Tinker v. Colwell

193 U.S. 473, 24 S. Ct. 505, 48 L. Ed. 754, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 921
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 21, 1904
Docket160
StatusPublished
Cited by541 cases

This text of 193 U.S. 473 (Tinker v. Colwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U.S. 473, 24 S. Ct. 505, 48 L. Ed. 754, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 921 (1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Peckham,

after making the above statement of facts/ delivered the opinion of the court.

The question herein arising is, whether the judgment obtained against the defendant, petitioner, for damages arising from the criminal conversation of the defendant with the plaintiff’s wife, is released by the- defendant’s discharge in bankruptcy, or whether it is excepted from such release by reason of subdivision 2, section 17, of the bankruptcy act of July 1, 1898, which provides that “a discharge in bankruptcy shall release a bankrupt from all his provable debts, except such- as . . . (2) are judgments in actions for frauds, or obtaining property by false pretences or false representations, or for willful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another; . . .”

The averment in the petition, that the judgment was not recovered for a willful and malicious injury to the person or *481 property of the plaintiff in the action, is a mere conclusion of law and not an averment of fact.

If the judgment in question in this proceeding be one which was recovered in an action for willful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another, it was not released by the bankrupt’s discharge; otherwise it was.

We are of opinion that it was not released. We think the authorities' show the husband has certain personal and exclusive rights with regard to the person of his wife which are interfered with and invaded by criminal conversation with her; that such an act on the part of another man constitutes an assault even when, as is almost universally the case as proved, the wife in fact consents to the act, because the wife is in law incapable of giving any consent to affect the husband’s rights as against'the wrongdoer, and that an assault of this nature may properly be described as an injury to the personal rights and property of the husband, which is both malicious and willful. A judgment upon such a cause of action is not released by. the defendant’s discharge in bankruptcy.

The assault to et armis is- a fiction of the law, assumed at first, in early times, to give jurisdiction of the cause of action as a trespass, to the courts, which then proceeded to permit the recovery of damages by the husband for his wounded feelings and honor, the defilement of the marriage bed, and for the doubt thrown upon the legitimacy of children.

Subsequently the action of trespass on the case was sustained for the consequent damage, and either form of action was thereafter held proper.

Blackstone, in referring to the rights of the husband, says (3 Black. Com. edited by Wendell, page 139):

“Injuries that may be offered to a person, considered as a husband, are principally three: abduction, or taking away a man’s wife; adultery, or criminal conversation.with her; and beating or otherwise abusing her. ... 2. Adultery, or criminal conversation with a man’s wife, though it is, as a public crime,, left by our laws to the coercion of the spiritual *482 courts; yet, considered as a civil injury (and surely there can be no greater), the law gives a satisfaction to .the husband for it by action of trespass vi et armis against the adulterer, wherein the damages recovered.are usually very large and exemplary.”

Speaking of injuries to what he terms the relative rights of persons, Chitty says that for actions of that nature (criminal conversation being, among them) the usual and perhaps the more correct practice is to declare it trespass vi et armis and contra pacem. 1 Ch. PL (2 vol. ed.) 150, and note h.

In Macfadzen v. Olivant, 6 East. 387, it was held that the proper action was trespass vi et armis, for that the defendant with force and arms assaulted and seduced the plaintiff’s wife, whereby he lost and was deprived of her comfort, society and fellowship against the peace and to his damage. Lord Ellenborough, C. J., among other things, said:

“Then the question is, whether this be an action on the case or an action of trespass and assault? And it is said that the latter description only applies to personal assaults on the body of the plaintiff who sues; but nothing of the sort is said in the statute. No doubt that an' action of trespass and assault may be maintained by a master for the battery of his servant per quod servitium amisit; and also by a husband for a trespass and assault of this kind upon his wife per quod consortium amisit.”

In Rigaut v. Gallisard, 7 Mod. Rep. 81, Lord Holt, C. J., said that .if adultery be committed with another man’s wife, without any force, but by her own consent, the husband may have assault and battery, and lay it vi et armis, and that the proper action for the husband in such case was a special action, quia — the defendant his wife rapuit, and not to lay it per qúod consortium amisit.

In Haney v. Townsend, 1 McCord’s Rep. 206 (decided in 1821), it was held that case, as well as trespass vi.et armis is a proper action for criminal conversation, the court holding that no doubt trespass was-a proper form of action for the injury done by ¿.educing a wife, 'but thát case was also a proper action.

*483 In Bedan v. Turney, 99 California, 649, decided in 1893, it was held that the criminal intercourse of the wife with another man was an invasion of the husband’s rights, and it was immaterial whether this invasion was accomplished by force, or by the consent of the wife; that the right belonged to the husband, and it was ho defence to his action for redress that its violation was by the consent or even by the procurement of the wife, for she was not competent to give such consent; that it was not necessary that the husband should show that it was by force or against her will. The original form of the action was trespass vi el armis, even though the act was with the consent of the wife, for the reason, as was said by Holt, C. J., in Rigaut v. Gallisard, 7 Mod. Rep. 81, “that the law will not allow her a consent in such case to the prejudice of her husband.”

In M’Clure’s Executors v. Miller, 11 N. C. Rep. (4 Hawks) 133, note, page 140, trespass was held to be the proper form of action in such a case, and that a single act of adultery, though never manifested in its consequences, is an invasion of the husband’s rights, and the law redresses it. It is also said that the husband has, so to speak, a property in the body and a right to the personal enjoyment of'his wife. For the invasion of this right the law permits him, to sue as husband.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 U.S. 473, 24 S. Ct. 505, 48 L. Ed. 754, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinker-v-colwell-scotus-1904.