27 N.Y.S. 438 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
It is not claimed that the plaintiff was subjected to any indignity until the spring of 1886. The fact that the plaintiff on none of the occasions to which she refers made any outcry, although some of the places to which she refers were so near the house that she may have been heard; also that she remained at the defendant’s house so long after the alleged transactions occurred, and that she did not then inform her grandmother or aunts of the treatment she had received from the defendant,—were circumstances bearing with some force against her credibility. But this was a question for the jury, in view of all the evidence given, not only by the parties, but by the other witnesses, so far as it tended to bear in either direction upon it. The jury were permitted by the plaintiff’s evidence to find that she did not consent to the connection,- but that the defendant took hold of her, threw her down, and accomplished his purpose, against her will. This would seem to have been sufficient to support the denial of the defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint, if no further reason for such ruling appeared by the evidence.
The action is for assault and battery by the defendant upon the plaintiff, and his defilement of her is matter in aggravation of damages. And while the charge of the assault could not be sustained if she consented to the connection, if she did not so consent the jury were authorized to find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. People v. Bransby, 32 N. Y. 525; Reg. v. Hallett, 9 Car. & P. 748. In that view, irrespective of the question whether the facts which the evidence tended to prove constituted all the elements requisite to support the charge of rape, the plaintiff may have been permitted to recover; and no question was raised at the trial to the
“When an assault is committed by the sudden and unexpected exercise of overpowering force, upon a timid and inexperienced girl, under circumstances indicating power and will of the aggressor to effect his object, and an intention to use any means necessary to accomplish it, it would seem to present a case for a jury to say whether the fear naturally inspired by such circumstances had not taken away or impaired the ability of the assaulted party to make effectual resistance to the assault.”
The jury in the case at bar were permitted ■ by the evidence to find a state of facts as strong in support of the charge against the defendant as those expressed in the opinion of Chief Judge Ruger, and they are not. weakened by the fact that the duty of the defendant, arising out of the relation he had assumed, was to care for the plaintiff, and give her advice and protection. It would be more difficult-to account for the failure of the plaintiff to disclose, soon after it was committed by him, this conduct of the defendant, consistently with the facts requisite to sustain the charge against him, if the inference was not permitted that she was so subject to his influence as to render his imperative direction in that respect effectual upon her, or that she was restrained from so doing by the fear of the consequences of his threats, or both. She says that this injunction of silence on the subject was imposed upon her, and threats of the consequences which she otherwise would suffer were made on each of the occasions referred to. As bearing upon the question as to the effect of her delay in making the disclosures, the jury could also properly take into consideration the youth and inexperience of the plaintiff. They have found that her evidence had the support of her credibility; and, having so found, the jury were at liberty to determine the questions of fact, as they did, against the defendant. The rule in criminal cases that the jury must, by evidence, be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the party charged with offense, has no application to this case. A preponderance of evidence is sufficient to support the action. People v. Briggs, 114 N. Y. 56, 20 N. E. 820. The court, having charged substantially the propositions embraced in some of the requests to charge, was not required to repeat them, and there was no error in his refusal to change its phraseology as requested. 27or was there any error in the refusal to charge as requested upon the subject of threats. There was no evidence of threats of the defendant to cause the plaintiff to submit to his connection with her. While the failure of the plaintiff to make any outcry may have been regarded by the jury as a potent fact against her, there was no error in the refusal of the court to charge that in such case she could not recover unless she was prevented by fear of personal violence. This was a question for the jury, and it was submitted to them. There seems to have been no error in the rulings at the trial. The judgment and order should be affirmed.