Vallone v. Vallone

228 Ill. App. 543, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 255
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,550
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 228 Ill. App. 543 (Vallone v. Vallone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vallone v. Vallone, 228 Ill. App. 543, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 255 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 15, 1919, the plaintiff, Dorothy Val-lone, brought suit against the defendants, Salvatore Vallone and Josephine Vallone, for damages for the alienation of the affections of her husband, who was the son of the defendants.

The declaration alleges, among other things, that the defendants, contriving to injure the plaintiff and to deprive her of the society, friendship and assistance of her husband, on February 14, 1916, and on other days before and after that date, did knowingly, wilfully, wickedly and maliciously destroy and alienate from her, the plaintiff, the affections of Thomas Val-lone, her husband, by means whereof she, the plaintiff, has wholly lost and been deprived of the society, affections, friendship, association, comfort and support of her husband in her domestic affairs in life during the time she ought to have had them, to the damage to her in the sum of $5,000; that she was duly married to Thomas Vallone on May 6, 1915, and lived together with her husband happily as his wife until the defendants undertook to, and did, wilfully and maliciously destroy and alienate from her the affections of her husband.

On October 23, 1919, the defendants filed a plea of the general issue. There was a trial by jury and at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, upon a motion of counsel for the defendants, the trial judge instructed the jury to find the defendants not guilty. The jury accordingly brought in a verdict to that effect. Motions were then made by counsel for the plaintiff for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, both of which were overruled. The judgment was then entered for the defendants and against the plaintiff for costs. It is now before us on a writ of error. No brief has been filed on behalf of the defendants in error.

The plaintiff, when a few months less than sixteen years of age, was, on October 3, 1915, married to the defendant, Thomas Vallone. They began housekeeping as soon as they were married in a cottage at 4837 Federal street, Chicago. At that time, Salvatore and Josephine Vallone, the parents of the plaintiff’s husband, Thomas Vallone, were living on the second floor of 4727 Federal street. It is the testimony, of the plaintiff that her husband was very good to her while they lived in the cottage; that he was at home with her every evening and gave her all his money; that they lived there for two months. She says that several months after the marriage her mother-in-law, Josephine Yallone, came to the cottage of the plaintiff and her husband and said to the plaintiff’s husband, “We want you to move in our flat”; that he then said, “I don’t want to move. We are getting along fine here”; that the mother-in-law then said, “You have to move to our place, you are ours, you know”; that her husband then said to her, “Do you want to go?” and she, the plaintiff answered, “No, I don’t want to go;” that the mother-in-law then said, “Well, you have to go with us.” The plaintiff and her husband then, accordingly, moved to 4727 Federal street and lived on the first floor of that building. The mother-in-law and father-in-law lived on the second floor.

The plaintiff further testified that for a short time her husband was good to her but that the defendants had bim upstairs most of the time and that he gave his money to them; that they called him upstairs but never invited her to go up; that on one occasion in February, 1916, she had a conversation with her mother-in-law in regard to her, the plaintiff’s relations with her husband, and that she asked her mother-in-law for money and her mother-in-law said, “What do you want it for?” and that as she was to become a mother she said, “I want to get clothes for the baby”; that her mother-in-law then said, “You can’t have it. Tom belongs to us. He has to bring the money to us. If you want anything to eat, come upstairs”; that she, the plaintiff, answered, “No, I am married to Tom, not to you”; that her mother-in-law insisted, “He belongs to us, he has to bring us money. ’ ’ She further testified that her mother-in-law told her that the plaintiff’s husband had given her the money and that when she, the plaintiff, said to her mother-in-law, “I think you ought to give me some money; I cannot live like this,” her mother-in-law said,

“If you don’t like it, you don’t have to stay”; that when she told her mother-in-law she was about to become a mother and wanted to buy baby clothes and asked her for money, her mother-in-law said she didn’t care what it was wanted for.

On May 15, 1916, the plaintiff gave birth to a child which, twenty-two days afterwards, died. Neither of the defendants nor the husband of the plaintiff attended the funeral.

There is some evidence in the record that in June, 1917, the plaintiff and her husband were before Judge Foell on a bill for separate maintenance and that on that occasion when Judge Foell said, you must not live with his parents, that they should go and look for a flat the next afternoon, and said to her husband, you are willing to go back to your wife, her mother-in-law, the defendant, said, “Don’t go back to her.”

It is further shown that on June 21, 1919, and some other occasions, her husband went to see her, and the record shows that when counsel for the plaintiff desired to put in evidence what was said by her husband to her in relation to his father and mother bearing O upon their domestic life, the trial judge ruled it out. The court allowed her, however, to state that she never refused to live with her husband.

On cross-examination the plaintiff testified that on February 14, 1916, she asked her husband for some money and he went upstairs to tell his mother about it; that afterwards he came down and told her to go up and tell his mother about it because they were very cross with him; that he then took the keys away from her and put her out of the house; that when she left she just wandered about alone; that in the evening she was tired out, had no money, and so, pawned her engagement ring and got $10 for it; that she walked to 63rd street, saw a hotel sign, which was the Englewood Hotel, and went in and registered under the name of Pearl Eogers; that she then undertook to look for a job; that she got a job of housework and taking care of a baby and was there about a week when one evening two detectives came and took her to the police station; that in the early part of March, 1916, a little over a week after she left home, she got another'job through an advertisement in the paper; that she did not remember the name of the man who hired her.

The plaintiff offered to prove by one Thomas Alvano, her brother, that he knew the plaintiff’s mother-in-law and that in June, 1917, in Judge Fo ell’s court room, he heard the mother-in-law of the plaintiff tell her son not to go back to his wife. Further, that he heard the husband of the plaintiff say that he wanted to live with his wife but that his parents would not let him; that the plaintiff’s husband said, further, if they, referring to his parents, “knew he came over there to arrange to live with her they would kill him”; that evidence the trial judge refused to admit. A similar proffer was made of evidence by a witness, Conney Alvano, and a similar ruling was made by the court.

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Bluebook (online)
228 Ill. App. 543, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vallone-v-vallone-illappct-1923.