Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Alienation of Affections -- Still Alive:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_26-2009_08_01.shtml#1248793691


   Alienation of affections basically consists of a defendant�s (1)
   wrongfully (2) causing plaintiff (3) to lose the affection and often
   company of the plaintiff�s spouse. In principle, it could apply to
   supposedly meddling in-laws, and has sometimes been applied that way,
   though if the in-laws are looking out for their married child�s best
   interest such behavior might not be �wrongful.� In practice, it has
   generally been applied to people who supposedly seduce away one spouse
   from the other (if it can be shown that they caused the alienation,
   rather than that a preexisting alienation of the spouses caused one
   spouse to be interested in the defendant�s attentions). The related
   tort of criminal conversation basically consists of a defendant�s
   having adulterous sex with plaintiff�s spouse, though of course such
   conduct may also often lead to an alienation of affections claim.

   Many people assume that these two torts are dead. But some states --
   Hawaii, Illinois, Mississippi, New Mexico, North Carolina, South
   Dakota, and Utah -- still recognize them (or at least recognize the
   alienation of affections). And it turns out that they still account
   for a significant amount of litigation, not much less than some
   well-established torts whose viability no-one doubts.

   It seems that the main jurisdiction in which there's a good deal of
   alienation of affections litigation is North Carolina. My search
   through the NC-CS and NC-TRIALORDERS databases in Westlaw uncovered 38
   cases from 2000 to mid-2009, and it seems likely there were more
   (since those databases don�t offer a complete list even of decided
   cases, and entirely exclude ones that were filed but were settled
   before any decision). By way of comparison, the well-established tort
   of slander (oral defamation) seems to be litigated only slightly more
   often than alienation of affections in North Carolina. The
   well-established right of publicity seems to be litigated in North
   Carolina much less often than alienation of affections (2 cases since
   2000 in the NC-CS and NC-TRIALORDERS databases, as opposed to 38 for
   the alienation of affections).

   Even on a national basis, a search for sy(�right of publicity�
   ((misappropriat! appropriat!) +5 (name likeness image))) & date(>
   1/1/2000) through the ALLCASES database yielded 150 cases, while
   sy((alienat! +3 affection) "criminal conversation") & date(> 1/1/2000)
   yielded 66, of which 50 were in jurisdictions that still recognize one
   or both of those torts. Now naturally these results may not be
   representative of all cases litigated through trial, or of all cases
   filed in court. (For instance, there might be reasons why people might
   be more or less likely to settle right of publicity cases than they
   are to settle alienation of affections cases.) Also, my right of
   publicity query might have excluded some cases in which the matter is
   discussed solely as "invasion of privacy" (from which the right of
   publicity derived).

   Still, the comparison suggests that alienation of affections claims
   are not vastly less common than right of publicity claims, which
   no-one treats as moribund. In many states, it has indeed been
   abolished, so it's not of practical importance to lawyers who litigate
   solely under the law of those states (though even California lawyers
   might come across it if, for instance, their clients acted tortiously
   in North Carolina, or perhaps even in California with a visiting North
   Carolinian). But I think it should still be seen as being of scholarly
   and pedagogical significance to tort scholars and teachers, untainted
   by a sense that it is somehow entirely moribund.

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