Garmong v. Henderson
Garmong v. Henderson
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff in this action seeks to recover damages for an alleged breach of promise of marriage. The ad damnum is $250,000. The writ alleges that a contract was entered into between the parties about March 10, 1910, in the city of Washington, D. C., the marriage to take place sometime during that year; that on November 6, 1910, the promise was renewed by the defendant but the date was deferred to about March 1, 1911, and that the defendant subsequently refused to be bound by his promise and repudiated the agreement.
Upon the issues joined, the cause was tried at the January term, 1915, for Penobscot county, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of one hundred and sixteen thousand dollars. This verdict was set aside by the Law Court. The concluding language of the opinion is this: “We do not say that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict in this case, for,, the plaintiff has testified. But we do say upon the whole record, giving to the plaintiff such degree of credibility as her own statements entitle her to, her practically unsupported testimony is so overborne by proved circumstances, by her obvious disregard either here or in Iowa of the sanctity of an oath, by her own inconsistent conduct, by the mutual conduct of both, by the testimony, contradictory to hers, of witnesses apparently reputable, disinterested and credible, and by the probabilities of the case inconsistent with her claims, as to induce the belief that the jury either did not sufficiently weigh all of the facts of the case or were influenced by sympathy, passion or prejudice.” Garmong v. Henderson, 114 Maine, 75, 90.
A second trial was had at the April term, 1916, when' the jury-assessed the damages in the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, and the case was reported to the Law Court upon so much of the evidence as is legally admissible, the Law Court to determine the liability of the defendant and if liability is established to enter judgment upon the amount of the verdict, unless the defendant should file a motion for a new trial because of excessive damages. In that event the Law Court is to reduce the damages, if found excessive, to a sum which would be the greatest amount that it would approve if found by the jury. That motion has been filed.
The present situation is different. As the case is now before us on report, the burden is on the plaintiff to prove her case, and the question of the preponderance of evidence is open. If upon the former evidence plus a verdict she was not allowed to recover, upon substantially the same evidence minus a verdict she certainly cannot prevail. By agreement the evidence at the former trial, as well as at this, is before us, and the crucial test therefore is, whether the plaintiff has strengthened her case by additional and effective testimony to such an extent that she can now sustain the burden of proof and maintain her action.
A patient study of the entire evidence compels us to answer this question in the negative.
In the former opinion the facts and circumstances were exhaustively discussed. Every phase of the case as raised by the pleadings or developed by the voluminous evidence was carefully considered. The evidence now before us is doubly voluminous
The plaintiff was born in Iowa in 1880. While at school there she became engaged to one Roscoe D. Smith. In November, 1907, she came to Baltimore to pursue her medical studies and was a special student at the Woman’s Medical College from November, 1907, to May, 1908, when she was requested by the faculty to withdraw because of her unsatisfactory work. She may have attended some other medical lectures in Baltimore for a short time, and then she engaged in nursing. She first met the defendant casually in June or July, 1909, at a residence in Washington where she was visiting. He took her on a short automobile drive at that first meeting and they were together for an hour or two. Soon after, the defendant went to his summer home in Bar Harbor. The plaintiff followed, at some time in July without informing him that she was coming. She was a stranger in the place, and stopped at a boarding house. She remained in Bar Harbor about foul weeks and during that time they walked and rode and sailed together on several occasions. At her departure she borrowed seventy-five dollars of him to pay her expenses west. She went first to her uncle’s in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and then to Philadelphia where she resumed her occupation as a nurse. She remained in Philadelphia until February, 1910. The defendant visited her once while she was there, they taking dinner together at a hotel, and she went to Washington to meet him five or-six times, their meetings there also taking place at a local hotel. On these trips the defendant paid her traveling expenses. In February, 1910, she left Philadelphia and went to Washington, boarding for a time with her aunt. The parties met as before, taking automobile rides together and dining together at one or more hotels. He never visited her at her aunt’s house, but on one or more occasions took
This is a mere skeleton of events taken chronologically. It is not intended as a statement of all the material facts, on either side. But it is sufficient to enable us to resume the consideration of the vital issues before us in the light of the new evidence and that is its purpose.
The controlling issue is the existence of a mutual engagement of marriage. This admittedly can be proved either by direct evidence of an express promise or by evidence of such facts, conduct and circumstances as will lead to a reasonable inference of such engagement and contract. So far as the proof of an express promise on the defendant’s part is concerned, the evidence comes wholly from the plaintiff herself, and its force rests therefore upon her credibility. It rests upon a weak foundation. In view of the fact that she is an admitted perjurer either in the courts of Iowa, where she instituted proceedings against Smith, or in the courts of Maine, where she makes the same charges against the defendant, little weight can be attached to her statements. She now states in her proceeding against Henderson that all her allegations in Iowa against Smith were false. Her testimony was perjured either there or here. “It must therefore be regarded as self evident that a woman such as the plaintiff describes herself to be with respect to the Iowa court proceedings, has little or no regard for the sanctity of an oath, and its binding obligation to tell the truth” said the court in the former opinion. The same criticism holds good now. The senseless excuse for her conduct that she offered at the former trial she repeats at this, and it neither palliates the offense nor lessens the enormity of her course of action.
The plaintiff’s evidence on the point of an express contraer remains uncorroborated. The only new witness introduced by her throughout the whole trial was her brother, John P. Garmong, and his testimony is meagre and unimportant. It relates to a brief interview that he had with the defendant at Bar Harbor in October, 1909, in relation to a boa which had been lost by the
When we pass to the conduct of the parties, the circumstánces and the probabilities of the case, no new light has been thrown upon the situation to warrant the inference of a subsisting agreement to marry. No engagement was publicly announced and there is no evidence that any friend or relative understood it to exist. Even as late as August 28, 1910, we find the plaintiff’s sister writing to the mother of Dr. Smith and imploring her to persuade the doctor to keep his promise of marriage and save the plaintiff from being the mother of an illegitimate child. There was no engagement ring. There were no presents such as one would expect a person of the wealth of the defendant to shower upon his affianced wife. There was no public conduct from which an engagement could be inferred. There is no evidence that the alleged engagement was ever referred to by the defendant or by any third person in his presence. He returned to his luxurious club life in Washington, and she continued to earn her living by employment as a nurse.
The letters or notes that the defendant wrote to the plaintiff were not those of an affianced husband. They were infrequent in quantity and meaningless in quality, quite unlike the loving and even passionate letters that passed between the plaintiff and Dr. Smith to whom she evidently was engaged at the time she met the plaintiff and whose engagement continued for a considerable time
Upon this branch of the case, without discussing the evidence further it need only be said that the existence of a contract of marriage expressly made in Bar Harbor in August, 1909, or at Washington or elsewhere in February or March, 1910, or to be inferred from conduct and circumstances, is unsupported by such proof as. commends itself to our judgment.
Thus far we have not referred to the evidence of the defendant. He strenuously denies any promise of marriage at any time. It is fair, however, to say that in his denial of the paternity of the child we think his testimony is not to be relied upon. The facts speak otherwise, and in that respect his credibility is certainly shaken. But in other respects and especially during the course of a long, searching and at times trying cross examination we find his testimony for the most part to be frank, truthful and consistent. The plaintiff on the other hand, perhaps because of the strain of a second trial, we find even less trustworthy than before. Her answers are evasive, at times reckless and again insolent to both counsel and court. We are constrained therefore by even stronger reasons than before to reject the plaintiff’s claim of a promise of marriage either in August, 1909, or February or March, 1910, or at any time prior to November, 1910.
This brings us to the other main subject of controversy, the making or renewal of the defendant’s promise of marriage in November, 19x0, after the plaintiff’s return from Iowa and on the eve of the birth of her child. Here we are forced to the same conclusion.
The law is well settled that if the plaintiff was unchaste with other men or with another man prior to or during any engagement of marriage with the defendant, it is a bar to this suit, unless at the time he made or renewed his promise, he knew or had been informed of her unchasity. Garmong v. Henderson, supra, p. 85.
Even assuming therefore that there had been a subsisting engagement, made either in August, 1909, or in February or March, 1910, her unchastity with Dr. Smith, either in previous years or during the spring and summer of 1910, would bar recovery
Her improper relations with Smith are abundantly proved. Smith testifies to those relations as beginning in May, 1907, and continuing until she left for the east. The correspondence that passed between them after she came east confirms his statement. Iler letter to him dated June 20, 1908, was quoted and commented upon in the prior opinion. Its somewhat obscure or veiled language was interpreted to signify that sexual intimacy had existed between them. In it she seemed to claim the privilege of intimacy with other men if he had been untrue to her. Other letters introduced for the first time at this trial confirm the accuracy of that interpretation. Two days later, on June 22, 1908, she .wrote: “Am really ashamed of asking what I did when I wrote Sunday, but if you have, I will too. Now be honest.” Again in her letter of July 8, 1908, evidently referring a second time to her request of June 20, she says: “Well when I do use the limit of my nerve energy there will be no more letters from me. . . . Your refusal of my horrible request only deepened my love for you.” Dr. Smith’s letter to her in response to the “horrible request” was not produced. Words like these need no interpretation. They are self explanatory.
As to what took place between the plaintiff and Dr. Smith in the spring and summer of 1910, after her return from the east, the plaintiff has admitted by her sworn allegations in the Iowa proceedings. Smith’s acts in endeavoring to settle the civil suit which incorporated seduction corroborate hers. It is not unlikely that because their illicit relations were resumed early in April, 1910, Smith considered himself responsible for her condition when she made her charges against him in July and September. The date of the birth of the child placed its conception in February rather than April and tended to shift its paternity from Smith to the defendant; but the fact of the sexual relations between Smith and the plaintiff during the spring and summer of 1910 remains unchanged.
The evidence upon the two essential points, first, whether the plaintiff gave Henderson full information as to her relations with
Upon the question of the plaintiff’s illicit relations with men other than Dr. Smith the new evidence introduced by the defendant bears strongly. If the testimony of apparently disinterested and reputable witnesses is to be believed, she began her improper conduct many years before she ever met the defendant, and according to her statements to those witnesses, her paramours had been many.
This brings us to what, after a long and careful study of the case, we believe to be the true situation and the real relations between the parties. The plaintiff claims that they were affianced husband and wife, the defendant that they were merely friends. The facts bear out neither hypothesis. The true ^solution seems to be what was suggested in the former opinion, the evidence of no bethrothal but of illicit relations between them from nearly the beginning of their acquaintance. With this theory the circumstances and probabilities harmonize. The defendant was a man thirty-nine years old, a widower, of present and prospective wealth, high social standing, culture and travel, a man .of the world so called. The plaintiff was a woman of twenty-nine, of a different social sphere, away from her own home, with a -somewhat varied experience, self supporting and worldly wise. The lively interest ■which they manifested in each other at the first casual introduction, the rapidity with which their acquaintance ripened, her following him to Bar Harbor without his knowledge when they had met but once before, the nature, times and places of their semi-clandestine meetings in Bar Harbor and subsequently in Philadelphia and Washington, the absence of those accompaniments which we would expect in the case of a true engagement, and which we have before
The result is deplorable, but this court cannot do otherwise than decide the precise issue now before it, which is the existence of a valid contract of marriage. That issue the plaintiff has failed to maintain and the entry must therefore be,
Judgment for the defendant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Elizabeth Garmong v. John B. Henderson
- Status
- Published