96 Ind. 266 | Ind. | 1884
The appellant, Clara E. Brattain, prosecuting her suit as a poor person, brought this action against the appellee. A demurrer to the complaint for want of sufficient facts was sustained. The action was commenced in November, 1883.
The complaint alleged that on the 1st of October, 1881, the plaintiff was only fifteen years of age, in stature small, just verging into womanhood, without father or mother living, chaste, uneducated, utterly ignorant of the meaning of the terms sexual intercourse, and of the fact that pregnancy results from such intercourse, and so feeble in mind as to be unable to discriminate between right and wrong; that at said date the defendant was the duly appointed, qualified and acting guardian of her person and estate, and he had claimed to be acting in that capacity ever since; that shortly after said date he took control of her person, placed her in his family as a servant, and continuously afterward kept her in that position until about four weeks before the commencement of this suit; that on the 1st of December, 1881, the defendant, in violation of his duty as her guardian and master, and well knowing all the facts aforesaid, unlawfully took indecent liberties with her person, at said county, by then and there unlawfully embracing her and handling her private parts to such an extent- as to excite her passions; and at the same time he informed her that it was not improper for her to permit his said caresses and to submit to his said embraces ; that he continued, almost daily, to take similar liberties with her person,and to repeat to her that such conduct was not improper, and that the act of sexual intercourse would not injure her, during all the time she remained in his service and under his control as aforesaid, well knowing that she still remained ignorant and feeble in mind as aforesaid; that during the last year she so remained in his service, he well know
This is a peculiar case. The improper and indecent acts of the defendant, which the plaintiff permitted, could not render him liable as for assault and battery; and his failure through negligence, to prevent his son from having sexual intercourse with the plaintiff, could not, of itself, render him pecuniarily liable.
The defendant was entitled under the statute, section 2518, R. S. 1881, to have the custody and tuition of tho plaintiff. She was bound to submit to his exercise of that right, and she was entitled to his protection. He was bound to care for and to promote her moral, intellectual and physical welfare. Mr. Schouler, in discussing the duties of guardians (Dom. Rel., sec. 336), says: Guardians, as wc have seen, are seldom appointed where there is not some property. But even though the ward be penniless, we are not to suppose that one vested with the full right of custody can neglect with impunity those offices of tenderness which common charity as well as
For the purpose of deciding the case, we must take the averments of the complaint to be true. Besides being of tender age and innocent, the girl was of weak mind, ignorant and unable to discriminate between right and wrong. Taking advantage of the confidential relation which he sustained to her and of the control which he possessed over her, he corrupted her and prepared her to be an easy victim of the lust of another person in bis own household, where he kept her, and of her own passions, which he had excited, and of her ignorance and weak-mindedness, of which he had knowledge. When he had done the acts imputed to him, if they did not of themselves subject him to any pecuniary liability, and only constituted good ground for removing him from the guardianship, they placed upon him a requirement while she remained under his personal control, he knowing that she still continued ignorant and feeble minded, to protect her from the legitimate consequences of his acts and the •surroundings in which he kept her.
If the complaint is true, certainly she has suffered grievously, and we can not say upon the whole complaint that her suffering is not the effect of his wrong, but, on the contrary, we think that the complaint sufficiently connects her injury with his breach of duty to make him liable for the damages which she claims. We arc unwilling to say that the law affords her no redress but his removal from the guardianship.
We think the demurrer to the complaint should have been overruled.
Per Curiam. — It is ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment be reversed, at the costs of the appellee.