Wolff v. Schlenker

31 N.W.2d 793, 75 N.D. 645, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 90
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1948
DocketFile 7062
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 N.W.2d 793 (Wolff v. Schlenker) 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
Wolff v. Schlenker, 31 N.W.2d 793, 75 N.D. 645, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 90 (N.D. 1948).

Opinion

*649 Nuessle, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for the alienation by the defendant of the affections of the plaintiff’s wife. The jury returned a verdict for $10,000. Thereafter, at the proper time, a foundation having been laid therefor, the defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. The court held the verdict to be excessive and made an order reducing it to $7500 and that the motion for a new trial he granted unless the defendant accepted such reduction. The plaintiff notified the court of his acceptance of the reduced verdict whereupon defendant’s motion was denied and judgment was ordered and entered for the plaintiff in the amount thereof. The defendant then perfected this appeal from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for judgment notwithstanding or for a new trial.

Plaintiff and his wife, Kathryn, were married in September 1932. Two children, hoys, aged at the time of the trial, eleven years and six years, respectively, were horn to this marriage. Apparently there was disharmony in the marital relationship for in 1942 plaintiff’s wife engaged an attorney to bring action for divorce. Plaintiff besought his wife to drop the action and resume the marriage relation. He admitted that he had called her opprobrious names, begged her forgiveness, and signed a written statement admitting his fault and declaring there would be no repetition. Thereafter the action was dropped. Subsequently, however, in December 1944, plaintiff’s wife brought another action for divorce. The case came to trial. A divorce was granted to her in May 1945, and she was given custody of the children. Thereafter, plaintiff brought the instant action alleging that the defendant by his persuasion, promises and blandishments had alienated the affections of the plaintiff’s wife and caused her to institute the action for divorce. The defendant denied the matters and *650 things set out in the plaintiff’s complaint and the case came to trial on the issues thus made. •

The plaintiff operated an automobile filling station in the town of Wishek. The defendant was also a resident of Wishek. He was a man of considerable property. He dealt in Ford automobiles' and operated a garage and filling station. Plaintiff offered testimony tending to show that beginning some time in 1942 or 1943, but subsequent to the time when the plaintiff’s wife began her first action for divorce, the defendant was frequently in her company. That on Sunday mornings he would drive from the town into the country in his automobile and that she would either precede him or follow him in her automobile and after leaving the town, their automobiles would be parked close together on the roadside. That on two or three occasions defendant stopped at the plaintiff’s house, picked up the latter’s wife and drove away with her in his automobile. That on one occasion the defendant with plaintiff’s wife drove out some distance into the country. There was also testimony that on various occasions plaintiff’s wife came to the defendant’s garage and talked to him there and through a period of three months in 1943 frequently called him over the telephone. The defendant denies that there was anything wrong or improper between the plaintiff’s wife and himself. He testified that he might have called for her at his wife’s request and taken her to his own home to attend a party or some other gathering there just as he had done for other woman acquaintances of his wife. He denied positively that he ever drove away from Wishek alone with Mrs. Wolff or that he had ever driven out alone and thereafter met Mrs. Wolff either along the highway or elsewhere.

There was a friendly relationship between the two families. On several occasions defendant and his wife drove to Fargo and Minot and the plaintiff and his wife accompanied them. This was admitted by the plaintiff. Plaintiff further offered some testimony tending to show defendant at one time in 1943 or .1944 bought an automobile from one Dircks of St. Cloud, Minnesota and that defendant introduced plaintiff’s wife, who *651 was with him, to Dircks. Defendant says he did buy an automobile from Dircks but that his wife was with him then and he introduced her to Dircks. He denies the plaintiff’s wife was ever introduced to anyone as his wife. Defendant’s wife, called as a witness, testified that she had gone with defendant to St. Cloud and to other places where the defendant went to buy automobiles and was introduced by him to various people with whom he dealt.

After procuring'her divorce plaintiff’s wife at once left Wishek and procured employment in Fargo and Moorhead. There is nothing in the record to show that thereafter she and the defendant were ever together or ever communicated with each other. She was a witness in behalf of the defendant. Her testimony was taken by deposition. She denied that there was ever any impropriety or irregularity as between the defendant and herself. She further testified that there was never any promise of any sort made to her or any inducement offered to her by the defendant for her to bring the divorce action. She also testified that she brought the action for divorce because of the plaintiff’s ill-treatment of her. She said she had never had any love or affection for him. That she married him only because of the fact that she and he had had pre-marital sexual relations whereby she had become pregnant, and that to avoid possible disgrace, she married him. That some two months after her marriage she met with an injury while playing* kitten ball and as a result had a miscarriage. The plaintiff admits that there were pre-marital sexual relations between them but denies that she was pregnant at the time of the marriage or that pregnancy was the reason for the marriage. He says their domestic relations were pleasant and agreeable in all respects and that they lived happily together up to the time she instituted her first action for divorce. Plaintiff’s wife further testified that the plaintiff was a sexual pervert. That he resorted to practices that were odious and unnatural and which disgusted and nauseated her and caused her to hate him. Plaintiff, in turn, vehemently denies that this was so.

*652 The defendant predicates his appeal as he did his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial on the following grounds; Insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict; Error in rulings of law during the trial; Error in instructions to the jury; And that the verdict is so excessive as to appear to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice. The court ruled against the defendant on the first three grounds set forth hut held that the verdict was excessive and pursuant to the statute, § 28-1902, ordered that the amount thereof be reduced to $7500 and that if the plaintiff were willing to remit the excess to the extent ordered., the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial should be denied and judgment entered against the defendant for the amount of the reduced verdict.

The statute, § 28-1902, defines the causes for which a new trial may be granted. Subsection 5, thereof, provides that a new trial may be granted for,

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W.2d 793, 75 N.D. 645, 1948 N.D. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolff-v-schlenker-nd-1948.