Court Opinion

ID: 6584245
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:41:02.008915+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:24.493548
License: Public Domain

ROWELL, J.
Case for alienating the affections of plaintiff’s wife and for criminal conversation with her.
In order to make admissible what purported to be a certificate of plaintiff’s marriage it was necessary to show that it was signed by the priest who performed, the ceremony. Plaintiff testified that he was married in church at New London, Conn., and that at the time of the ceremony the-certificate of his marriage that he produced was given to him. The father of plaintifl’s wife testified that he was present and *275saw the parties married, and saw said certificate given to them at the time of the marriage. Although neither witness testified directly that it was the priest who gave the certificate, yet it is fairly inferable from their testimony that it was he; and that being so, the fact that he gave it was evidence tending to show that the signature attached thereto, purporting to be that of the officiating priest, was his ; hence the certificate was admissible. An intimation to the like effect is made in State v. Colby, 51 Vt. 291.
Plaintiff and his wife quarrelled the night before she left him, and defendant offered to show what she subsequently said about it, for the purpose of showing on what terms they were then living. Trouble concerning plaintiff’s wife began between these parties about the middle of April, which was some time before she left. Defendant also offered to show generally her complaints and declarations of and concerning her husband’s treatment of her, made after trouble began as aforesaid, but was limited in time to those made before trouble began ; and this was right. In actions for criminal conversation it is relevant to inquire into the terms ’on which the husband and wife lived together before her connection with the defendant, and it is usual to give evidence of what they have said or written to or of each other, in order to show their mutual demeanor and conduct, and whether they were living on good or bad terms. It is, however, always required that proof should be given that the declarations or letters of the wife, when the husband is the plaintiff, purporting to express her feelings, were made or written prior to the existence of any facts calculated to excite suspicion of misconduct on her part, and when there existed no ground to suspect collusion, 1 Phil. Ev., * 182; 1 Greenl. Ev., s. 102; 1 Whart. Ev., s. 225.
This rule, and the reason of it, are as applicable to the counts for alienating affections as to the count for criminal conversation, for the cause of action is the same in all, *276namely, the loss of consortium. Daley v. Gates, 65 Vt. 591; Cross v. Grant, 62 N. H. 675; 13 Am. St. Rep. 607. The rule was applied in Houliston v. Smyth, 2 C. & P. 22, which was for board and lodging supplied to defendant’s wife while she was living apart from him on account of his cruelty. Defendant offered certain letters, purporting to have been written by his wife to him, for the purpose of rebutting the charge of cruelty. But they were excluded, because it was not shown, otherwise than by their dates, when they were written. There is nothing decided in Rudd v. Rounds, 64, Vt. 432, that conflicts with this rule.
The copy of the record of the conviction of the plaintiff for an assault upon his wife was properly excluded, because, if for no other reason, the copy not being furnished us, it does not appear whether the conviction was on a plea of guilty. If not, it may have been, and probably was, obtained on the testimony of his wife, who is not a competent witness in this action. Quinn v. Quinn, 16 Vt. 426; Robinson v. Wilson, 22 Vt. 35.
It is claimed that there is no such thing as a partial alienation of a wife’s affections; that in order to a recovery it devolved upon the plaintiff to show that his wife had affection for him at the time in question, and that the defendant completely^alienated it from him and caused it to center on himself, and that the court should have so charged. The Supreme Court of Indiana has said in a case of this kind that if the wife had no affection for her husband the defendant had no right to interfere to cut off all chance of its springing up in the future. Dallas v. Sellers, 17 Ind. 479; 79 Am. Dec. 489. As to the claim that there is no such thing as a partial alienation of affections, it is enough to say that experience and observation show the fact to be far otherwise.

Judgment affirmed.