complete, reparation, as far as possible. * * *
“The courts are quite unanimous in holding that the gist of actions of this nature is the loss of consortium, and they are also quite generally agreed that ‘consortium’ means, as counsel for respondent argues: ‘Something more than mere physical presence in the home. To entitle plaintiff to recover it was not absolutely necessary to show actual abandonment — actual abduction —or adultery.

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.W.2d 124, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tice-v-mandel-nd-1956.