57 Me. 495 | Me. | 1869
Since the decision in Thayer v. Boyle (30 Maine, 476), in which the defendant was charged with willfully and maliciously setting fire to the plaintiff’s barn, and in which it was held, that an instruction to the jury that “ they should decide upon the balance of testimony, as in other civil cases, and that the defendant was not entitled to a verdict in his favor upon merely raising a reasonable doubt, as would be the case in a criminal prosecution,” was not so favorable as the defendant had a right to require; it has been assumed, that in all civil suits in which the cause of action implies an offense against the criminal law, the defendant has a right to have the jury instructed, that the truth of the allegations must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict. In other words, that the court must first determine whether the facts stated in the plaintiff’s declaration constitute a criminal offense, and then to require of 'the plaintiff more or less evidence according to the conclusion reached.
Such a course of proceeding is clearly wrong. It is as unreasonable to require a civil suit to be determined by the rules of evidence applicable to a criminal prosecution, as it would be to require a tailor to measure A., when he is going to make a suit of clothes for B. The measure of proof must be determined by the character of the issue being tried, and not by the character of an issue which is not being tried. If the measure of proof is the same in the two cases, such a proceeding is useless; it burdens and distracts the attention .to no purpose. If the measure of proof is not the same, it is pernicious ; it is a misapplication of the rules of evidence, and confounds -and destroys the distinction between the two classes of cases.
In the suit now under consideration, the defendant is charged with being the father of a bastard child, of which the plaintiff had been delivered. The object of the suit is to compel the defendant to contribute toward the support of the child; and its determination will be followed by no penal consequences. It is well settled, that such a prosecution is simply a civil and not a criminal proceeding. It was, therefore, the right of the plaintiff to have it tried according to the rules of evidence applicable to civil suits. But the presiding
Exceptions sustained. New trial granted.