79 N.W. 337 | N.D. | 1899
In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for wrongs alleged to have been suffered by her at the hands of the defendant, who is her father-in-law. The complaint originally contained three separate causes of action. The first charges an assault with attempt to rape, committed July 12, 1894, the second sets out a repetition of the same offense occurring some eight days later, and the third charges the defendant with alienating the affections of her husband. The case was tried to a jury. After the plaintiff had rested her case the second cause of action was stricken out by consent of counsel, as being without evidence to sustain it. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on both remaining causes of action, assessing her damages on the first at $500, and on the third at $1,500. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was granted as to the third cause of action, but was refused as to the first. Both parties appeal.
We will first consider the defendant’s appeal from the order refusing to vacate the verdict rendered on the first cause of action. The motion for a new trial was made upon a settled statement of the case, which was used as a basis for both appeals. Three particulars pertinent to his appeal are urged by defendant’s counsel in support of his contention that the Court’s refusal to grant a new trial on the first cause of action was error: First, misconduct of the jury; second, insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict;. third, the rejection of evidence as to defendant’s chastity. These will be taken up in the above order.
The misconduct of the jury of which complaint is made is set out in the statement in the form of three affidavits made by third persons, stating that certain statements relative to the defendant were made by two of the jurors on the regular panel, either to or in the presence of two of the jurors sitting on the case, and before its final submission to them. These statements, it is urged, were made for the purpose of influencing a verdict against the defendant, and were in fact prejudical. We may state that the communications were reprehensible, and possibly of such a nature ás to subject the parties making them to punishment for contempt. But, in the condition of the record, we are not at liberty to give any weight to this ground of defendant’s motion, for no showing whatever is made, by affidavit or otherwise, that this alleged misconduct was not known to the defendant before the final submission of the case to the jury,
Neither does our examination of the record give us any reason for reversing the order refusing a new trial upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict. .The only direct evidence in this cause of action is that of the parties themselves. The plaintiff testified positively to the acts constituting the assault. These were unequivocally denied by the defendant. There are circumstances surrounding and immediately connected with the alleged acts which cast some discredit upon the plaintiff’s testimony, but not sufficient to enable us to say that the verdict is not supported by the evidence.
One of defendant’s witnesses was asked this question: “Do you know what his (defendant’s) reputation for chastity is?” The witness was not permitted to answer, and evidence of defendant’s chastity was excluded. In so ruling the Court did not err. The civil cases wherein a defendant may introduce evidence of his reputation are very few in number, and are exceptional cases, in which the defendant’s character is peculiarly involved; and even in such cases, when the evidence of reputation is admissible at all, it is confined to the particular trait involved in the case. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 55; Norris v. Stewart’s Heirs, 105 N. C. 455, 10 S. E. Rep. 912; Fowler v. Insurance Co., 6 Cow. 673. In Humphrey v. Humphrey, 7 Conn. 116, the Court used this language: “The rule of law is that in civil proceedings, unless the character of the party be directly put in issue by the proceeding itself, evidence of his general character is not admissible. Swift, Ev. 140; 2 Starkie, Ev. 366. This rule has ever been regarded in our courts, and is too firmly established to be shaken at this day.” In Church v. Drummond, 7 Ind. 17, the Court said: “The evidence of character in civil cases is thus confined within narrow limits. * ’* * The rule is that only in cases where the character is in issue can evidence of general reputation be given. Even then it must be- confined to the reputation of the party with special reference to the nature of the question in issue.”
Neither do we find any merit in plaintiff’s appeal from the order granting a new trial on the third cause of action. Not only is there no evidence that her husband’s affections were alienated, but, on the contrary, it affirmatively appears that his regard for her has not been at all disturbed by any of the scandalous matters which appear to have occurred. We are clear that the verdict upon this cause of action cannot be sustained. The evidence in the case is of such a character that we do not choose to discuss it at length. The orders of the lower court are both affirmed.