29 Ind. 267 | Ind. | 1868
This was a civil suit by the appell»e against the appellant for her own seduction. There was no averment in the complaint that the plaintiff’ was a woman previously chaste, or of good repute for chastity. For this reason, the appellant urges that the complaint was bad, and that the court below erred in overruling a demurrer to it. "We do not find ourselves able to concur in that opinion. The fact may be pertinent to the question of the measure of damages, and evidence upon the subject is admissible, but it is not essential to the right of action. A female not previously chaste, or of good reputation for chastity, may nevertheless resolve to be virtuous, and may be disposed to adhere to that resolution. Such an one, the law protects against the enticements of unprincipled men, by giving her damages against him who allures her from the correct path which she has chosen.
The court instructed the jury as follows: “2. If an unmarried man, having.by his visits and attentions to an unmarried female, gamed her affections and confidence, importunes her to sexual intercourse with him, and she, through her confidence in him and love for him, yields to his solicitations, it is seduction.
“ 3. If an unmarried man solicits sexual intercourse with
The first of these instructions is called in question here. But fairly construed, it is not liable to any well founded objection. ' The appellant’s counsel overlooks, in argument, that part of the instruction which we have put in italics, and which is the most important element in it. The jury could not well ignore it, with the third instruction before them, as. above set out.
The court refused to give the following instruction, prayed for by the defendant:
“The jury cannot, in this case, indulge in any presumption in favor of the character of the plaintiff; the law raises no presumption of good character in her favor, in that regal’d. So far as character is concerned, it is a matter of proof. In passing upon the question of character, you should take into consideration her own evidence and her conduct, as shown by the evidence.”
This instruction was, we think, correctly refused. Much of the plaintiff’s own evidence, given as a witness, had no bearing, even in the remotest degree,' upon the question of her character, and it would have been improper,'therefore, to have directed the jury to consider it in passing upon the question of character. Then, again, her conduct was not proper to be considered in that connection. Character could not be either attacked or sustained by proof of specific acts. The only evidence before the jury proper to be considered ' in determining her previous character for chastity, and we suppose that was what was meant, was that which related to her reputation. So that if the first part of the instruction be good, concerning which no opinion need now be expressed, yet inasmuch as the latter part was not a correct statement of the law, it was not error to refuse the whole.
During the progress of the trial, the defendant, upon affidavit filed, applied for leave to take the deposition of a wit
The sufficiency of the evidence is discussed, but we cannot i’cverse the judgment upon the evidence. There was enough, if true, to support the verdict. It was directly and flatly contradicted in every essential particular, the parties both being witnesses. The question of credibility is not for us. Our position does not afford us the means for its determination which were possessed by the jury and the judge who presided at the trial, who had the witnesses personally before them, and could observe indications of candor, on the one hand, and insincerity upon the other, which no art or skill could possibly place upon the record. The rule that this court shall not disturb a verdict upon a question of the mere credibility of witnesses is so eminently wise, that nothing could possibly justify a disregard of it.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.