72 Ind. 220 | Ind. | 1880
— The complaint in this case was by MaryEllers, an unmarried woman, against Wiley Buckles, for-seduction.
A jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing her . damages at one thousand dollars, and, after denying a motion-for a new trial, the court rendered judgment in her favor upon the verdict.
The only question made here by the appellant is upon-the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.
The appellee was the principal and only important witness in her own behalf. She stated that at the time of the trial she lived in Hamilton county, in this State ; that she went toChampaign, Illinois, to live, in June, 1875, where, as a means-.of living, she became engaged in sewing and dress-making'; that she became acquainted with the appellant at that place-in September, 1876, when she was under twenty years of* age; that she first casually met him upon the street, where-'.
She further stated that the next time she met the appellant was in October, 1877, at the city of Crawfordsville, where they stopped at a hotel, as husband and wife, and again had sexual intercourse, she coming to that city at his request; that the next and last time they met was at Covington, in this State, in the latter part of January, 1878, where they spent two or three days together, occupying the same bed, and again having sexual intercourse, from which •she became pregnant, and from which a miscarriage resulted.
On cross-examination, the appellee admitted that at the
The question for our decision is, did the evidence, set out ■as above, which embraces all that was most favorable to the appellee, make out, or fairly tend to make out, against the appellant, an actionable charge of seduction, under the laws <of this State?
The first objection urged against the sufficiency of the ■evidence is, that it was shown affirmatively, that the supposed injury complained of was committed in the State of Illinois, •and that hence no right of action accrued to the appellee for ■such supposed injury under any statute of this State.
Upon the point presented by this objection, there seems to be some confusion in, and apparent conflict between, the authorities bearing upon it, but we think this confusion and apparent conflict have resulted more from a failure, in very many cases, to observe the distinction which evidently exists, and ought to be well recognized, as regards their general transitory character, between common-law. actions and actions purely statutory in their origin, than from any other •cause.
In Story on the Conflict of Laws, p. 369, sec. 307 d, 13th •edition, it is said: “In general where actions ex delicto are held transitory, and suits allowed to be maintained in a foreign forum the right of action and the nature and extent of •damages must be estimated according to the law of the place where the wrong was committed.” To this proposition some rather confusing and unsatisfactory exceptions are
Rorer on Inter-State Law, at pages 144 and: 145, after reviewing the authorities on the general subject, announces as a conclusion, that, in all purely personal actions of a transitory nature for torts at common lavo, a citizen of a State may sue a citizen of another State, in the courts of such other State, or of any State wherein he may reside, or may be found and served with process, without regard to the place or State in which the injury may have been perpetrated. But that where certain acts are made wrongs by statute, which were not such theretofore, or where remedies additional to those which existed at common law are provided by statute, advantage can be taken of these new and additional remedies only within the territory or locality in which the statute has force. These constitute new rights, so to speak, and depend for their enforcement always upon the statutes by which they are created. • And such statutes will be enforced, only by the courts of the State wherein they are enacted.
Taking the conclusion thus reached by Rorer, in respect to statutory actions, in connection with the authorities relied on to sustain the text, the inevitable inference is, that a statute, providing a right of action for a personal injury, has no extra-territorial force, and does not confer a right of action for an injury inflicted in another State. See McCarthy v. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company, 18 Kan. 46, and the authorities cited in that case.
Section 24 of our code, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 43, confers upon every unmarried woman the right to prosecute an action for her own seduction; but under the construction given, and, as we believe, correctly given, as above stated, to analogous statutes, that provision of the code has no extraterritorial force, and does not authorize such an action to be
It is manifest from the evidence in this case, that, if the appellee was in fact seduced by the appellant, the seduction took place, and was fully accomplished, in the State of Illinois. The illicit intercourse, testified to as having occurred in this State, did not constitute a new and independent case of seduction as contended for by the appellee, but was merely consequential to the alleged seduction Avhich had previously taken place.
But it may be insisted that, conceding that the gravamen of the appellant’s supposed offence Avas shown to have been perpetrated in the State of Illinois, still the appellee was entitled to prosecute her action in this State in the spirit, and as a matter of comity between the two States. The rules governing the prosecution of actions by comity between states have no application to this case, for two reasons :
First. Nothing being shown to the contrary on the trial, Ave must assume that the common law was in force in Illinois on the subject of prosecutions for seduction. By the common law, the appellee acquired no right of action against the appellant for her own seduction, and hence, putting the Avorst possible construction upon the evidence as against the appellant, she did not bring with her from Illinois any right of action to be enforced in this State.
Secondly. If it had been shown upon the trial that there Avas some statute of Illinois conferring upon her a right of action for her own seduction, that would not have authorized the appellee to prosecute this action in the court below upon principles of comity, as it is only common-law rights, or such rights as are recognized as existing by the general usage of civilized nations, Avhich can be enforced by comity in a foreign forum. Rorer on Inter-State Law, pp. 4, 5 and 6.
Eor the reasons given, we are of the opinion that the evi
The conclusion we have reached renders it unnecessary that we shall consider other objections urged to the sufficiency of the evidence.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.