A jilted husband in North Carolina has the right to file a lawsuit against his wife’s lover

A jilted husband in North Carolina has the right to file a lawsuit against his wife’s lover



In North Carolina a jilted husband can sue his wife’s lover

Heartache‍ is messy;⁤ marriage ⁢is ​made of ⁣compromise. How potentially satisfying, then, to see all the mess and ambiguity turned into something simple and unequivocal in a lawyer’s⁢ brief. In North Carolina and a handful of other states, a jilted‍ spouse can indeed sue ‌for ⁤heartbreak.

Under an archaic ‍tort called ⁣“alienation of affection”, a third party—someone outside the marriage—can be liable if shown to have ​intentionally ruined the marital bond. Paramours are the most common target, though Alice Stubbs, a divorce lawyer ‍in Raleigh, ⁣the capital of North Carolina, says plaintiffs have sued their mother-in-law.⁣ Anyone who has ‍sex with a married person is liable under another tort ⁢called “criminal conversation”.

The “heart-balm”⁤ torts are at the centre of a drama captivating the North Carolina capitol. On June 18th Scott Lassiter, an⁤ assistant school principal, sued Tim Moore,⁤ the⁢ speaker of the state​ House, for having an affair with his wife, who⁤ works in the state government. Mr Moore, the lawsuit​ says, “deprived [him] of Mrs Lassiter’s ‌love,‌ society, companionship and consortium and proximately​ caused [their] marital separation”. Mr Lassiter is seeking at least $200,000 in ​damages. ‌Mr Moore says it was his understanding that the Lassiters ​had already separated, which, if true, could⁢ get him off the hook. The ‌speaker wants his colleagues in the state⁢ legislature to ban lawsuits of ‍this sort.

2023-06-29 09:38:40
Article ⁢from www.economist.com
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