144 Mich. 534 | Mich. | 1906
-Plaintiff brought this suit to obtain damages for seduction. She secured a verdict and judgment in the lower court. Defendant seeks a reversal of that judgment upon several grounds.
1. He contends that the court erred in denying his motion, made at the conclusion of - plaintiff’s case, to strike out all the testimony upon the ground that the declaration did not aver the plaintiff’s chastity. The declaration did aver that defendant seduced the plaintiff. This, as will hereafter appear in this opinion, 'was an averment that she was thereby drawn from the path of virtue. The declaration then- did in effect aver chastity and sufficiently averred it. The trial court did not therefore err in overruling this motion.
2. Defendant contends that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to strike out plaintiff’s testimony on the ground that she failed to show such “ promises, deceits, artifices, or influence that would overcome the scruples of a chaste woman.” Plaintiff, who was a girl only 17 years of age, testified:
“ He told me * * * he liked me the best of any girl he ever knew. He told me he was worth between $20,000 and $30,000. He did not say it right out — say that he would marry me, or anything like that. He always. said I never would be sorry, and would never regret it, and he said I always could live with him and be happy. That is the way he worded it.”
This testimony was sufficient to warrant the jury in deciding that defendant made such promises, deceits, arti
3. The trial court prevented defendant from proving by the cross-examination of plaintiff, and by the introduction of other testimony, that plaintiff lacked chastity at the time of the alleged seduction, upon the ground that with his plea he had given no notice of his intention to offer such testimony. This testimony was admissible under the plea of the general issue, unless made inadmissible thereunder by subdivision b of Circuit Court Rule 7. That subdivision reads:
“An affirmative defense, such as payment, release, satisfaction, discharge, license, fraud or failure of consideration in whole or in part, and any defense which by other affirmative matter seeks to avoid the legal effect of or defeat the cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s declaration, must be plainly set forth in a notice added to the defendant’s plea.”
Plaintiff’s lack of chastity is not an affirmative defense, tinder the foregoing rule, unless it was “affirmative matter [which] seeks to avoid the legal effect of or defeat the cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s declaration. ”
It is contended by plaintiff that testimony tending to prove plaintiff’s lack of chastity was “affirmative matter,” under the language above quoted, because the presumption of chastity made it the duty of defendant to introduce such testimony. It is true there is a presumption of plaintiff’s chastity. People v. Brewer, 27 Mich. 134. This presumption transferred from plaintiff to defendant the duty of first introducing testimony touching the issue of chastity, but it by no means follows that in introducing that testimony the latter was making an affirmative defense, within the meaning of Circuit Court Rule 7. If it is true that plaintiff’s declaration avers by implication that she was chaste at the time of the alleged seduction, and that she cannot recover if she was not — and I shall hereafter endeavor to prove that this is true — her suit necessarily puts her chastity in issue. The presumption of chastity
The foregoing contention that, in introducing testimony tending to prove that plaintiff lacked chastity at the time of the alleged seduction, defendant is not making an affirmative defense, rests upon the assumption that plaintiff had no cause of action, unless she was chaste at the time of the alleged seduction. It is therefore essential that I prove that this assumption is well founded. At common law the seduction of a female gave her no right of action. Her right of action is statutory. It is given in this State by section 10418, 3 Comp. Laws, which reads:
“ It shall not be necessary in any action on the case for •seduction hereafter to be brought, to allege in the declaration, or to prove on the trial, any loss of service in consequence of such seduction; but if the female seduced be a minor at the time of the seduction, the action may be brought by her father, mother, or guardian; and if such female be of full age, the action may be brought by her father, or any other relative who shall be authorized by her to bring the same.” . .
We have held that this statute gives to the woman seduced a right of action which she may enforce in her own name. Watson v. Watson, 49 Mich. 540; Ryan v. Fralick, 50 Mich. 483. This right of action is described
Can we say that the word “seduction” has two distinct legal definitions in this State ? Can we say it has one meaning when a woman brings suit for damages under the statute last above quoted, and another and different meaning when her seducer is prosecuted under the criminal statute ? To answer this question in the affirmative would, in my judgment, be illogical and productive of unnecessary confusion. Seduction as a statutory cause of action is to be defined precisely as it has been defined in construing the criminal statute. Plaintiff was not seduced.
4. Plaintiff testified that she had been told by third persons that defendant stated in his store “that I was a mother. He said that he could prove that he was not the cause though.” This testimony was admitted against the objection of defendant that the same was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial and hearsay. It was clearly hearsay, and should not have been admitted.
5. The trial court defined seduction to be:
“The act of persuading or inducing a woman of previous chaste character to depart from the path of virtue by the use of any species of arts, persuasions, or wiles, which are calculated to have, and do have, that effect, and resulting in her ultimately submitting her person to the sexual embraces of the person accused. ”
Defendant complains of this definition. It was correct. See People v. Gibbs, 70 Mich. 425; People v. Smith, 132 Mich. 58.
Other complaints are made in defendant’s brief. Some of these complaints are answered by elementary principles of law, and they need no discussion. Some of these complaints relate to discretionary rulings of the trial judge, and there was no abuse of that discretion. Some of these complaints are based upon no exception, and they relate to rulings which we cannot review without exceptions. In support of other complaints the brief contains no argument. We illustrate these last complaints by quoting from defendant’s brief: ■ . ■
“Exceptions 52 to 61, inclusive, relate to the refusal of the court to give defendant’s request to charge, and we call the court’s attention to such requests. Record, pp..
We assume that it was not expected that we should consider such complaints.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and a new trial granted.