IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2005-CA-01800-SCT
JERRY FITCH, SR.
v.
JOHNNY VALENTINE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/12/2005
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ANDREW K. HOWORTH
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: MARSHALL COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: DION JEFFERY SHANLEY
S. DUKE GOZA
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: MICHAEL ALFRED JACOB
RALPH EDWIN CHAPMAN
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL-TORTS-OTHER THAN PERSONAL
INJURY & PROPERTY DAMAGE
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 04/19/2007
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
EN BANC.
RANDOLPH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Before this Court today is a classic “he said”/“she said”/“the paramour said” case. It
commenced when Johnny Valentine (“Valentine”) filed a civil complaint against Jerry Fitch,
Sr. (“Fitch”) in the Circuit Court of Marshall County, Mississippi, averring various causes
of action, including alienation of affections. Valentine is a plumber, Fitch is a millionaire
who owns various businesses, primarily involving oil and real estate.1 At the conclusion of
a trial on the merits, a jury unanimously rendered a verdict against Fitch and awarded
1
An April 29, 1998, financial statement of Fitch revealed a net worth of nearly $22
million.
Valentine $642,000 in actual damages and $112,500 in punitive damages. Thereafter, Fitch
filed a consolidated motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, new trial, and
remittitur, which the circuit court denied. Fitch has filed this appeal.
FACTS
¶2. The record reflects that Valentine and Sandra Day 2 (“Sandra”) were married on
February 12, 1993. In 1995, the couple had a son together, J.V. In the spring of 1997,
Sandra began working as a realtor for the Fitch Realty division of Fitch Oil Company and
earned around $400 a week in cash, based upon her commissions, according to Fitch.3
Sandra testified that the adulterous affair with Fitch began in late 1997 or early 1998.
According to Fitch, the relationship commenced in 1998. Fitch testified to knowing that
Sandra was married to Valentine and that the couple had a child together. It was established
at trial that Fitch testified at his deposition that he did not care if his affair with Sandra might
affect her marriage to Valentine.
¶3. Valentine testified that his marriage to Sandra was “normal” prior to late 1998 and
early 1999. The couple shared a joint checking account, ate meals together, and engaged in
sexual relations “[l]ike normal couples” until that time. In June of 1998, Sandra became
pregnant. During the fall of 1998, Valentine suspected Sandra was having an affair, but she
2
Now Sandra Fitch, having married Fitch subsequent to her divorce from Valentine.
3
Co-worker Susan Fleming, who was also a personal friend of Sandra and the former
bookkeeper at Fitch Oil Company, testified that Sandra claimed she received only $500 a
month in cash for her work.
2
denied any such wrongdoing.4 In February 1999, a daughter, K.V., was presumptively born
to the marital union. Valentine testified that, at that time, he believed K.V. was his child.
He was present at the hospital for K.V.’s delivery and was listed as K.V.’s father on her birth
certificate; and he loved and cared for K.V. According to Valentine, “a few weeks after
[K.V.] was born” he began to notice changes in Sandra.
¶4. At trial, Fitch testified that he was aware that K.V. was his child “a month or two after
she was born[,]” even though in the divorce proceedings from his wife of thirty-five years,
he admitted he knew K.V. was his child three or four days after her birth.
¶5. One night in August 1999, Sandra was not home by 10:30 p.m., and Valentine drove
toward Fitch’s cabin looking for her. After observing Sandra driving on Highway 4,
Valentine flagged her down. Valentine testified that upon being confronted about an affair,
Sandra once again denied any wrongdoing and came home with him. Thereafter, Valentine
repeatedly requested that Sandra quit her job at Fitch Realty, but she consistently refused to
do so. During this time frame, Valentine testified to finding “[t]wo or three hundred here and
three or four hundred there, a thousand, $1,100 in different places” around their home.
Sandra claimed she made this money at work. Valentine testified that the cash was more
than he had previously observed her earning. Sandra’s co-worker Susan Fleming testified
that, prior to the divorce, Sandra told her that Fitch had given her $8,000 to buy a new Jeep
Cherokee, which she acquired soon thereafter.5 Fleming also testified that shortly after K.V.
4
Conversely, Sandra testified that Valentine knew of her affair with Fitch at this time
and knew that the child may have been Fitch’s.
5
Valentine testified that Sandra came home with a new Jeep Cherokee and he had no
idea where she obtained the funds to purchase it.
3
was born, Sandra told her that Fitch had purchased a baby bed, high chair, baby seat, baby
clothes and other baby items for K.V. Fitch readily admitted to giving money to Sandra
between February 1999 and August 1999. Fitch, however, testified that he never paid Sandra
to date or marry him, or to entice her away from Valentine.
¶6. On August 28, 1999, Valentine and Sandra separated. In September 1999, DNA
testing conclusively excluded Valentine as K.V.’s biological father. Nonetheless, Valentine
still offered to raise K.V. as his own child if Sandra would end the adulterous affair with
Fitch. Sandra refused.
¶7. Valentine filed for divorce on October 28, 1999, and the divorce decree was entered
on November 23, 1999. The decree specifically stated that “[t]he evidence presented in open
[c]ourt clearly establishes that [Valentine] is entitled to a divorce on the grounds of adultery.”
(Emphasis added). Prior to the divorce, Valentine testified that Sandra never told him that
she did not love him or that she wanted a divorce. He further testified that the marriage
failed because Sandra “couldn’t resist all the money[,]” and that absent Fitch’s interference,
the marriage would have remained intact.
¶8. As can be expected, Sandra denied “selling [her] affections” and testified that her
affections for Valentine were absent before the adulterous affair with Fitch commenced.
According to her testimony, she loved Valentine when they first married. By the time J.V.
was born, however, Sandra said the marriage was only “okay.” She stated:
[b]efore his gambling problem, Johnny loved to be with his buddies. He
would not come home from work. He would drink. There’s been occasions
where I’ve gone looking for Johnny when he was with his buddies, and his
4
remark was, I embarrassed him by coming to where he was to try to get him
to come home to be the husband that he should be.[6 ]
Sandra further testified that, at that time, she “was still, obviously, in love with him. I tried
to get him to change and be different, but . . . he didn’t.” Sandra said the breaking point
came in January 1996, when she went to a casino looking for Valentine. She claims to have
told him that if he did not leave the casino at that moment then their marriage was over.
When he did not leave, Sandra states that “I didn’t care if he went every night, and that’s
when our marriage was over[,]” 7 although she further testified that their sexual relationship
did not effectively end until 1997 or 1998. According to Sandra, the couple “separated [on]
several occasions about [gambling], and he would promise that he would get help, and he
didn’t . . . .” Valentine denied having a gambling problem or that the couple ever separated.
¶9. Sandra asserted that the adulterous relationship with Fitch, which she claims to have
initiated, was caused by her unhappy marriage to Valentine. Furthermore, while she and
Fitch engaged in sex two or three times a week, she maintained that the adulterous sexual
activity had no effect on her alleged nonexistent desire to have sex with Valentine.
¶10. On December 21, 1999, Valentine filed suit against Fitch alleging various causes of
action, including alienation of affections. In Fitch’s answer, response to Valentine’s first set
of interrogatories, and response to Valentine’s first set of requests for admission, filed when
6
Valentine denied drinking to an extent that it interfered with his marriage or job, and
further testified that he did not recall Sandra confronting him about going out with his
friends.
7
Valentine testified that he did not recall Sandra confronting him about gambling in
this, or any other, instance. Despite the claim that Valentine’s gambling instigated Sandra’s
loss of affection, she failed to offer any evidence of gambling debts.
5
K.V. was more than one year old, Fitch denied having had sexual relations with Sandra,
being the father of K.V., or giving Sandra any monetary support beyond her salary.8
¶11. Following trial, the jury unanimously found for Valentine and awarded him $642,000
in actual damages and $112,500 in punitive damages against Fitch. On April 12, 2005, the
circuit court entered judgment against Fitch and in favor of Valentine “for the total sum of
$754,500 and interest thereon in the amount of 8% per annum and all costs . . . .” Thereafter,
Fitch filed his consolidated motion for judgment notwithstanding the jury verdict (“JNOV”),
new trial, and remittitur. Following Valentine’s response, Fitch’s reply for the first time
requested the circuit court to abolish the tort of alienation of affections.9 Following a
hearing, the circuit court concluded that:
[t]he jury’s verdict . . . seemed to be a lot of money to me; but if I correctly
instructed the jury on the elements of their damages and if the jury was entitled
to consider once they arrived at a conclusion about liability, considered the
elements that I instructed them on, I can’t second-guess them, don’t have the
authority to do so, don’t want to do so. It’s the jury’s job to establish the value
of the loss and they’ve done so and I cannot say the amount of the verdict is
such to justify the Court granting the motion to remit the verdict. The Court
is going to deny all motions.
(Emphasis added). On September 16, 2005, Fitch filed his notice of appeal.
ISSUES
¶12. This Court will consider:
(1) Whether the tort of alienation of affections should be abolished on public
policy grounds.
8
In amended responses filed six months later, on the day before his deposition, Fitch
admitted to having sexual relations with Sandra and being the father of K.V.
9
Valentine filed a motion to strike the portion of Fitch’s reply addressing the abolition
of the tort of alienation of affections. The circuit court granted Valentine’s motion to strike.
6
(2) Whether the circuit court committed evidentiary errors.
(3) Whether the circuit court erred in instructing the jury.
(4) Whether the jury verdict was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the
evidence.
(5) Whether the punitive damages award violates due process.
(6) Whether this Court should order a remittitur of the award in this case.
ANALYSIS
I. Whether the tort of alienation of affections should be abolished on
public policy grounds.
¶13. Fitch argues that this Court should abolish the tort of alienation of affections as a
matter of public policy. Fitch states:
[t]he adversarial positions taken in this litigation over the intensely personal
and private matters of [Valentine] and Sandra certainly does not serve as a
shining example to the citizens of Marshall County that marriage as an
institution must be preserved.
Fitch frames the trial as a “classic morality play” with “[t]he hapless victim; his wife’s virtue
stolen by the rich villain.” Fitch contends that since the divorce rate continues to escalate in
Mississippi, the institution of marriage has already been devalued and the justification for
this tort’s continued existence is outdated and discredited.
¶14. To the contrary, Valentine asserts that this Court “should continue to allow alienation
of affection cases against third parties who cause the destruction and breakdown of the
marital bond and family relationship.” Valentine further contends that “[t]he focus of this
Court should be to continue to allow the viability of the tort which imposes liability . . . [and
deters third parties] from intentionally interfering with a marriage.”
¶15. The tort of alienation of affections was recognized in Mississippi as early as 1926 in
McRae v. Robinson, 145 Miss. 191, 110 So. 504 (1926). In Camp v. Roberts, 462 So. 2d
7
726, 727 (Miss. 1985), this Court held “[w]here a husband [wife][10 ] is wrongfully deprived
of his rights to the ‘services and companionship and consortium of his [her] wife [husband],’
he [she] has a cause of action ‘against one who has interfered with his [her] domestic
relations.’” Id. at 727 (citing Walter v. Wilson, 228 So. 2d 597, 598 (Miss. 1969), overruled
in part on other grounds; Saunders v. Alford, 607 So. 2d 1214, 1219 (Miss. 1992)). Without
question, Mississippi’s recognition of the tort of alienation of affections places it among the
minority of states. See Helsel v. Noellsch, 107 S.W.3d 231, 235 (Mo. 2003) (Benton, J.,
dissenting) (the other states are Illinois, Hawaii, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Dakota,
and Utah). However, in his special concurrence in Bland v. Hill, 735 So. 2d 414 (Miss.
1999), Chief Justice (then Justice) Smith wisely responded to the “everybody else is doing
it, so should I” view, by stating:
[w]hile I agree that it appears society’s moral values have changed during
modern times, I do not believe Mississippi should get aboard this runaway
train. I would also not take away an offended spouse’s only legal means to
seek redress in our courts for the wrongful conduct of a third party who
wilfully and intentionally interferes in and aids in destroying a marriage.
Id. at 422 (Smith, J., specially concurring).11
10
The tort of alienation of affections is equally applicable to women as men, avoiding
any archaic notion that a wife is the property of her husband. See Kirk v. Koch, 607 So. 2d
1220, 1224 (Miss. 1992).
11
I cannot adopt the position of a majority of states and minimize this activity which
the legislature has defined as a crime against public morals and decency, and declared its
penalty comparable to similar conduct between a teacher and pupil or a guardian and ward.
See Miss. Code Ann. § 97-29-1 et seq. The Legislature has not seen fit to join the throngs
who say these are only “affairs of the heart,” “flings,” or “stepping out,” as a means of
attaching validity to such conduct.
8
¶16. In retaining the tort, this Court has stated that “the purpose of a cause of action for
alienation of affection is the ‘protection of the love, society, companionship, and comfort that
form the foundation of a marriage . . . .’” Id. at 417 (quoting Saunders, 607 So. 2d at 1215).
“The right sought to be protected is that of consortium.” Saunders, 607 So. 2d at 1215.
Justice Smith’s special concurrence in Bland explained the justification and need for
continued recognition of the tort of alienation of affections, stating:
[s]hould an individual be allowed to intrude upon a marriage to such an extent
as to cause it to come to an end? Does a spouse have a valuable interest in a
marriage that is worthy of protection from the intruding third party? In my
view, the answer to both questions is in the affirmative. The traditional family
is under such attack both locally and nationally these days that this Court
should not retreat now from the sound view of the tort of alienation of
affections espoused by this Court in Saunders as entitling a spouse to
"protection of the love, society, companionship, and comfort that form the
foundation of a marriage." [Saunders, 607 So. 2d at 1215] (quoting Norton
v. Macfarlane, 818 P.2d 8, 12 (Utah 1991)); see also Horner v. Byrnett, 511
S.E.2d 342 (N.C. Ct. App. 1999). I do not believe that under the compelling
facts of this particular case this Court should hold that the doctrine of
alienation of affections has outlived its usefulness as a deterrent protecting the
marital relationship of a husband and wife in cases where the facts clearly
warrant.
Bland, 735 So. 2d at 422 (Smith, J., specially concurring) (emphasis added). In addition to
protecting the marriage relationship and its sanctity, see id. at 418, the tort of alienation of
affections also provides an appropriate remedy for intentional conduct which causes a loss
of consortium. The dissenting opinion in Helsel summarized this position, stating:
[i]n tort cases where a spouse is injured, the other spouse often has a separate
claim for loss of consortium. Powell v. American Motors Corp., 834 S.W.2d
184, 188 (Mo. banc 1992). Most of these losses are caused by a defendant’s
negligence. In alienation of affection – an intentional tort – a defendant’s
intentional conduct causes the loss. See Gibson [v. Frowein,] 400 S.W.2d
[418,] 421 [(Mo. banc 1966)]. It is inconsistent [if] the law compensates for
9
negligent conduct causing a loss of consortium, but . . . does not compensate
for intentional conduct causing the same loss.
Helsel, 107 S.W.3d at 234 (Benton, J., dissenting). See also Bland, 735 So. 2d at 421
(Smith, J., specially concurring) (“there is no point in abolishing an otherwise valid common
law tort, especially now that we have leveled the playing field in Kirk. Would the dissent
strike down consortium next?”). Therefore, in the interest of protecting the marriage
relationship and providing a remedy for intentional conduct which causes a loss of
consortium, this Court declines the invitation to abolish the common law tort of alienation
of affections in Mississippi.12 Alienation of affections is the only available avenue to provide
redress for a spouse who has suffered loss and injury to his or her marital relationship against
the third party who, through persuasion, enticement, or inducement, caused or contributed
to the abandonment of the marriage and/or the loss of affections by active interference.
II. Whether the circuit court committed evidentiary errors.
(A) The use of Fitch’s prior inconsistent statements, set forth in the pleadings, during
Valentine’s opening statement.
¶17. In Valentine’s opening statement, his counsel discussed the charges contained in the
complaint and Fitch’s various responses found in his answer, answers to interrogatories, and
responses to requests for admissions which set forth Fitch’s repeated denials of having sexual
12
One dissent suggests that “these suits inevitably do more to hurt families than to
help them.” I find more persuasive the counter-argument that damage actually arises from
the adulterous conduct which first violates, and then destroys, the trust of not only the
participants, but also of their respective families. To minimize and cast as theoretical the
obvious negative consequences, such as the erosion of the marital relationship and the
disruption to family unity ignores these empirical truths. The dissent’s fatalistic
presupposition that marriages experiencing affairs will “crash and burn,” fails to recognize
the reality of forgiveness and reconciliation.
10
relations with Sandra or being the father of K.V. Counsel for Fitch objected to the pleadings
being referenced in Valentine’s opening statement, arguing “they are not proof or evidence.”
The circuit judge overruled Fitch’s objection.
¶18. Fitch now contends that the circuit court erred, maintaining that “argument and
comments upon the credibility of witnesses are improper when made in opening statement.”
In support thereof, he cites Balfour v. State, 598 So. 2d 731, 749-50 (Miss. 1992), for the
proposition that “before there can be impeachment, there must be testimony which is
impeachable.” According to Fitch, Valentine:
proceeded to publish to the jury what he obviously considered passed for a
predicate from which impeachment may commence: unsworn allegations of
the [c]omplaint, unsworn denials in the [a]nswer. From here, [Valentine]
proceeded with the ‘testimony’ – answers to interrogatories, deposition
testimony, and responses to request for admissions. . . . [Fitch] had not taken
the stand.
In Fitch’s estimation, “the unsworn allegations were blown up and published to the jury
obviously disproportionate to their significance . . . in light of the fact that many claims were
abandoned in subsequent testimony.” As such, Fitch contends that this error warrants a new
trial.
¶19. In response, Valentine first submits that Fitch has waived this issue as he “only
objected to [Valentine’s] use of the unsworn pleadings on the basis for use as evidence[,]”
but never objected “to the use of the unsworn pleadings on the basis of impeachment, which
is the issue [Fitch] is raising on appeal.” See Johnson v. Alcorn State Univ., 929 So. 2d 398,
407 (Miss. Ct. App. 2006) (“[a]ppellate courts may not rule upon material matters which the
trial judge did not have the opportunity to judge. Ditto v. Hinds County, Miss., 665 So. 2d
11
878, 880 (Miss. 1995). Issues not raised at trial cannot be raised on appeal. Southern v.
Mississippi State Hosp., 853 So. 2d 1212 (Miss. 2003).”).
¶20. Notwithstanding the alleged procedural bar, Valentine maintains that the prior
inconsistent statements:
were not being introduced during [Valentine’s] opening statement as
substantive evidence nor were they being ‘offered for the truth of the matter
asserted’ but the pleadings were being used merely to define the issues the jury
would decide and show [Fitch] made the statements and as such it is relevant
regardless of its truth and it does not matter that the trier of fact is unable to
ascertain [Fitch’s] credibility.
In support of this position, Valentine notes that both his counsel and the circuit court
informed the jury that the substance of the opening statement did not constitute evidence.
Moreover, Valentine asserts that the pleadings “were used as demonstrative aids only . . . to
describe the issues that the jury would decide, [Fitch’s] defenses and that [Fitch] had made
prior inconsistent statements.” In Haggerty v. Foster, 838 So. 2d 948 (Miss. 2002), this
Court stated:
[d]emonstrative evidence may be admitted at the trial court’s discretion, if such
evidence was reasonably necessary and material, Murriel v. State, 515 So. 2d
952, 956 (Miss. 1987), and appropriate and relevant. Gandy v. State, 373 So.
2d 1042, 1047 (Miss. 1979). Furthermore, where error involves the admission
or exclusion of evidence, this Court “will not reverse unless the error adversely
affects a substantial right of a party.” In re Estate of Mask, 703 So. 2d 852,
859 . . . .
Haggerty, 838 So. 2d at 958. Valentine argues that “this evidence was necessary, material,
appropriate, and relevant since [Fitch] testified that he provided information to his counsel
to be used in answering the [c]omplaint.” Finally, Valentine insists that “this reference was
12
cumulative of other and later similar denials, under oath, in response to both interrogatories
and requests for admissions (which were also sworn) and if error at all, it was harmless.”
¶21. The circuit judge’s decision to overrule Fitch’s objection is reviewed by this Court
under an “abuse of discretion” standard. See id. This Court finds that the use of Fitch’s prior
inconsistent statements in Valentine’s opening statement was permissible and the circuit
court’s decision to overrule Fitch’s objection was not an abuse of discretion. Not only was
the jury repeatedly informed that the content of the opening statements were not evidence,
but Fitch’s prior inconsistent statements in these pleadings were developed during his
testimony at trial. Accordingly, this issue is without merit.
(B) Evidence of Valentine’s conduct prior to and after his marriage to Sandra.
¶22. Fitch sought to solicit testimony regarding Valentine’s adulterous conduct with Sandra
at the inception of their relationship. Valentine filed a motion in limine to prevent Fitch from
introducing any such evidence. The circuit judge granted Valentine’s motion in limine. In
support of that position, the circuit judge stated that “if you have any evidence of . . . relevant
marital misconduct on his part while he’s married to [Sandra], that’s one thing. Proof
beforehand is something else.” (Emphasis added).
¶23. “[T]he standard of review regarding Rule 403 determinations is an ‘abuse of
discretion.’” Baldwin v. State, 784 So. 2d 148, 160 (Miss. 2001). Applying that deferential
standard of review, this Court finds that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in
granting Valentine’s motion in limine. Fitch’s wrongful conduct was the issue in this case.
The presence of a marriage relationship is necessary for the tort of alienation of affections
to apply. Therefore, the time frame in which Valentine and Sandra were married, not their
13
pre-marriage conduct, was key. The meager probative value of evidence on the beginning
of Valentine’s relationship with Sandra was found to be outweighed by the undue prejudice
it would create. As such, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in granting Valentine’s
motion in limine, and this issue is without merit.
¶24. At trial, Valentine objected to Fitch mentioning another child born to Valentine
following his divorce from Sandra. The circuit court precluded the introduction of such
evidence, finding that “you should not inquire as to any after born children, if that’s a correct
term for it because that, in the Court’s opinion, is unduly prejudicial and of limited or no
probative value.” (Emphasis added).
¶25. Once again, this Court applies the deferential abuse of discretion standard of review,
see id., and finds that the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in precluding the
introduction of evidence regarding the child born to Valentine following his divorce from
Sandra. The key time frame for the tort of alienation of affections is that of the marriage,
within which this evidence clearly does not fit. Moreover, the circuit court found this
evidence to be “unduly prejudicial and of limited or no probative value.” As the circuit court
did not abuse its discretion in so finding, this issue is without merit.
III. Whether the circuit court erred in instructing the jury.
(A) Instructions P-5 and D-8.
¶26. Instruction P-5 was given to the jury by the circuit court and provided:
[i]n order for your verdict to be for [Valentine] and against [Fitch], you must
find the following:
1. That the conduct of [Fitch] was wrongful;
14
2. A loss of affection or consortium was suffered by [Valentine];
and
3. That this wrongful conduct caused the loss of affection or
consortium.
If you determine the above statements to be true, yo[u] must return a verdict
for [Valentine] and award him damages in accordance with the Court’s
instructions.
If [Valentine] fails to prove any one or more of these elements by a
preponderance of the evidence, then your verdict must be for [Fitch].
Instruction D-8, which was rejected by the circuit court as “repetitive,” stated “[y]ou are
instructed that in determining the cause of the loss of Sandra’s affections [Valentine] must
prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that [Fitch’s] direct interference in his marriage
caused Sandra to lose affections for him.”
¶27. While conceding that Mississippi law has commonly listed the elements of the tort of
alienation of affections just as in Instruction P-5, see Saunders, 607 So. 2d at 1215, Fitch
argues that:
as far back as Stanton v. Cox, 139 So. 458, 461 (1932), it is settled law that
[Valentine] must prove [his] loss was occasioned by the direct interference of
[Fitch]. Because the lower court’s instruction allowed the jury to find liability
without the predicate finding of proximate cause specific to this tort, the matter
should be reversed for a new trial . . . .
¶28. In response, Valentine initially contends that Fitch waived this argument because “[t]o
preserve an objection to a jury instruction, the specific ground for the objection must be
stated in the original objection. The issue raised on appeal may not be based on a different
legal theory.” See Shields v. Easterling, 676 So. 2d 293, 296 (Miss. 1996) (“Shields did not
put this objection to the trial court in any specific meaningful manner. Thus, the trial judge
15
had no opportunity to rule on it. . . . Thus, this Court is barred from reviewing this issue.”)
(emphasis added). At trial, Fitch objected to Instruction P-5 initially because he perceived
the wording to be “cumbersome.” Once the language was rephrased, Fitch raised no further
objection. As to Instruction D-8, the circuit judge refused the instruction “because i[t]
becomes somewhat repetitive.” According to Valentine, Fitch has failed to show that
Instruction D-8 “properly stated the law and was necessary to fully inform the jury of the law
considering the totality of the instructions[.]” 13
¶29. This Court has stated that it “[i]f other instructions granted adequately instruct the
jury, a party may not complain of a refused instruction on appeal. Purina Mills, Inc. v.
Moak, 575 So. 2d 993, 996 (Miss. 1990). . . . [T]he trial court has considerable discretion in
instructing the jury.” Southland Enter. v. Newton County, 838 So. 2d 286, 289 (Miss.
2003). This Court first finds this argument to be procedurally barred as Fitch failed to object
after Instruction P-5 was rephrased and therefore failed to properly preserve for appeal his
Instruction D-8 argument. Procedural bar notwithstanding, this Court concludes that the
circuit court properly exercised its discretion in finding Instruction D-8 “repetitive” of
Instruction P-5. Therefore, this issue is without merit.
(B) Instruction P-8
¶30. Instruction P-8 was given to the jury by the circuit court and provided:
[y]ou are instructed that just compensation is a decision to be made by the jury.
Your discretion as to the measure of damages is wide, but not unlimited, and
you may not act arbitrarily. Exercise your discretion as to the amount of
13
Fitch replies that “[i]f the trial court was correct in finding D-8 repetitive of P-5 . .
. [then Fitch] loses this point on the merits, not on a point of procedure.”
16
damages reasonably, intelligently and in harmony with the evidence of the
case and the Court’s instructions. The damages cannot be assessed by an fixed
rule, but you are the sole judges as to the measure of damages in this case.
Should you find for [Valentine] then you must determine the amount of money
which will reasonably and fairly compensate him for the value of the
consortium he has lost. You should consider the following elements of
damage as have been proved by a preponderance of the evidence in this case:
a. The loss of society, companionship, love and affection;
b. The loss of aide, services, and physical assistance provided
by [Sandra];
c. The loss of sexual relations;
d. The loss of participation together in the activities, duties and
responsibilities of making a home;
e. Any mental and emotional distress proximately resulting
from [Fitch’s] conduct; and
f. Any other damages proven to have proximately resulted from
any wrongful act of [Fitch].
¶31. Fitch cites Cousar v. State, 855 So. 2d 993 (Miss. 2003), for the proposition that
“[g]ranting instructions not supported by evidence is error.” Id. at 997 (citing Haggerty, 838
So. 2d at 955). Fitch then argues that the circuit court erred by approving “an instruction on
damages which the evidence did not support, specifically allowing the jury to consider an
award for any damage the jury thought appropriate despite the fact that [Valentine], on
evidentiary grounds, abandoned all damages beyond the consortium lost with his wife and
child.” 14 Furthermore, Fitch contends that “[t]here is no temporal restrictions placed on the
14
Fitch alleges that Valentine did this “to prevent examination of [himself] on issues
relating to his adventures after his marriage to Sandra ended.”
17
instruction. . . . These questions were significant insofar as [Valentine] continually prevented
[Fitch] from going into matters that preceded or followed the marriage.”
¶32. In response, Valentine maintains that:
[t]emporal restrictions were placed both on types of damages recoverable and
as to what period of time the jury should consider since the jury was instructed
to only award damages proven during the course of the trial to have
proximately resulted from the wrongful acts of [Fitch]. The jury heard the
evidence presented and unanimously determined the amount of damages that
were proximately caused by [Fitch’s] wrongful acts.
(Emphasis added). Furthermore, Valentine notes that “[t]he instructions must be read as a
whole[,]” Phillips v. Dow Chemical Co., 247 Miss. 293, 304, 151 So. 2d 199, 203 (1963);
Court Instruction No. 4 provided that any damages were to be proven by a preponderance of
the evidence; and “it is and should be presumed that the jury followed the law.”
¶33. This Court “must view the instruction in light of all the other instructions which were
given to determine whether the jury was properly instructed. Munford, Inc. v. Fleming, 597
So. 2d 1282, 1286 (Miss. 1992). . . . [T]he trial court has considerable discretion in
instructing the jury.” Southland Enter., 838 So. 2d at 289. Instruction P-8 stated “[y]ou
should consider the following elements of damages as have been proved by a preponderance
of the evidence in this case[.]” (Emphasis added). As such, the damages awarded were
limited to those proximately resulting from Fitch’s wrongful acts during Valentine and
Sandra’s marriage. Granting such an instruction was proper and well within the circuit
judge’s discretion. Therefore, this issue is without merit.
18
IV. Whether the jury verdict was contrary to the overwhelming weight
of the evidence.
¶34. At the hearing on his post-trial motion for JNOV, Fitch argued that:
because the plaintiff had not established the second element of the tort of
alienation of affection [loss of affection or consortium] or a causal connection
. . . between the defendant, [Fitch], as conduct and the disintegration of this
marriage, a jury issue was not presented and we would contend that a directed
verdict should have been granted.
In response, Valentine maintained that:
[w]hile they have one set of facts and proof, we had another. The jury chose
to believe our facts. It was a classic case of where the jury made a decision
and in this case they made it unanimously. There was proof on both sides of
it. We proved wrongful conduct. We proved loss of affection. We proved the
causal connection. We proved loss of love and affection through our client.
(Emphasis added). After hearing argument from both parties, the learned circuit judge
denied the JNOV motion.
¶35. A trial court’s denial of a motion for JNOV is reviewed de novo by this Court. Poole
v. Avara, 908 So. 2d 716, 726 (Miss. 2005) (citing Wilson v. Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp.,
883 So. 2d 56, 64 (Miss. 2004)). “The trial court must view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party and look only to the sufficiency, and not the weight, of that
evidence.” Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726 (emphasis added). “When determining whether the
evidence was sufficient, the critical inquiry is whether the evidence is of such quality that
reasonable and fairminded jurors in the exercise of fair and impartial judgment might reach
different conclusions.” Id. (citing Jesco, Inc. v. Whitehead, 451 So. 2d 706, 713-14 (Miss.
1984) (Robertson, J., specially concurring)) (emphasis added). See also Irby v. Travis, 935
So. 2d 884, 888-89 (Miss. 2006).
19
¶36. The commonly stated elements of the tort of alienation of affections are “(1) wrongful
conduct of the defendant; (2) loss of affection or consortium;[15 ] and (3) causal connection
between such conduct and loss.” Saunders, 607 So. 2d at 1215. See also Camp, 462 So. 2d
at 727 (“where a husband [wife] is wrongfully deprived of his [her] rights to the ‘services and
companionship and consortium of his [her] wife [husband],’ he [she] has a cause of action
‘against the one who has interfered with his [her] domestic relations.’ . . . The husband [wife]
might then sue for . . . alienation of affection . . . .”). This Court has recognized that
persuasion, enticement, or inducement which causes or contributes to the abandonment is a
necessary component of “wrongful conduct.” Justice Dickinson recognized in Children’s
Medical Group v. Phillips, 940 So. 2d 931 (Miss. 2006) that in order “to maintain this action
it must be established that the husband [wife] was induced to abandon the wife [husband] by
some active interference on the part of the defendant.” Id. at 934 (quoting Stanton, 139 So.
at 460) (emphasis added). In recognizing this he identified pre-Stanton language requiring
persuasion. See McRae, 145 Miss. at 205, 110 So. at 508. Thus, to determine whether this
15
Regarding loss of consortium:
[t]he interest sought to be protected is personal to the wife [husband] and
arises out of the marriage relation. She [He] is entitled to society,
companionship, love, affection, aid, services, support, sexual relations and the
comfort of her husband [his wife] as special rights and duties growing out of
the marriage covenant. To these may be added the right to live together in the
same house, to eat at the same table, and to participate together in the
activities, duties and responsibilities necessary to make a home. All of these
are included in the broad term, ‘conjugal rights.’ The loss of consortium is the
loss of any or all of these rights . . . .
Kirk, 607 So. 2d at 1224 (citing Tribble v. Gregory, 288 So. 2d 13, 16 (Miss. 1974)).
20
standard was met, following denial of the JNOV motion, this Court must view the evidence
“in the light most favorable to the non-moving party[,]” Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726, and it must
be determined if “reasonable and fairminded jurors in the exercise of fair and impartial
judgment might reach different conclusions[,]” id., as to that evidence.
¶37. As a preliminary matter, the credibility of a witness is to be judged by the jury. See
Bland, 735 So. 2d at 419. Viewing the credibility evidence regarding Fitch and Sandra “in
the light most favorable,” Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726, to Valentine, it is clear that a reasonable
juror could reject or discount their testimony.
¶38. Under oath and in response to Valentine’s first set of interrogatories and requests for
admission,16 Fitch denied both that he fathered K.V. and that he had any sexual relations with
Sandra. At the time of this response, K.V. was more than one year old. At trial, Fitch
testified that he knew the child was his “a month or two after she was born.” At the time he
responded under oath to Valentine, Fitch was well aware that K.V. was his child. In spite
of this, Fitch denied being K.V.’s father and having any sexual relations with Sandra.
¶39. As to Sandra, when she was pregnant with K.V. in the fall of 1998, during her second
trimester of pregnancy, she falsely denied to Valentine that she was having an affair with
Fitch. At trial, she stated that her affair with Fitch commenced in late 1997 or early 1998.
Furthermore, Sandra subsequently married Fitch, and, as Fitch’s wife, her testimony at trial
in support of Fitch’s position could justifiably be questioned.17
16
As well as in his answer.
17
At trial, Sandra admitted to discussing the lawsuit with Fitch. Regarding potential
motive, counsel for Valentine stated, “they eat out of the same trough.”
21
¶40. Furthermore, viewing the testimony and evidence presented at trial “in the light most
favorable,” id., to Valentine, a reasonable juror could conclude that all elements of the tort
of alienation of affections were met. The “wrongful conduct of the defendant,” Saunders,
607 So. 2d at 1215, when viewed “in the light most favorable,” Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726, to
Valentine, was satisfied by introduction of evidence supporting a finding that Fitch’s acts of
persuasion, enticement, or inducement caused or contributed to an adulterous relationship
between Fitch and Sandra, which subsequently was admitted. The judgment of divorce
provided that “[t]he evidence presented in open [c]ourt clearly establishes that [Valentine]
is entitled to a divorce on the grounds of adultery.” 18 Furthermore, Valentine testified that
after K.V. was born he began finding large sums of money throughout the home, which
Sandra claimed to have made at work. The amount of cash he found far exceeded what he
had previously observed Sandra earning. Fitch testified to giving Sandra money between
February 1999 and August 1999. Moreover, Fleming testified that Sandra told her she was
given $8,000 by Fitch with which to buy a new Jeep Cherokee. Soon thereafter, Sandra
acquired a new Jeep Cherokee. Finally, Fleming testified that Sandra told her “that if she did
quit [working for Fitch], she was afraid that Mr. Fitch would have [the child] taken away
from her.” Valentine testified his marriage failed because Sandra “couldn’t resist all the
money[,]” and, absent Fitch, his marriage would have remained intact. This satisfies the
additional element of persuasion, enticement, or inducement, when viewed “in the light most
favorable,” to Valentine. Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726. The key issue is the “causal connection
18
Furthermore, Sandra admitted at trial that she committed adultery with Fitch.
22
between such conduct and loss.” Id. In short, when did the loss of society, companionship,
aid, services, support, and the remaining components of loss of affection and consortium
occur? See Kirk, 607 So. 2d at 1224. Was it before or after Sandra became involved with
Fitch? If after, did Fitch’s wrongful conduct lead to Sandra’s loss of affection or
consortium? Again, the testimony must be viewed “in the light most favorable,” to
Valentine. Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726. Even though the marriage may have been “on the
rocks,” there is no proof that aid, services, support, or the right to live in the same house and
eat at the same table had been lost until after the wrongful conduct, even though Sandra
asserted that she lost affection for Valentine in January of 1996. Around that time, she
allegedly went to the casino, told Valentine that if he did not leave with her their marriage
was over, and he did not leave. From that point on, which predated her introduction to Fitch,
she claims not to have “care[d] if he went every night, and that’s when our marriage was
over.” However, Valentine testified that, prior to K.V.’s birth, his marriage to Sandra, while
not perfect, was “normal.” He stated that they had regular sexual relations 19 prior to K.V.’s
birth, shared a joint checking account, ate meals together, never separated,20 and that he loved
Sandra. Only after K.V. was born did Valentine begin to notice changes in Sandra. The
“loss of affection or consortium,” id., was unquestionably present.
¶41. After considering the evidence, the jury unanimously found for Valentine in the
amount of $642,000 in actual damages and, thereafter, for $112,500 in punitive damages.
In light of the credibility issues surrounding both Fitch’s and Sandra’s testimony and the
19
“Like normal couples.”
20
Sandra further testified that she never filed for divorce from Valentine.
23
standard of review which mandates viewing the evidence “in the light most favorable,” to
Valentine, “reasonable and fairminded jurors . . . exercis[ing] . . . fair and impartial
judgment,” could (and unanimously did) find Fitch liable for the tort of alienation of
affections. Id. Out of respect for the judgments of both the jury and circuit judge, this Court
concludes that “[c]onflicting evidence exists which could cause fair-minded jurors to reach
different conclusions and thus, granting this motion would have been improper. Therefore,
this issue is without merit.” Id.
V. Whether the punitive damage award violates due process.
¶42. Fitch concedes that “[u]nder the current state of jurisprudence in Mississippi, the state
has a legitimate interest in protecting the institution of marriage” and the love that forms its
foundation. Nonetheless, he argues that such interest ends “when one is punished for
engaging in action protected by the Constitution that incidentally may also cause the transfer
of affections to one outside the marriage.” Therefore, he maintains that “the penal
component of the award below . . . offends substantive due process insofar as it sanctions
punishment for constitutionally permissive conduct.”
¶43. In reply, Valentine first argues that Fitch waived this argument by only generally
objecting to punitive damages at trial21 and not seeking remittance of the punitive damage
21
Specifically, Valentine argues that Fitch “only objected to the jury instruction on
punitive damages to the extent it had a presumption of malice. This presumption was
redacted from the instruction. [Fitch] then only made a general objection to punitive
damages.” While Fitch admits that he “did not urge a First Amendment-based theory of
relief against the punitive damage award[,]” he still maintains that he raised due process
claims in the circuit court regarding “the ‘excessiveness of the verdict’ as well as the
cumulative errors . . . .”
24
award in post-trial motions. Notwithstanding the procedural bar, Valentine notes that this
Court “has recognized punitive damages as proper relief in alienation of affection cases since
Brister v. Dunaway, 115 So. 36 (Miss. 1928) . . . .” Moreover, he asserts that because
adultery constitutes malice, see Walter, 228 So. 2d at 598 (“on the issue of adultery with the
wife of another . . . malice is presumed.”), then Miss. Code Ann. Section 11-1-65(1)(a) 22 is
satisfied and “[t]he necessary elements were present for the jury to determine whether or not
to grant punitive damages in this case.” In total, Valentine maintains that:
[t]his malicious act of adultery was . . . admitted on the stand. Further, other
aggravating circumstances also existed in the case sub judice: i.e., by the
continuing acts of adultery occurring two to three times a week during work
and occasionally at night over an extended period of time; by a child fathered
by [Fitch] during Sandra’s marriage to [Valentine]; and by the exorbitant and
lavish sums of money, gifts, and benefits which [Fitch] gave to Sandra, his
employee, during her marriage to [Valentine].
¶44. As an initial matter, this Court finds that this issue is procedurally barred as no due
process challenge to the punitive damage award was raised before the circuit court. See
Johnson, 929 So. 2d at 407. Procedural bar notwithstanding, this Court has consistently
recognized punitive damages as a legitimate form of relief in alienation of affections cases.
See Brister, 115 So. at 36. Moreover, the punitive damages awarded in the case sub judice
22
Which states “[p]unitive damages may not be awarded if the claimant does not prove
by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant against whom punitive damages are
sought acted with actual malice, gross negligence which evidences a willful, wanton or
reckless disregard for the safety of others, or committed actual fraud.” (Emphasis added).
25
were only a fraction of compensatory damages awarded,23 hardly rising to the level of gross
excess. In total, this issue is without merit.
VI. Whether this Court should order a remittitur of the award in this
case.
¶45. As to damages, Circuit Judge Howorth considered a motion to remit the verdict and
concluded:
[t]he jury’s verdict . . . seemed to be a lot of money to me; but if I correctly
instructed the jury on the elements of their damages and if the jury was entitled
to consider once they arrived at a conclusion about liability, considered the
elements that I instructed them on, I can’t second-guess them, don’t have the
authority to do so, don’t want to do so. It’s the jury’s job to establish the value
of the loss and they’ve done so and I cannot say the amount of the verdict is
such to justify the Court granting the motion to remit the verdict.
(Emphasis added).
¶46. Miss. Code Ann. Section 11-1-55 states, in part:
[t]he supreme court or any other court of record in a case in which money
damages were awarded may overrule a motion for new trial or affirm on direct
or cross appeal, upon condition of an additur or remittitur, if the court finds
that the damages are excessive or inadequate for the reason that the jury or
trier of facts was influenced by bias, prejudice, or passion, or that the damages
awarded were contrary to the overwhelming weight of credible evidence.
Miss. Code Ann. Section 11-1-55 (Rev. 2002). This Court has stated that “[a]bsent either
of these findings, the trial court abuses its discretion[,]” in ordering a remittitur. State
Highway Commission of Miss. v. Warren, 530 So. 2d 704, 707 (Miss. 1988) (quoting
McIntosh v. Deas, 501 So. 2d 367, 369-70 (Miss. 1987)).
23
The punitive damage award constituted less than 15% of the total award. The
United States Supreme Court has noted that “single-digit multipliers are more likely to
comport with due process.” State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 538 U.S.
408, 425 (2003).
26
¶47. Fitch initially admits that “the verdict was based on [Valentine’s] testimony
concerning the distress caused by the breakup of his marriage and . . . that expert testimony
is not required to prove such elements.” (Emphasis added). Nonetheless, he argues that:
[Valentine] suffered no economic loss in this case that was quantified with
certainty sufficient to support the award . . . . Such a verdict is so obviously
excessive as to demonstrate without further argument, bias, passion and
prejudice on the part of the jury. The verdict should be set aside . . . .
¶48. Valentine responds that the jury verdict was unanimous and that “[t]he evidence
presented by [Valentine] supported the jury’s finding that [he] suffered a loss of consortium
and affection, and mental and emotional distress because of [Fitch’s] wrongful acts.”
Specifically, he argues that:
[t]he proof established that [Valentine] suffered not only from the alienation
of Sandra’s affection, but the damages and losses he sustained as a result of his
marital household divided. [Valentine] continues to suffer from the effects of
not only losing the affection of Sandra, but also from the effects of losing
[K.V.] who he thought was his daughter and who he raised as his daughter and
from losing his right to be a full time father of his son, [J.V.], all as a result of
[Fitch’s] wrongful and intentional acts.
Furthermore, “[i]f there was bias or prejudice, the punitive verdict would have been much
larger, particularly when [Fitch’s] list of assets reflected aggregate assets of at least
[$18,639,750].”
¶49. The trial judge’s decision on the denial or acceptance of an additur or remittitur is
reviewed by this Court for abuse of discretion. Ross-King-Walker, Inc. v. Henson, 672 So.
2d 1188, 1193-94 (Miss. 1996). The evidence in this case, viewed “in the light most
27
favorable,” Poole, 908 So. 2d at 726, to Valentine establishes that Valentine lost: his home;24
physical custody of J.V.;25 his marriage and the society, companionship, aid, services,
support and other components of affection and consortium attached thereto; and K.V., the
child he believed to be, and raised as, his daughter. As the circuit judge found, the jury
establishes the value of the loss suffered by Valentine. They determined he was entitled to
$642,000 in actual damages and $112,500 in punitive damages, and the judge concluded that
the amount of the verdict did not justify remittitur. There being no evidence that either “(1)
the jury or trier of fact was influenced by bias, prejudice, or passion, or (2) the . . . damages
were contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence[,]” Entergy Miss., Inc. v. Bolden,
854 So. 2d 1051, 1058 (Miss. 2003), this Court finds that the circuit court did not abuse its
discretion in denying remittitur and the jury verdict should be affirmed.
CONCLUSION
¶50. Based upon the aforementioned analysis, this Court affirms the judgment of the
Circuit Court of Marshall County entered against Fitch and in favor of Valentine “for the
total sum of $754,500 and interest thereon in the amount of 8% per annum and all costs . .
. .”
¶51. AFFIRMED.
SMITH, C.J., WALLER AND COBB P.JJ., DIAZ AND CARLSON, JJ.,
CONCUR. GRAVES, J., DISSENTS WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
DICKINSON, J., SPECIALLY CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION
24
He sold his interest in the house to Sandra “because [he] wanted a place for [J.V.]
to live.”
25
He gave Sandra physical custody of J.V. because “[he] loved [K.V.]. I was not
going to split them up and do that to him.”
28
JOINED IN PART BY GRAVES, J. EASLEY, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE
WRITTEN OPINION.
DICKINSON, JUSTICE, SPECIALLY CONCURRING:
¶52. In my view, Mississippi should abandon the five other states which continue to fully
recognize the antiquated common law tort of alienation of affections, and join the forty-two
states who refuse to do so. As well said by the Iowa Supreme Court a quarter of a century
ago, “[t]here is inherent and fatal contradiction in the term ‘alienation of affections.’ The
alienation belies the affection.” Funderman v. Mickelson, 304 N.W.2d 790, 791 (Iowa
1981). Nevertheless, I have been unsuccessful in persuading the benevolent majority which
holds that the ancient and infirm cause of action shall continue to breathe in Mississippi.
That said, I shall respect the majority’s decision, and apply the law to alienation of affections
cases which find their way here, including the case before us today. First, however, I shall
state my case for abolition of the cause of action.
Evolution of the alienation of affections cause of action
¶53. The tort called alienation of affections originated in the English common law, when
wives were considered their husbands’ property. A third party who actively interfered with
a marriage by persuading a wife to leave her husband was considered to have deprived the
husband of his property. A brief overview of the development of common law alienation
actions is in order to explain and provide an historical backdrop for the discussion to come.
¶54. In order to maintain pure bloodlines and discourage adultery, Teutonic tribes required
a wife’s lover to compensate the husband for his wife’s infidelity, allowing the husband to
buy a new wife and ensure the legitimacy of his offspring. Hoye v. Hoye, 824 S.W.2d 422,
29
423-24 (1992) (citing Lippman, The Breakdown of Consortium, 30 Colum. L. Rev. 651, 655
(1930)). The Anglo-Saxons later allowed actions for marital interference on the premise that
wives were valuable servants to their husbands. Helsel v. Noellsch, 107 S.W.3d 231(Mo.
2003). The action was analogous to a master’s claim “against one who enticed away his
servant, in whose services the master held a quasi-property interest.” O’Neil v. Schuckardt,
733 P.2d 693, 696 (Idaho 1986). Thus, in keeping with this belief, a husband could
“vindicate” his loss in the marital relationship through an action for alienation of affections,
but a wife was not afforded the same right. Helsel, 107 S.W.3d at 232.
¶55. Two centuries ago, in Hutcheson v. Peck, 5 Johns. 196 (N.Y. 1809), the Supreme
Court of Judicature of New York applied the common law tort to an action by a husband who
sued his wife’s father for attempting to alienate his wife’s affection. Although at first
agreeable to his daughter’s marriage, the father-in-law began to question the Plaintiff’s
ability to provide for his daughter, and changed his mind. He threatened his daughter’s
husband, going so far as to “strike” him, and then took his daughter into his home and
threatened that, if she returned to her husband, he would not support them. In analyzing the
claim, the court stated that “[i]f it was the duty of the wife to return to her husband, the
defendant did an unlawful act by persuading her to violate that duty. If the wife was
unjustifiable in abandoning the plaintiff, the defendant is responsible for having enticed and
persuaded her to abandon him.”Id. at 205 (emphasis added.). The court went on to state
that, had the defendant “not been instrumental in procuring his daughter to live apart from
her husband, and had he gone no further than to receive and support her,” the plaintiff would
have no recovery. Id. at 206. The court then stated, “[v]ery different, however, will be the
30
conclusion, when the parent unlawfully produces the separation by sowing the seeds of
discord and hatred; thereby poisoning the sources of domestic harmony and enjoyment.” Id.
¶56. In Wensmore v. Greenban, (Wiles 581) (Wiles’ English King’s Bench and Common
Pleas Reports), the ancient English court declared, “[t]o be sure, it must be an unlawful
procuring . . . and by means of [insinuations] the defendant [must have] persuaded the
plaintiff’s wife to do an unlawful act . . . .” (Emphasis added).
¶57. When Mississippi became one of the United States, it recognized and adopted most
of the English common law. Thus, the civil cause of action for alienation of affections
traveled with our ancestors from England to Mississippi. Over the past two hundred years,
however, the cause of action has fallen into disfavor for several reasons. In the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Married Women’s Property Acts were passed,
giving women the same rights to own property as men. Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 424 (citing
Comment, Alienation of Affections: Flourishing Anachronism, 13 Wake Forest L. Rev. 585,
588 (1977)). This shift in the perception of a wife’s role in the marriage forced the courts
to consider the continued viability of alienations actions. Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 424. But
instead of allowing the tort – along with its wife-as-chattel premise – to fade away, some
courts began to justify alienation of affection actions as a means to preserve marriages and
discourage interference by third-parties. Id. See also O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 696. While the
rationale for the action changed, the tort’s elements (in most states) remained unaltered 26
despite the new focus on marital harmony. Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 425.
26
As will be discussed below, the tort’s elements changed in Mississippi by this
Court’s loose interpretation of previous cases.
31
¶58. For example, consent was historically prohibited as a defense to alienation actions
“based on the legal inferiority of the wife who was deemed incapable of consenting to the
injury of her superior, her husband.” Id. (citing H. Clark, The Law of Domestic Relations in
the United States, § 4.2, p. 267 (1987)). And even though the cause of action has supposedly
moved beyond those outdated roots, consent remains a prohibited defense today, id., as
today’s case demonstrates. As one commentator noted, “[t]he idea that one spouse can
recover for an act the other spouse has willingly consented to is perhaps better suited to an
era that regarded one spouse as the property of another.” Prosser and Keeton, The Law of
Torts, § 124 at 917 (5th ed. 1984).
¶59. The Kentucky Supreme Court, quoting Justice Holmes, described the unfortunate rise
of the legal fiction buttressing the common law tort of alienation of affections:
[A] common phenomenon . . . familiar to the students of history, is this. The
customs, beliefs or needs of a primitive time establish a rule or a formula. In
the course of centuries the custom, belief, or necessity, disappears, but the rule
remains. The reason which gave rise to the rule has been forgotten, and
ingenious minds set themselves to inquire how it is to be accounted for. Some
ground of policy is thought of, which seems to explain it and to reconcile it
with the present state of things and then the rule adapts itself to the new
reasons which have been found for it, and enters a new career. The old form
receives a new content and in time even the form modifies itself to fit the
meaning which it has received.
Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 425 (quoting Lippman, supra, at 672). As the Missouri Supreme Court
astutely noted, “When the reason for a rule of law disappears, so too should the rule.”
Helsel, 107 S.W.3d at 233. In Mississippi, though, the legal fiction that the common law tort
of alienation of affections preserves a spouse’s right to the mind and body of a partner
continues to this day, only now it is masked as the means to stabilize the marital union.
32
Right to abolish common law actions
¶60. Because I favor strict observance of the constitutional separation of powers, reserving
unto the Legislature the prerogative to legislate, and claiming for this Court the power and
duty to attend to all things judicial, I feel somewhat obligated to justify my preference that
this Court, rather than the Legislature, abolish the tort.
¶61. It appears that this Court first recognized the tort of alienation of affections in Brister
v. Dunaway, 149 Miss. 5, 115 So. 36 (1927). Notably, the Mississippi Legislature has never
codified any of the so-called “heart balm torts,” including alienation of affections, and the
actions remain exclusively creatures of the common law.
¶62. In Saunders v. Alford, 607 So. 2d 1214, 1219 (Miss. 1992), this Court, recognizing
the obsolete nature of another of the common law “heart balm” torts, abolished criminal
conversation. In explaining the constitutional power of the Court to abolish the cause of
action, this Court stated that “the creation of common law is not a one-way street. . . . What
the court gives it can take away. This Court faces no constitutional impediment to ceasing
to recognize criminal conversation as a viable tort.” Id. See also Funderman, 304 N.W.2d
at 793 (“Of course it is our duty to monitor and interpret the common law, and to abandon
antiquated doctrines and concepts. The genius of the common law is its flexibility and
capacity for growth and adaption.” (Citations omitted)); Russo v. Sutton, 422 S.E.2d 750,
753 (S.C. 1992) (“The common law changes when necessary to serve the needs of the
people.”). Thus, because the common law is a creature of the courts, English and American,
this Court and other courts are free to change it at will, recognizing that the legislative bodies
33
of the various states are also free to enact into statutory law any provision of the common law
they think appropriate.
¶63. A woman is not property, and her decision to engage in and consent to extra-marital
affairs – although abhorrent to the majority (and to me) – should not be relegated to the
musings of an inferior spouse, incapable of making such decisions.
Spousal affection is incapable of theft
¶64. The alienation of affections cause of action has never sufficiently separated from its
property-based origins, and the tort is continued because “spousal affection” is characterized
as “property” capable of theft. Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 794. However, that premise is
simply illogical. “To posit that one person possesses rights to the feelings of another is an
anachronism.” Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 426. Even though courts today do not call the alienated
affection “property” or “a possession,” that is how it is treated, just as it was when courts
created the cause of action to compensate husbands for the loss of their wives’ “services.”
In the end, the successful plaintiff engages in what is essentially a “sale” of his or her
spouse’s affections. Wyman v. Wallace, 615 P.2d 452, 455 (Wash. 1980).
¶65. Additionally, “theft” implies the taking of property from an unwilling owner by an
outsider. However, the fact is that actions for alienation of affections arise from the willing
participation of one spouse. While the tort purportedly exists to discourage third-parties from
disturbing the martial relation, in reality the marriage is unlikely to weaken without one
spouse actively consenting to the “wrongful interference.” O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698. “Human
experience is that the affections of persons who are devoted and faithful are not susceptible
34
to larceny no matter how cunning or stealthful.” Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 791. See also
Russo, 422 S.E.2d at 752; Wyman, 615 P.2d at 455.
¶66. Importantly, I do not advocate for the abolition of this tort because I feel defendants
in such suits deserve protection, or because I view promiscuity as harmless. I merely find
the foundation for such suits – that someone should recover for an injury to “property” which
they cannot own – completely erroneous. See Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 794.
No evidence the tort deters wrongful interference with or preserves marriage
¶67. As the Washington Supreme Court noted when abolishing the tort of alienation of
affections, “[t]he underlying assumption of preserving marital harmony is erroneous.”
Wyman, 615 P.2d at 455. The tort is inherently unplanned, especially where sexual activity
is involved, so the idea that the parties would contemplate the possibility of a lawsuit and be
deterred is unrealistic. O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698 The truth remains that a spouse inclined to
engage in an extramarital affair will do so, and even if “a would-be paramour would be
thereby dissuaded [by the threat of suit], a substitute is likely to be readily found.”
Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 792.
¶68. The theory that alienation actions must be retained as a means of preserving marriages
and protecting families must fail for lack of support. While an admirable sentiment, these
suits inevitably do more to hurt families than to help them. In my view, when a marriage has
crashed and burned, the law should not provide an imprimatur to fan the coals of anger and
resentment, extending further into the future the time when healing can begin. This is
particularly true where children are involved. Enough difficulty exists already in the
development of a civil relationship among divorced parents and the children of the marriage.
35
Cause of action is primarily punitive and brought to gain revenge
¶69. Despite the fact that an action for alienation of affections is a civil suit and
theoretically compensatory, the true nature of the claim is punitive. “The third party is seen
as a malicious seducer wreaking havoc upon the harmonious marital couple. These common
law actions thus reason that the third-party must be punished for his [or her] misdeeds by
payment to the aggrieved spouse.” Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 425.
¶70. Undeniably, the primary motives in bringing an action for alienation of affections are
to gain revenge on the unfaithful spouse and the defendant and to force outrageous
settlements. O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698. Alienation of affection claims have become prime
tools for extortion or blackmail. Russo, 422 S.E.2d at 753; Wyman, 615 P.2d at 455. Such
vexatious lawsuits can make contentious divorce proceedings even more bilious. O’Neil,
733 P.2d at 698. The action can also rearrange the marital assets, making it difficult for a
court to properly assess the needs and abilities of the individual spouses. Id. at 697. These
suits are never used to achieve reconciliation or preserve the marriage; rather, they are fueled
by vindictiveness and a desire to destroy reputations and relationships. Helsel, 107 S.W.3d
at 223.
Injuries to parties’ reputations and dignity
¶71. No party involved in an action for alienation of affections emerges unscathed. While
the harm to the defendant and unfaithful spouse is clear, “the action [also] diminishes the
plaintiff’s dignity and injuries his [or her] own reputation through the process of seeking
money damages.” O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 697. The intimate details of the marriage, and its
36
breakdown, are revealed for all to see as the parties attempt to assassinate the character of
their adversaries. Helsel, 107 S.W.3d at 223; Russo, 422 S.E.2d at 753.
¶72. Often lost in this bitter fight is the effect the suit can have on children of the marriage.
Even beyond the mere exposure to the airing of their parents’ dirty laundry, children can be
required to testify for one parent or another in open court. O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698. See also
Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 791 (detailing such testimony). Clearly, any injuries that might
have been caused by the wrongful conduct are exacerbated by alienation of affections
actions.
Difficulty of juries to properly evaluate alienation actions
¶73. Alienation of affections cases present a particularly difficult challenge for juries. As
the Iowa Supreme Court observed,
[o]ur system of establishing facts, however, has a strong, sometimes it seems
an irresistible, tendency to break down in alienation cases. This is because of
the incendiary effect of the usual evidence in such cases. Under the
established theory of recovery, the jury should first undertake to decide which
came first, the marriage breakdown or the misconduct. But juries necessarily
face the first determination after learning of conduct of which they strongly
disapprove and which society condemns.
Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 791.
¶74. The element of “inducement” often proves perplexing, as the factfinder must
determine whether the defendant or the alienated spouse was primarily responsible for the
other spouse straying. The Idaho Supreme Court cited a case to illustrate the dilemma where
the plaintiff and spouse were separated, the spouse willingly engaged in an affair, and yet the
jury still found for the plaintiff. O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698 (citing Sebastian v. Klutz, 170
S.E.2d 104 (N.C. Ct. App. 1969)). The jury in this case fell into the same trap. The majority
37
accurately points out that there was no evidence that Fitch “induced” Valentine’s estranged
wife to engage in an illicit affair with him. Nevertheless, the jury awarded Valentine
$754,500, plus interest, for his alleged loss.
¶75. The awarding of damages presents another distinct problem in these actions, as no
clear standards for compensating the plaintiff exist. Wyman, 615 P.2d at 455. This opens
the door for quasi-punitive damage awards, disguised as actual damages, which are usually
tainted by passion and prejudice. O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698. Of course, I can hardly blame
jurors for struggling with this cause of action. The theory of recovery, itself, is flawed.
Funderman, 304 N.W.2d at 791.
Abolition will have no effect on right to recover for loss of consortium
¶76. Abolition of the common law tort of alienation of affections will in no way restrict the
right to recover for loss of consortium. “The right to recover for loss of consortium is a
factor in assessing damages when the underlying liability has been established in a personal
injury suit. Renunciation of the right to recover for alienation proceeds from the belief there
is no basis for the underlying liability.” Id. at 794. Given the specific attributes of an
alienation action and the right to recover for loss of consortium, it is not inconsistent to
abolish the former and continue to recognize the latter. Id.
Comparison with actions for tortious interference with a contractual
relationship is misplaced
¶77. A claim of tortious interference with a contractual relationship is not comparable to
a claim of alienation of affections. In contract suits, the aggrieved party can sue both the
interferer and the other party to the contract. However, in alienation actions, the “other
38
party” to the “contract” is the spouse (whose affection was allegedly alienated from the
plaintiff) who is not subject to suit, as in true contract cases. Hoye, 824 S.W.2d at 426. As
the Kentucky Supreme Court pointed out, “[t]his logical asymmetry has prompted the
majority of jurisdictions to eliminate these marital torts.” Id.
A majority of states have abolished the common-law action
¶78. Despite the majority’s assertions to the contrary, there is simply no evidence that the
alienation of affections cause of action protects marriages. O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698. “In fact,
once suit has been brought, it notifies the public that the marriage is unstable, embarrasses
the spouses and their children, and adds more tension to the family relationship.” Id. The
majority of states have discarded this fictional rationale for preserving the common law tort
of alienation of affections, and we should follow suit.
¶79. The following twenty-five states and the District of Columbia have legislatively
abolished the common law tort of alienation of affections: Alabama, Ala. Code § 6-5-331
(1975); Arizona, Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 25-341 (1956); Arkansas, Ark. Code Ann. § 16-118-106
(1989); California, Cal. Civ. Code § 43.5 (1982); Colorado, Colo. Rev. Stat. § 13-20-202
(1973); Connecticut, Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 52-572b (1984); District of Columbia, D.C.
Code Ann. § 16-923 (1981); Georgia, Ga. Code Ann. § 51-1-17 (1979); Indiana, Ind. Code
Ann. § 34-12-2-1 (1998); Kansas, Kan. Stat. Ann. § 23-208 (1982); Maine, Me. Rev. Stat.
Ann. tit. 14, § 301 (1995); Maryland, Md. Code Ann., Fam. Law § 3-103 (1984);
Massachusetts, Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 207, § 47B (1985); Michigan, Mich. Comp. Laws
Ann. § 600.2901 (1961); Minnesota, Minn. Stat. Ann. § 553.01 (1978); Montana, Mont.
Code Ann. § 27-1-601 (1983); Nebraska, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-21,188 (1986); Nevada, Nev.
39
Rev. Stat. 41.380 (1979); North Dakota, N.D. Cent. Code § 14-02-06 (1983); Oregon, Or.
Rev. Stat. § 31.980 (2004); Rhode Island, R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-42 (1997); Tennessee, Tenn.
Code Ann. § 36-3-701 (1989); Texas, Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 1.107 (1997); Virginia, Va.
Code Ann. § 8.01-220 (1977); West Virginia, W. Va. Code § 56-3-2a (1969); and Wisconsin,
Wis. Stat. Ann. § 768.01 (1979).
¶80. The following six states have judicially abolished the common law tort: Idaho, in
O’Neil, 733 P.2d at 698; Iowa, in Fundermann, 304 N.W.2d at 791; Kentucky, in Hoye, 824
S.W.2d at 423; Missouri, in Helsel, 107 S.W.3d at 233; South Carolina, in Russo, 422 S.E.2d
at 753; and Washington, in Wyman, 615 P.2d at 455.
¶81. Thus, thirty-one states have completely abolished the common law tort of alienation
of affections. But it doesn’t stop there. The following eight states have legislatively
abolished all alienation of affections suits for money damages: Delaware, Del. Code Ann.
tit. 10, § 3924 (1974); Florida, Fla. Stat. Ann. § 771.01 (1964); New Hampshire, N.H. Rev.
Stat. Ann. § 460:2 (1981); New Jersey, N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:23-1 (1935); New York, N.Y.
Civ. Rights Law § 80-a (1965); Ohio, Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2305.29 (1990); Vermont, Vt.
Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 1001 (1973); and Wyoming, Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-23-101 (1977).
¶82. Oklahoma has abolished the tort when a spouse of sound mind/legal age is involved.
Okla. Stat. tit. 76, § 8.1 (1976) Pennsylvania has abolished the tort except in those cases
where the defendant is the parent or sibling of the plaintiff’s spouse Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 23, §
1901 (1990). Illinois only permits actual damages to be recovered in alienation of affection
actions 740 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 5/2 (1990). Alaska and Louisiana have never even
40
recognized the tort. See Moulin v. Monteleone, 115 So. 447, 451 (La. 1927), overruled in
part on other grounds by 9 to 5 Fashions v. Spurney, 538 So. 2d 228, 234 (La. 1989).
¶83. Only six states continue to fully recognize the common law tort of alienation of
affections: Hawaii, Mississippi, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Dakota, and Utah. It
is, in my view, time that Mississippi’s name be removed from this ever-dwindling list and
recognize what so many other jurisdictions have long since realized: alienation of affections
suits have outlived any relevance or usefulness they may have once possessed. The Court
recognized this truth with respect to the tort of criminal conversation, and we abolished that
cause of action accordingly. Saunders, 607 So. 2d at 1219. The same course of action
should be followed here, and this Court should likewise abolish the common law cause of
action for alienation of affections.
II.
¶84. Having failed to gain agreement from a majority of Justices on elimination of the
cause of action, I must now analyze the case before us. Despite my view that the cause of
action for alienation of affections should be eliminated in Mississippi, a majority of this
Court wishes it to remain viable. Since my oath of office requires me to follow the law as
it exists, not as I think it should be, I cannot deprive the plaintiff of my vote simply because
my personal view is that the law should be changed. A vote to dissent would be justified in
this case only if I conclude that the existing law has been improperly applied. In my view,
Justice Randolph’s analysis of the law and his application of the law to this case is exactly
correct. Indeed, I am grateful that Justice Randolph has taken this opportunity to clarify an
area of the law which, because of previous cases handed down by this Court, has become
41
muddled. The majority clearly sets forth the requirement that alienation of affections claims
may be maintained only where the defendant can be shown to have committed a wrongful
act which served to induce or entice a spouse to abandon the marriage relationship. For these
reasons, with respect to the majority’s disposition of this case under our current law, I
concur.
¶85. I commend the majority for clarification of this issue.
GRAVES, J., JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
EASLEY, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶86. On appeal, Jerry Fitch, Jr. (Fitch) raised numerous assignments of error: (1) whether
the tort of alienation of affections should be abolished; (2) whether the trial court erred in
allowing Johnny Valentine (Valentine) to use unsworn pleadings to impeachment Fitch; (3)
whether the trial court erred in granting Valentine’s jury instructions, P-5 and P-8; (4)
whether the trial court erred in denying Fitch’s jury instruction, D-8; (5) whether the
compensatory award in this case was contrary to the weight of the evidence; (6) whether the
compensatory award in the case was contrary to the weight of credible evidence and the
product of bias, passion, and prejudice; (7) whether the punitive damage award in this case
violates due process; and (8) whether the trial court erred in denying a substantial remittur.
I. Alienation of Affections.
¶87. While the Valentines’ marriage was unquestionably not a “shining example” of
marriage, and divorce is unfortunately increasingly prevalent in our society, I agree that the
Court should decline the invitation to abolish the tort of alienation of affections. Alienation
of affections is the only avenue available to provide redress for a spouse who has suffered
42
loss and injury to his or her marital relationship against the third party who induced the
husband or wife to abandon the marriage and/or affections due to his or her active, direct, and
intentional interference with the marriage.
¶88. In Camp v. Roberts, 462 So. 2d 726, 727 (Miss. 1985), this Court held:
[W]here a husband [wife] is wrongfully deprived of his rights to the "services
and companionship and consortium of his [her] wife [husband]," he [she] has
a cause of action "against one who has interfered with his [her] domestic
relations."
Camp, 462 So. 2d at 727 (citing Walter v. Wilson, 228 So. 2d 597, 598 (Miss. 1969),
overruled in part on other grounds, Saunders v. Alford, 607 So. 2d 1214, 1219 (Miss.
1992)). The tort of alienation of affections is equally applicable to women as men as to avoid
any archaic notion that a wife is the property of her husband. See Kirk v. Koch, 607 So. 2d
1220, 1224 (Miss. 1992).
¶89. Chief Justice Smith, then Justice Smith, authored an excellent special concurring
opinion in Bland, which clearly explained the justification and need to continue to recognize
alienation of affections as a viable tort, stating:
[W]here the proof is so great in support of an action for alienation of
affections, we must ask the following questions. Should an individual be
allowed to intrude upon a marriage to such an extent as to cause it to come to
an end? Does a spouse have a valuable interest in a marriage that is worthy of
protection from the intruding third party? In my view, the answer to both
questions is in the affirmative. The traditional family is under such attack
both locally and nationally these days that this Court should not retreat now
from the sound view of the tort of alienation of affections espoused by this
Court in Saunders as entitling a spouse to "protection of the love, society,
companionship, and comfort that form the foundation of a marriage."
Saunders v. Alford, 607 So. 2d 1214, 1215 (Miss. 1992) (quoting Norton v.
Macfarlane, 818 P.2d 8, 12 (Utah 1991)); see also Horner v. Byrnett, 511
S.E.2d 342 (N.C. Ct. App.1999). I do not believe that under the compelling
facts of this particular case this Court should hold that the doctrine of
43
alienation of affections has outlived its usefulness as a deterrent protecting the
martial [sic] relationship of a husband and wife in cases where the facts clearly
warrant. 607 So. 2d at 1219.
Bland, 735 So. 2d at 421-422 (Smith, J., specially concurring) (emphasis added).
II. Judgment Not Withstanding the Verdict (JNOV).
¶90. The required elements of an alienation of affections lawsuit include: (1) wrongful
conduct of the defendant, (2) loss of affection or consortium, and (3) a causal connection
between the conduct and the loss. Bland v. Hill, 735 So. 2d 414, 417 (Miss. 1999) (emphasis
added). In Bland, this Court held that “the purpose of a cause of action for alienation of
affections is the ‘protection of the love, society, companionship, and comfort that form the
foundation of a marriage . . .’” Bland, 735 So. 2d at 417 (quoting Saunders, 607 So. 2d at
1215).
¶91. The “wrongful conduct” required to maintain an action for the tort of alienation of
affections is the direct and intentional interference with the marriage relationship by the
defendant and an inducement to abandon the spouse by some active interference by the
defendant. See Children’s Medical Group v. Phillips, 940 So. 2d 931, 934 (Miss. 2006);
Stanton v. Cox, 162 Miss. 438, 450, 139 So. 458, 460 (1932). In Stanton, 139 So. at 460,
this Court held:
“In order to sustain an action for the alienation of the husband's [wife’s]
affections it must appear, in addition to the fact of alienation or the fact of the
husband's [wife’s] infatuation for the defendant, that there had been a direct
interference on the defendant's part, sufficient to satisfy the jury that the
alienation was caused by the defendant, and the burden of proof is on the
plaintiff to show such interference.” 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 865.
Again, on page 866, it is said: “But to maintain this action it must be
established that the husband [wife] was induced to abandon the wife
[husband] by some active interference on the part of the defendant.” In 3
44
Elliott on Evidence, section 1643, it is said: “To entitle the plaintiff to recover
in an action for alienating affections, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff,
and the plaintiff must show that there was a direct interference upon the part
of the defendant that not only was there infatuation of the husband or wife for
the defendant, but that the defendant by wrongful act was the cause of it."
(Emphasis added). See also Kirk, 607 So. 2d at 1223; Martin v. Ill. Cent. R.R. Co., 246
Miss. 102, 110-11, 149 So. 2d 344, 348 (1963). In Kirk, this Court stated that the defendant
must “directly and intentionally [interfere] with” plaintiff’s marriage, thereby inducing the
alienation of affections of the plaintiff’s spouse. Kirk, 607 So. 2d at 1223 (emphasis added).
¶92. The majority correctly recognizes that inducement is a specifically required element
to establish alienation of affections, rather than alienation of affections being established
solely from the fact that an affair or sexual relationship occurred. However, the majority’s
reasoning remains fatally flawed. The majority focuses its reasoning to establish inducement
from the undisputed fact that Fitch is a wealthy man, and Sandra could not resist his money.
The majority misses the point that there must be established some “wrongful conduct” on the
part of Fitch that amounted to the direct and intentional interference with the marriage
relationship and resulted in the inducement of Sandra to abandon Valentine by some active
interference on the part of Fitch. Sandra testified that Fitch did not ask her to leave
Valentine, and she was the initiator of the eventual relationship.
¶93. Here, the majority bases the inducement on Sandra’s alleged inability to resist Fitch’s
money and the fact that Sandra had a lot of money in cash when she worked for Fitch.
However, both Sandra and Fitch testified that Fitch did not give Sandra any money above
and beyond what she earned in her salary from working for Fitch Oil Company and in
commissions from the sale of real estate for Fitch Realty. According to the record, Sandra
45
began working at Fitch Oil Company sometime in 1997. Sandra testified that her
relationship with Fitch did not start until sometime in the spring of 1998. She testified that
she believed that she had worked there approximately sixteen months before she initiated
flirtation and the affair with Fitch. Fleming, who worked as the bookkeeper for Fitch Oil
Company testified as to how Sandra was paid her salary. Fleming verified that Fitch paid
all his employees in cash.
¶94. Fitch testified regarding the money he gave to Sandra before they were married. He
stated that Sandra worked out of Fitch Oil Company, but she also worked in Fitch Realty as
a realtor. Fitch stated that Sandra, like all of his employees, was paid in cash for her weekly
salary plus commissions on what she sold. According to Fitch’s testimony, he never gave
Sandra any extravagant gifts nor took any trips with her. He further denied that he ever gave
Sandra $8,000 in cash to purchase a Jeep Cherokee. Fitch testified that he did not recall
giving Sandra any money over and above her salary and commissions.
¶95. Further, Sandra and Fitch both denied that Fitch had ever made any threats against
Sandra that he would take her child away from her. Sandra also denied any physical threats
from Fitch. Sandra testified that Fitch never asked her to leave Valentine. Sandra
subsequently married Fitch after she divorced Valentine, and she was still married to Fitch
at the time of the trial. Further, Sandra met Valentine under similar circumstances.
¶96. Prior to trial, Valentine filed a motion in limine to prevent Fitch from introducing any
evidence that Valentine and his former wife, Sandra, engaged in and participated in a lengthy
adulterous relationship prior to their marriage while Sandra was still married to a prior
husband, Tracey Hughey. After Sandra’s divorce from her husband, Hughey, she married
46
Valentine. The trial court granted the motion in limine to exclude the testimony regarding
Valentine’s adulterous affair with Sandra.
¶97. As will be discussed in greater detail below, Sandra testified that she was the initiator
of the relationship with Fitch. This fact is completely ignored in its reasoning by the majority
which acknowledges that the spouse must have been induced to abandon the marriage. It is
hard to imagine how Sandra was the one induced when she testified that she pursued Fitch,
who was married at the time, and she was the initiator of their eventual relationship.
¶98. Fitch made a post-trial motion for JNOV. In Fitch’s reply memorandum, Fitch
contended that “[the] plaintiff was unable to show that [the] defendant’s direct interference
with the marital relationship caused the alienation of the plaintiff’s affections.” Fitch stated
that “the plaintiff’s theory of the case” was that “Sandra [Valentine Fitch] was attracted to
[the] defendant’s money.” Fitch further noted that the evidence of adultery satisfied the first
prong of the inquiry, however, “the plaintiff was unable to prove loss of affection as a result
of that conduct.” The trial court subsequently entered its order denying Fitch’s motion for
JNOV.
¶99. Pursuant to M.R.C.P. 50(b), “a party may file a motion to have the verdict and any
judgment entered thereon set aside,” no “later than ten days after entry of judgment in
accordance with a verdict.” M.R.C.P. 50(b). A motion for JNOV challenges the legal
sufficiency of the evidence. McFarland v. Entergy Miss., Inc., 919 So. 2d 894, 904 (Miss.
2005); McClain v. State, 625 So. 2d 774, 778 (Miss. 1993). "[T]his Court properly reviews
the ruling on the last occasion the challenge was made in the trial court." McClain, 625 So.
2d at 778. Here, this occurred when the trial court denied Fitch’s motion for JNOV. In
47
White v. Stewman, 932 So. 2d 27, 32-33 (Miss. 2006), this Court recently provided an
excellent analysis of what occurs when a motion for JNOV is made pursuant to M.R.C.P.
50(b), stating:
Rule 50(b) allows the court to reserve the decision on this critical
question of law until after the case has been submitted to the jury and the jury
has reached a verdict or has informed the judge of its inability to agree on a
verdict. Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil 2d § 2521, p.
241. "If the court decides that the initial motion for judgment as a matter of
law should have been granted, it may set aside the verdict of the jury and enter
a judgment as a matter of law. . . . Thus the rule gives the trial court a last
chance to order the judgment that the law requires." Id., pp. 241-42.
When a proper post-verdict motion for a JNOV has been made, the
court has three options:
First, of course, it may deny the motion and enter judgment on
the verdict. Alternatively, it may grant the motion and order
judgment for the moving party. Either of these actions results
in a final appealable judgment. Third, the court may think the
motion well taken but the defect in the proof possibly
remediable and thus order a new trial rather than judgment as a
matter of law. An order granting a new trial is interlocutory in
nature and generally not appealable.
Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil 2d § 2540, p. 366-67.
(See also Miss. R. Civ. P. 50, cmt.).
The standard of review for the denial of a motion for JNOV is well settled:
A motion for a JNOV tests the legal sufficiency of the evidence
supporting the verdict, not the weight of the evidence. Tharp v.
Bunge Corp., 641 So. 2d 20, 23 (Miss. 1994). It asks the court
to hold, as a matter of law, that the verdict may not stand.
Goodwin v. Derryberry Co., 553 So. 2d 40, 42 (Miss. 1989)
(citing Stubblefield v. Jesco, Inc., 464 So. 2d 47, 54 (Miss.
1984)). When a motion for JNOV is made, the trial court must
consider all of the evidence-not just evidence which supports the
non-movant's case-in the light most favorable to the party
opposed to the motion. If the facts and inferences so considered
point so overwhelmingly in favor of the movant that reasonable
48
jurors could not have arrived at a contrary verdict, granting the
motion is required. Janssen Pharmaceutica, Inc. v. Bailey, 878
So. 2d 31, 54 (Miss. 2004).
McFarland, 919 So. 2d at 899-900 (quoting White v. Yellow Freight System, Inc., 905 So.
2d 506, 510 (Miss. 2004)).
¶100. Sandra testified that she met Valentine in 1989 when she was married to someone
else. They were married years later in 1993. Sandra went to work for Fitch Oil Company
sometime in 1997. According to Sandra’s testimony, she was the initiator of the relationship
with Fitch. She testified that she was the one who pursued Fitch and flirted with him. She
testified that she was attracted to Fitch and fell in love with him. Eventually, Sandra and
Fitch began a relationship sometime in 1998 that eventually became sexual.
¶101. Sandra testified that her marriage to Valentine was already over before the
relationship began. According to Sandra’s testimony, her marriage to Valentine was over
in her mind in 1996, before she ever met Fitch in 1997. She testified that Valentine spent his
money and time gambling and hanging out with his buddies rather than spending any time
with her. She stated that Valentine routinely came home drunk, and they had no
communication with each other. Sandra testified that after she stopped hanging out with
Valentine at his buddy’s house sometime in 1995 or 1996, she rarely saw him. Sandra
testified that she would go to Valentine’s buddy’s house or the casinos and try to get him to
come home. Sandra testified that at times, Valentine would not come home for days, with
the longest period being three days.
¶102. She stated she “would scream, cry, holler,” but “nothing helped.” In January of 1996,
she went to the casino and told him that if he did not leave the casino then the marriage was
49
over. They talked outside and ended up in a fight. She stated that Valentine walked back
inside the casino instead of coming home with her. Sandra testified that was the moment that
the marriage was over in her mind. According to Sandra, she was married to “someone that
didn’t show . . . affection.”
¶103. Sandra testified that she had come to resent having to have sex with Valentine because
he had “turned . . . [her] against him.” Sandra stated that Valentine “never spoke to her.”
She testified that “[h]e never had anything to say, and then he would expect me to just want
to touch . . . he just wanted to have sex with me.” When Valentine wanted to have sex, she
considered the act of sex “just something to get him . . . to get the job done and get through.”
Sandra alleged that Valentine had failed to provide financial support for their son, J.V., since
the divorce and that Fitch was having to support him.
¶104. Fitch testified that at the time the relationship began he knew Sandra was married, but
Sandra told him that she “did not have a marriage any more.” However, by the time that the
relationship became sexual, Fitch testified that he did concern himself about Sandra’s
marriage. Fleming testified that Sandra had confided in her regarding the problems in her
marriage to Valentine.
¶105. Sandra testified that Fitch did nothing to threaten her into the relationship or to remain
in a relationship. Further, Fitch never threatened to take K.V. away from her if she did not
continue working for him or the relationship. When Valentine insisted that Sandra quit
working for Fitch, she refused and testified that she had no intention of ever quitting. Sandra
testified that the cash she had came from her salary and commission. Fitch did not give her
money in exchange for sexual relations or to entice her into the relationship or to remain in
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the relationship. Fitch testified that he never gave Sandra any extravagant gifts and did not
recall giving her any money except for her salary and commissions paid in cash like all his
employees. Fleming testified that Fitch paid all his employees in cash.
¶106. Valentine confronted Sandra regarding whether she was having an affair. Sandra
denied the accusation. Later, Valentine confronted Fitch and Sandra, inquiring if they were
having an affair. Both denied the accusation. Valentine was aware that K.V., born in 1999,
was not his child. The paternity test showed that Valentine had no chance of being the
father.
¶107. Valentine presented no evidence that Sandra was not the initiator of the relationship
with Fitch. Valentine made unsupported accusations that Fitch was giving Sandra money to
have a relationship with him and that he had threatened to use his money to take K.V. away
from Sandra if she ended the relationship. Sandra and Fitch both denied the allegations.
Valentine alleged that Sandra sought to “trade up” by becoming involved with Fitch, and he
testified as to the change in Sandra’s lifestyle since she married Fitch.27 Years after Sandra
and Valentine were divorced, Sandra and Fitch were married and were married at the time
of trial.
¶108. This Court has established the required elements of an action for alienation of
affections: (1) wrongful conduct of the defendant, (2) loss of affection or consortium, and (3)
a causal connection between the conduct and the loss. Bland, 735 So. 2d at 417. However,
in order to maintain an action for alienation of affections, “it must be established that the
27
Sandra and Fitch were married at the time of trial.
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husband [wife, Sandra,] was induced to abandon the wife [husband, Valentine,] by some
active interference on the part of the defendant [Fitch].” Stanton, 139 So. at 460. In Kirk,
this Court again stated that the defendant must “directly and intentionally [interfere] with”
plaintiff’s marriage, thereby inducing the alienation of affections of the plaintiff’s spouse.
Kirk, 607 So. 2d at 1223.
¶109. Here, according the record, the Valentines’ marriage had deteriorated before Sandra
began a relationship with Fitch. Nothing contradicted Sandra’s assertion that she was the
initiator of the relationship with Fitch. She testified that she had no affection left for
Valentine for Fitch to have alienated. There is a lack of evidence that Fitch directly and
intentionally interfered the Valentines’ marriage by inducing Sandra’s affections. While
Fitch’s and Sandra’s conduct is clearly not admirable, the evidence fails to support a claim
of alienation of affections.
¶110. Further, Valentine failed to present sufficient evidence of any economic loss to
support the award of damages he received. Valentine’s failure to present any evidence that
he suffered financially from the alleged alienation of affections results in our inability to
determine that he is entitled to an award of damages. The only argument advanced by
Valentine was that he lost his house and physical custody of his son, J.V.
¶111. However, the record provides that Valentine voluntarily surrendered possession of the
marital home to Sandra in the property settlement agreement signed by the parties. Sandra
agreed to pay Valentine $32,500 for his interest in the house within 30 days of the agreement.
Valentine also was granted a divorce on the grounds of adultery as part of the terms of the
property settlement agreement.
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¶112. In fact, the parties’ property agreement specifically provided that Sandra would admit
that Valentine was entitled to a divorce on the ground of adultery as a condition of the
property settlement. Therefore, from the language of the settlement agreement, it is apparent
that Valentine exchanged the possession and use of the marital home and received $32,500
for his interest in the house in return for Sandra’s admission of adultery.
¶113. According to Sandra’s testimony, Valentine never sought custody of J.V. Likewise,
in the child custody agreement signed by the parties, Valentine allowed Sandra to have the
“paramount permanent physical custody of the minor child,” J.V., subject to his visitation
rights. Sandra testified that Valentine was not paying his child support for J.V. as agreed in
the divorce settlement. Valentine admitted that he exchanged the house and custody of J.V.
for Sandra’s admission of adultery. The record provides:
Q: Now, in the – what you ended up giving up, basically, is the house and
the child, but what you got was an admission of adultery, didn’t you?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: And that was very important to you, wasn’t it?
A: At the time, yes, sir.
Q: Because you needed that admission of adultery to get here today, didn’t
you?
A: Yes, sir, I believe I did.
¶114. As shown above, Valentine testified that he exchanged possession of the house and
physical custody of J.V. for the purposes of developing an alienation of affections lawsuit.
However, Valentine later explained that his decision to agree to Sandra receiving physical
custody of J.V. was also influenced by his desire to not separate J.V. from his sister, K.V.
¶115. Moreover, Valentine introduced no medical bills in support of any alleged damages
he suffered. Valentine testified that he had gone to the hospital once for anxiety and was
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prescribed the medication, Paxil, by Dr. Ross Collins. He stated that he took the Paxil for
only “a couple of months at the very most.” However, no medical records were introduced
and no medical charges were introduced by Valentine. Valentine testified that it was hard
to focus on his business during the time following the divorce. However, he did not testify
that he lost any business during that time. Likewise, Valentine did not testify that he lost any
income as a result of the alleged alienation of affections.
¶116. Therefore, I find that the trial court erred in denying Fitch’s motion for JNOV. Based
on the record, the jury’s verdict was incorrect and not based upon legally sufficient evidence
to prove a claim of alienation of affections. I would reverse the judgment of the Circuit
Court of Marshall County in the amount of $642,000 in actual damages and $112,500 in
punitive damages, for a total of $754,500, in favor of Valentine and render judgment in favor
of Fitch. As my decision to reverse and render judgment regarding the issue of JNOV, this
assignment of error raised by Fitch is dispositive of the other issues he raised on appeal.
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