Wolf v. Wolf
This text of 164 N.W. 106 (Wolf v. Wolf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff, Gale Wolf, brought this action against John Wolf, Dora Wolf, and A. G. Wolf, for the recovery of damages sustained by her because of the alleged alienation of the affections of her husband, David Wolf, by the defendants. John Wolf is a brother of plaintiff’s husband, David Wolf. The [349]*349action was dismissed as to Dora Wolf and A. G. Wolf, and plaintiff had judgment against the defendant John Wolf. From such judgment, and an order overruling his motion for a new trial, John Wolf appeals.
“That for many years last past the defendant has treated the plaintiff with extreme cruelty, and has inflicted upon the plaintiff grievous mental suffering continuously for more than 10 years last past. That the plaintiff during- all of his married life has been a member' of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and has always been desirous and often in the habit of attending church service, and has always been in the habit of saying grace or asking the blessing at meal time in his family. That for many years prior to the commencement of this action the defendant has been in the habit of mocking and jeering at the plaintiff’s religious observances. That when asking a blessing at the table she frequently in an angry manner would call him a hyprocrite, and in the presence of the children, and sometimes in the presence of strangers,- would continue to pour out the coffee and otherwise arrange dishes on the table during the time that the plaintiff was asking the blessing. That she would do this intentionally, either through anger, or in order to show her contempt and derision for the plaintiff’s religious observances. That she encouraged the children [351]*351in 'disobedience and contempt for the plaintiff’s authority. That she on different occasions, without any cause or grounds therefor, accused the plaintiff of undue familiarity and improper conduct with the women Sunday school teachers of the Methodist Episcopal Sunday school at Kennebec, of which Sunday school the plaintiff was at the time the superintendent. That she frequently referred to the plaintiff and his people as being ‘low-lived, having been brought up in a hogpen,’ and on one occasion, in speaking to the plaintiff of his sister Dora, who was born with a deformity of the mouth, made a comparison in regard to Dora’s mouth which is unfit to be repeated or set out in the record of the court.”
The evidence taken in the divorce case is not before us, but the evidence contained in the record in this case fully sustains the above finding of fact. A careful reading of the testimony can lead to no other conclusion than that respondent’s present plight is the result of her own conduct and treatment of her husband during their married life. ' No doubt her.pitiable condition strongly appealed to the sympathies of the jury, as it certainly does to the sympathies of the court; but this does not entitle her to damages from the appellant. The burden was upon her to show, by a preponderance of -the evidence, that appellant, by his conduct, intentionally alienated the affections of her husband. This she not only failed to do, but, on the other hand, the evidence shows that she herself, if any one, alienated his affections.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
164 N.W. 106, 39 S.D. 347, 1917 S.D. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-wolf-sd-1917.