11 Ga. 603 | Ga. | 1852
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This was an action of trespass on the case, instituted in the Superior Court of Stewart County, by Isaac McCrary against John B. Kendrick, for the seduction of plaintiff’s daughter. The Jury returned a verdict for $1,049 ; and a new trial is asked, on the grounds that the daughter was twenty-one years old at the time the injury occurred, and there was no contract of service between her and her father; that the service rendered was voluntary. And it is contended that the father could not sue for, and recover damages, for the loss of that which he had no legal right to claim ; that the measure of damages was the actual loss sustained ; and that the right of action belonged to the daughter and not to the father.
This action was originally given to the master, to enable him
As to the measure of damages, the rule originally governing the action, has for a long time been so far extended as to authorize the father to recover damage beyond the mere loss of services and expenses consequent on the seduction.
Lord Ellenhorough, in the case of Irwin vs. Dealman, (1 East. 24,) says : “ however difficult it may be to reconcile to principle the giving of greater damages, the practice is become inveterate, and cannot now be shaken.” In Tulledge vs. Wade, (3 Wils. 18,) Chief Justice Wilmot remarks: “Actions of this sort are brought for example’s sake; and although the plaintiffs loss in this case, may not really amount to the value of twenty shillings, yet the Jury have done right in giving liberal damages.” The Court, in Tilletson vs. Cheatham, (3 Johns. 56,) quoting the foregoing cases with approbation, adds : “ The actual pecuniary damages, in actions fox defamation, as well as in other actions for loss, can rarely be computed, and are never the sole rule of assessment.”
In Briggs vs. Evans, (5 Iredell, 16,) and upon which I have
Never, so help me God, while I have the honor to occupy a seat upon this bench, will I consent to control the Jury, in the amount of compensation which they may see fit to render a father for the dishonor and disgrace thus cast upon his family j for this atrocious invasion of his household peace. There is nothing like it, since the entrance of Sin and Death into this lower world. Money cannot redress a parent who is wronged beyond the possibility of redress ; it cannot minister to a mind thus diseased. Give to such a plaintiff, all that figures can number, it is as the small dust of the balance. Say to the father, there is $>1049, embrace your innocent daughter, for the last time, and let her henceforth become an object for the hand of scorn to point its finger at! What mockery ! And yet this is the identical case we are considering.
It has been truly said, that more instructive lessons are taught in Courts of Justice, than the Church is able to inculcate. Morals come in the cold abstract from the pulpit; but men smart under them practically, when Juries are the preachers. In cases of deliberate seduction, there should be no limitation to verdicts, because there is none to the magnitude of the injury.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.