204 P. 165 | Or. | 1922
— A question presented to us is the degree of proof required to establish the charge of adultery in a suit for the dissolution of the marriage contract. There are decisions teaching that proceedings for divorce are in their nature criminal, and that the facts necessary to establish the crime charged as grounds for a divorce must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. It was said by the Supreme Court of Texas in Stafford v. Stafford, 41 Tex. 111:
“While the suit for a divorce is in its form a civil proceeding, it has widely different features and incidents connected with it. In all divorce suits the defendant is charged with a breach of a solemn contract; in many cases with disgraceful and brutal conduct; in others with offenses that are known to the law either as a misdemeanor or felony. Again, no judgment of divorce can be rendered by agreement or consent; none by confession or admission of either party; neither can a judgment be rendered by défault, and, as in criminal cases, the defendant cannot be compelled to criminate himself by answering or testifying under oath. These facts show that it is in its nature a gwasi-criminal proceeding although not.*212 presented in the name of the state, nor punished by fine or imprisonment.”
In Berckmans v. Berckmans, 17 N J. Eq. 453, the court said:
“The charge made by the complainant, if true, is known to our law as a crime; consequently, this prosecution partakes strongly of the nature of a criminal proceeding, so much so as to place the complainant under the necessity, not only of placing a decided preponderance of testimony in favor of the charge, but of proving it to the satisfaction of this court, beyond a reasonable doubt. I do not mean to say that it must be done by such an amount of overwhelming and unmistakable evidence as to render it impossible to be otherwise, but the evidence must be such as to satisfy the human mind, and leave the careful and guarded judgment of the court, free from any conscientious and perplexing doubts as to whether the charge be proved or not. If, after a careful examination of all the competent testimony, such doubts remain immovable, it is clearly our duty to give the defendant the benefit of such doubts, and to refuse the prayer of complainant.”
“In a suit for divorce, brought upon grounds that involve a criminal charge against the defendant, it is not necessary to prove the allegations constituting such charge beyond a reasonable doubt. It is sufficient if they be established by a preponderance of the evidence.” Smith v. Smith, 5 Or. 186 (Syl.).
“The evidence to authorize a divorce on the ground of adultery need not be direct, but if circumstantial*213 the circumstances must be such as would lead the guarded discretion of a just mind to the conclusion of the truth of the facts. The circumstances are to be taken together and when combined must tend to establish the following three facts: 1. The lustful disposition of the party charged towards the alleged paramour; 2. A like disposition on the part of the latter; 3. The opportunity to commit the act. These three facts must be reasonably approximate in point of time. The proof must sustain an inference of actual connection * # .” 3 Abbott’s Trial Evidence (3 ed.), pp. 2033, 2034.
In discussing the necessary degree óf proof to establish the flagrant act, with adultery as the ground for divorce, courts and text-writers have frequently observed that:
“Where the facts relied on to establish adultery may import innocence as well as guilt, they must be held to import innocence.” 19 C. J. 125.
The same rule is here stated:
“Circumstances susceptible of a reasonable interpretation consistent with innocence and which do not lead to guilt by a fair inference as a necessary conclusion are insufficient.” 3 Abbott’s Trial Evidence (3 ed.), p. 2034.
To similar effect is Herberger v. Herberger, 16 Or. 327 (14 Pac. 70).
*214 “Adultery may be established by the fact that the parties occupied the same room at night * * in the absence of an explanation of the incriminating circumstance.” 19 C. J. 140.
To like effect see Rickard v. Rickard, 9 Or. 168. The following authorities taken from 19 C. J., p. 140, note 5, are in point: Mosser v. Mosser, 29 Ala. 313; Holden v. Matteson, 38 App. D. C. 128; Foval v. Foval, 39 Ill. App. 644; Names v. Names, 67 Iowa, 383 (25 N. W. 671); Crane v. Crane, 128 Md. 214 (97 Atl. 535); Kerr v. Kerr, 134 App. Div. 141 (118 N. Y. Supp. 801); Langstaff v. Langstaff (Ohio), Wright, 148; Griffin v. Griffin (Civ. App.), 67 S. W. 514.
The alleged act of adultery charged in the indictment is the same- act averred in the complaint for divorce. The wife now invokes the verdict of not guilty returned by the jury in the criminal case for the purpose of defeating the charge of adultery contained in the complaint for divorce. The converse of her proposition has been held in Anderson v. Anderson, 4 Greenl. (Me.) 100 (16 Am. Dec. 237), where the court said:
“The record of the conviction upon an indictment for adultery is evidence in a subsequent suit for divorce brought against the defendant by his wife, both of the marriage and of the adultery.” (Syl.)
Likewise, in the case of Randall v. Randall, 4 Greenl. (Me.) 326, it appears that the wife had been convicted of the crime of lewd and lascivious cohabitation with a man other than her husband. It seems that her paramour was convicted and sentenced for adultery committed with her. The court, after default was entered, admitted this evidence as sufficient proof of the crime of adultery charged as grounds for divorce: See Griffis v. Sellars, 19 N. C. 492 (31 Am. Dec. 422).
The courts have frequently cited with approval this section from a text-writer:
íí # * A verdict and judgment in a criminal case, though admissible to establish the fact of the mere rendition of the judgment, cannot be given in evidence in a civil action to establish the facts on which it was rendered. If the defendant was convicted, it may have been upon the evidence of the very plaintiff in the civil action. And if he was acquitted, it may have been by collusion with the prosecutor. But beside this, and upon more general grounds, there is no mutuality; the parties are not the same; neither are the rules of decision-and the course of proceeding the same. The defendant could not avail himself, in the criminal trial, of any admissions of the plaintiff in the civil action.; and, on the other hand, the jury in the civil action must decide upon the mere preponderance of evidence, whereas, in order to a criminal conviction, they must be satisfied of the party’s guilt beyond any reasonable doubt.” 1 G-reenleaf, Evidence, § 537.
It is said by another distinguished text-writer, 1 Wharton, Law of Evidence, Section 776:
“The parties in a criminal prosecution being necessarily different from those in a civil suit, and the objects of the two forms of action and the redress they afford being essentially distinct, it stands to reason that a judgment in a criminal suit cannot be used in a civil suit to establish the facts on which such judgment rests.”
Jones on Evidence, Section 589, reads:
“Although the same fact may be involved in two cases, one civil and the other criminal, the parties*216 are necessarily different, for one action is prosecuted by an individual, tbe other by the state; and the judgment in one case is not generally admissible in the other to establish the facts on which it was rendered.”
Again, we have the principle stated:
“Ordinarily a judgment of conviction or acquittal of a party on a criminal charge cannot be used as evidence in a civil action of the facts or matters upon which such judgment is based.” 7 Ency. of Ev. 85U, and list of authorities cited under note 80.
To like effect is Freeman on Judgments, Section 319.
In Stone v. United States, 167 U. S. 178, 184 (42 L. Ed. 127, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 778, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes) — an action to recover the value of certain timber — it appears that the defendant had been indicted criminally for the cutting of the timber and had been acquitted. The court said:
“In our opinion the record of the criminal proceedings in the court in Idaho was not evidence to establish or disprove any of the material facts involved in the civil action.”
Tissie Belle Jenkins testified in this suit in the lower court that she was born in Tennessee thirty-four years prior to the trial. Her mother died when she was a little girl of the age of nine years, and during her childhood she resided “back and forth” with her relatives. She testified that she had been acquainted with Rex Arnwine all her lifetime; that they were second cousins, had attended school together, that she lived for a time at the Arnwine home, and that their families were intimately acquainted
“Mr. Jenkins was very nice to me when he was sober, but I never saw him sober very much, — just four or five months after we got married and a little while before. Whenever he had been drinking he said: ‘I wish I had never married you. My brothers don’t like it because I married you and I am going to get rid of you.’ * * Things like that. He seemed to like to tell me that, * * when he was drunk and angry.”
Describing the first assault made upon her by Jenkins, she said:
“We were coming from town and he grabbed hold of me and started to choke me and then he let loose and just started in laughing, says, ‘I was just funning. ’ I told him: ‘Why, you have just hurt me awful bad.’ He says: ‘I was just funning.’ He acted like he was kind of crazy * * . He was very much intoxicated at that time.”
Concerning the second assault, she testified:’
“There was a revival meeting started at the Nazarene Church * * . It was during these meetings. I wanted to go to the meetings, to preaching. He said I was took up with the preacher, * * up there lying with the preacher * * , and if I went I must stay and. not come back there any more, and he would move my bed up there and put it in the back room, he said.*218 * * And on one occasion Tsaid: ‘Well, I am going.’ He came np and grabbed me; grabbed me by tbe bair of tbe bead and struck me and knocked me down and I fell.”
Tbis occurred in tbe presence of Mel Culver and Mrs. Jenkins ’ little girl. Relating to tbe extent of tbe injury, sbe said:
“He blacked my eye, and my face was bleeding; burt me so bad I didn’t go to cburcb # * . He whipped me so many times I couldn’t remember * * tbe number of them * * .
“Tbe next occasion, as I remember, was out at tbe corral doing chores. He came out * * . He told me be was going to whip me * * ; there were people out around and I did not want them to know * * and I started to tbe bouse. I knew be would, because be usually did when be said be would, and be took in after me. Mrs. Hanley was in tbe bouse. As I went through I said: ‘Mrs. Hanley, Tom is going to whip me. Stop him if you can.’ Mrs. Hanley sent for tbe marshal. I went upstairs and locked tbe door.”
Testifying further, sbe said:
“I asked Tom, I says: ‘You won’t whip me much if I come out, will you?’ He said be would slap tbe face off of me, or something. I wanted to come out before tbe marshal came, and I came out, and be slapped my face and pulled my bair and my nose bled. * * Tbe first lick be missed my face and struck me on tbe nose, and my nose went to bleeding. He tore my Waist and bruised my arm, crushed my finger-nails into my arms so as tbe blood oozed out # *.
“Q. 'When next that you remember did be assault you?
“A. I bad washed my bair and I was sitting on tbe lounge with my bair combed down over my face. Tbe little girl was there. Sbe says: ‘Hello, Tommy,’ and I bad my bair combed down and I beard him swear and be made a lunge for me. He hadn’t spoken to me. He grabbed tbe bair of my bead and twisted my bead backwards like be wanted to break my neck; jerked*219 me off the lounge. The little girl grabbed him and pushed him back and began to scream and say: ‘You are killing Mamma.’ * * After he got sober he said he didn’t know why he done it and he was sorry * * .
“Q. Now, when next was it that he assaulted you, that you can recall?
“A. * # On that occasion # * I made a protest about this whiskey matter. I told Mr. Jenkins * * : ‘Mrs. Hanley told me * * people are talking about you and say you are selling Indians whiskey.’ # * He was going to let them have it anyway, * * and I grabbed hold of the jug and we poured a gallon jug full of whiskey out, as well as I remember, the whole jug, I think, was emptied on the floor. And after the whiskey was poured out Mr. Jenkins gave me an awful whipping.”
For about two hours on the night of April 5, 1918, Jenkins lay in wait outside the house, listening to a conversation between his wife and Arnwine, who were in the bedroom downstairs. Mrs. Jenkins had been ill for several days, and Arnwine had come to the house at the request of her daughter, for the purpose of remaining with the mother while the daughter attended a dance. "When Arnwine arrived Mrs. Jenkins was in bed. According to Jenkins’ own testimony, nothing unusual occurred during that time. Arnwine was then sent to the bedroom upstairs. Mrs. Jenkins says that she followed him upstairs to make up the bed which had not been made ready for occupancy. She prepared the bed. They were in the room together from fifteen minutes to half an hour. There is no proof that the bed was occupied. One of her children was sleeping in an adjoining room, and
We cannot assume that these cousins and childhood acquaintances carnally knew each other, merely because of the fact that they had an opportunity so to do. Indiscretion is not adultery. Suspicion is not proof. That an act of adultery might possibly, or even probably, have been committed, is not proof that adultery was committed. No court of conscience will ever adjudge that the scarlet letter “A” shall be placed upon the breast of a wife and mother in the absence of full and satisfactory proof of the truth of the charge.
As well stated by Strahan, J.:
“Because they were sociable the court will not presume evil, and because they had the opportunity and might have committed adultery, there is no presumption that they did. The presumptions are the other way. The law will not presume that these parties violated the criminal statutes of the state, and transcended their social duties, or were guilty of any wrong. Ho who alleges it must prove it. Opportunity alone will not suffice.” Herberger v. Herberger, supra,.
“Voluntary cohabitation of the parties pending proceedings for a divorce necessarily operates as a condonation of the misconduct complained of.” 19 C. J., p. 87, § 200.
The decree of the lower court is affirmed.