QUA, C.J.
The plaintiff has a verdict on a count for alienation of the affections of his wife and loss of consortium. The defendant excepts to the refusal of a directed verdict in his favor and to the admission in evidence of two letters and a telegram which the plaintiff contended had been sent by the defendant to the plaintiff's wife.
If the disputed letters were part of the evidence, there was no error in the refusal to direct a verdict for the defendant. There was evidence that, until "the defendant appeared," the plaintiff and his wife lived happily with their two children in a house which was bought in the names of both; that after she met the defendant she ceased to care for the plaintiff or the children; that the defendant and the plaintiff's wife wrote each other and saw each other from time to time; that the defendant's two letters introduced in evidence were full of expressions of affection; that the defendant wrote the plaintiff's wife about the annulment of her marriage to the plaintiff or her obtaining a divorce from him and marrying the defendant; that he wrote of their promises to marry each other; that in the letter dated October 23, 1945, he advised her to separate from the plaintiff, so that when the defendant came home he could see the plaintiff's wife more often and with less difficulty and embarrassment; that in 1947 the plaintiff's wife did leave the plaintiff; and that the defendant is now her landlord. The defendant did not testify. This evidence, with the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it, satisfies all the requirements for a cause of action. Gahagan v. Church, 239 Mass. 558.
There was no error in the matter of the two letters. A witness called by the plaintiff testified, apparently without objection, that these letters were left in the witness's mail box; that she gave them to the plaintiff's wife and read them to her;
The telegram in question appeared to come from San Pedro, California, and was this, "Arrived safely Expect to see you soon Don't Attempt to Contact or write me here. Love Francis C. Judeikis." After the letters were in evidence this telegram added nothing of consequence to what was contained in them. In view of all the other evidence, if there was error in admitting the telegram, which we need not decide, it was harmless error. G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 132.
Exceptions overruled.
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