39 Ind. App. 42 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
-This is an action begun by appellee against appellant before a justice of the peace, charging appellant with being the father of the relatrix’s unborn bastard child.
The complaint is in the usual form filed in such actions. On a hearing before the justice, appellant was held to appear in the Fountain Circuit Court, where was filed a transcript of the proceedings before said justice.
Appellant answered in three paragraphs. The first paragraph being a general denial. The second and third para
The second paragraph of reply, after averring facts covered by the complaint, avers that relatrix and a younger sister are the only living members of her immediate family; that relatrix is an orphan, and at the time her condition became known resided at the home of Jasper N. Philpott; that by reason of her condition she was driven from her then home, from whence she went to the home of an aunt in the city of Crawfordsville, where she was living at the time the proceedings were had before Justice Brewer; that appellant, as a member of a fraternal order, and relatrix, a member of an auxiliary society of that order, were frequently in each other’s company, and under pretense of love and affection for relatrix, and by virtue of his promise of marriage, and by reason of his standing in the community and said order, he had complete control of relatrix’s love and confidence; that he made three trips to see relatrix while she resided with her aunt, telling her'on the last trip that on account of the publicity of her condition he would not marry her, but would pay her $50 for the purpose of paying her expenses of lying-in, doctor bills, and the like, incident to the birth of the child; that without the knowledge and consent of the relatrix he employed an attorney to prepare a complaint, charging him with bastardy, and, on the day the proceedings set out in appellant’s answer were entered and had before Justice Brewer, he informed
A demurrer. for want of facts was addressed to this paragraph of reply and overruled. Thereupon the venue of this cause was changed to the Montgomery Circuit Court, where a third paragraph of reply was filed. This paragraph avers practically the same facts as those stated in the second paragraph, with the additional averment that said justice of the peage Brewer knew at the time he paid relatrix said $50 that she did not understand the nature of the papers and records which she had signed; that he knew that defendant was not paying relatrix any money whatever for the maintenance of said unhorn child; that he conspired with the defendant for the purpose of deceiving relatrix and in procuring her to enter said satisfaction of record, knowing that the proceedings before him were for the purpose of obtaining settlement of defendant’s liability in bastardy, under the fraudulent proceedings and pretext to pay relatrix for her sickness.
A demurrer to this paragraph of reply, for want of facts sufficient to avoid either the second or third paragraphs of answer, was overruled. The issues thus formed were submitted to a jury, trial, verdict in favor of appellee and motion for a new trial overruled. Judgment in accordance with the verdict of the jury for $550, with a credit of $50, and ordering the same paid in partial payments, from which judgment appellant appeals to this court.
Appellee claims that each paragraph of the reply shows that relatrix was induced by fraud to enter the acknowledgment and dismissal set up in appellant’s answers, and for that reason, and because the State was not in fact a party
Each paragraph of the reply exhibits facts showing that the proceedings had before Justice Brewer were procured, managed, and controlled by appellant; that the State was a party only in name and not in fact. No one was present having authority to act for the State. In the name of the State, appellant brings an action against himself to secure maintenance for his own offspring. lie appears to the action and submits himself to the jurisdiction of the court. He has the mother of the child accompany him into open court, and there, under the sanctity of a judicial proceeding, and for the purpose of relieving the public and society of the burden of maintaining such child, he pays to the penniless, homeless mother, who has just arrived at her majority, the munificent sum of $50, and she enters of record an admission- that provision for the maintenance of the child has been made to her satisfaction.
(3) The questions arising on the assignment of errors, based upon the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial, relate to the admission of certain evidence and to the giving and refusing to give to the jury certain instructions.
Binding no error in the record the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.