53 Ind. 552 | Ind. | 1876
Prosecution, by the appellee against the appellant, for bastardy. Trial by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff below.
The appellant has assigned error, raising but two questions, viz.: First, whether the verdict was sustained by the evidence; and, second, whether the court erred in giving a certain charge to the jury.
With regard to the first question, it may be observed,, that the testimony of the relatrix, taking it to be true, clearly and unequivocally made out the case. But it is claimed that her story was improbable in itself, and that she was impeached and contradicted by the testimony of other witnesses.
The case was one in which there was simply a conflict of evidence; and we cannot, under the well established practice, disturb the conclusion arrived at below, upon the evidence.
The instruction complained of is as follows:
“ This is a prosecution in the name of the State of Indiana, on the relation of Martha E. Harrell, against William Decker, to recover for the maintenance of the bastard child
It is claimed that the charge was incorrect as to the interest of the relatrix in the action, and, therefore, that the proper basis was not given to the jury by which to judge of the credence that should attach to her evidence.
In the case of McCullough v. The State, ex rel., etc., 14 Ind. 391, it was held, that “ in cases of this sort, the prosecuting witness, being the mother of the illegitimate child, is clearly interested in the event of the suit; because, in the event of a conviction, the defendant is adjudged the father of the child, and stands charged with its maintenance and education ; but should he be acquitted, the witness, being its mother, would, of course, be obliged to maintain and educate her own child. This, then, is an interest that directly ^affects the credit of the witness, and, in this respect, her credibility is, in our opinion, necessarily in question before the jury; hence, it was error in the court to refuse so to instruct them.”
A different ruling was had in the case of Dailey v. The State, ex rel., etc., 28 Ind. 285, where it was held that the relatrix in such case had no direct interest in the result of the suit.
But in Keating v. The State, ex rel., etc., 44 Ind. 449, the case in 28 Ind., supra, was overruled on this point, and that in 14 Ind., supra, followed.
The charge goes on, to be sure, to state, that, if money was recovered, the relatrix would not get it, and that she had no other interest than that arising from her relationship to the child, the recovery being solely for the support and maintenance of the child. This part of the charge, taken in connection with the preceding, could not have misled or have been misunderstood by the jury. The court, doubtless, meant, and the jury must have understood, that the relatrix would not be entitled to the money in her own right, or for her own benefit, but that her interest in it grew out of her relationship to the child. Her relationship to the child gave her, as long as she was living and a proper person to receive the money, a right to the annual payments, for the maintenance and education of the child. 2 Rev. Stat. 1876, p. 659, sec. 15.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.