90 Neb. 676 | Neb. | 1912
This is an appeal from a judgment of filiation. The first complaint is that the court erred in admitting in evidence the examination of plaintiff taken before the justice of the peace. The statute, however, provides: “At the trial of such issue the examination before the justice shall be given in evidence.” Comp. St. 1893, ch. 37, sec. 5. This question was raised in Stoppert v. Nierle, 45 Neb. 105, and it was held that either party is entitled to offer the whole examination in evidence. In the opinion it is said that the words of the statute that the examination before the justice shall be given in evidence “are plain and direct in their import and no interpretation of them is necessary to ascertain their meaning. The statement is that ‘the examination before the justice shall be given in evidence,’ and to us it clearly authorizes its use by either party and its reception when offered by either.” State v. O’Rourke, 85 Neb. 639.
As to the complaint made of the limitation of cross-examination and in striking out certain statements made by appellant to the witness Mrs. Dickenson: In the circumstances of this case neither the exclusion of this evidence nor the limitation of the cross-examination could be prejudicial, since the matters involved Avere otherwise proved, and taking all the evidence together were really immaterial.
It is also contended that the court erred in giving instructions Nos. 1 and 4. No. 1 told the: jury that a proceeding in bastardy is a.civil and not a criminal action, and that its purpose is to establish the parentage of the child and to provide that the father shall support it. This is a correct statement of the law. The gist of instruction No. 4 that, if the jury believed that all the material facts were proved against the defendant, they should find defendant guilty Avhether the sexual intercourse was had on either September 28, 29 or 30, 1909, is clearly correct, because proof of the exact date upon which the intercourse was had is not essential.
The principal contention is that the verdict is not supported by the evidence and is contrary thereto. The evidence is somewhat peculiar. The plaintiff and her father and mother testify that the defendant, driving a dun and a black horse hitched to a buggy, came to their home on the evening of September 28, 1909, about sundOAvn, and invited complainant to take a ride, that she consented, and they departed, driving soutlnvard on the section-line road west of their house. Plaintiff testifies that, after proceeding about a half mile from home, he took her from the buggy, and that intercourse was there had. All three of these witnesses say that they were gone from an hour to an hour and a half, and got back between 8 and 9
To meet this testimony the defendant proved, without dispute or contradiction, that on the 28th of September he was at Kensington, Kansas, a distance of over 150 miles from the pláintiff’s home; that he returned to Pawnee county in the afternoon of September 29, and that night went with his father to his home, which is a few miles north and west from where plaintiff resided. The next day he took his father’s team and left home in the morning to attend the Turkey Creek fair, which is held in Kansas, about 6 or 7 miles south of the town of DuBois, Nebraska; that he spent part of the day at the fair, and left in the afternoon. So far, his movements seem to be positively determined. What took place after this is the material inquiry. Defendant testifies that he" left the fair intending to go directly to DuBois; that he reached DuBois about sundown, and afterwards registered at the hotel and took supper there. From there he drove straight home, a distance of about 6 or 7 miles westward and north, arriving home about 8 or 9 o’clock that night. The
The jury evidently believed that the defendant did not reach Pawnee county until September 29, and that the
It is next complained that the court erred in refusing a new trial on account of the misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel. In this connection it is stated that the witness Davis, who testified for the defendant, was permitted to refresh his recollection from the hotel register. This was on March 15, 1911. The register was not introduced in evidence. That the next day, the witness not being present, plaintiff’s counsel called for the register, and, finding it was not there, asked in a loud voice for a subpoena to be issued for Davis, which the court allowed, but no effort Avas made to subpoena Davis or to procure the register. It is also assigned that further misconduct of counsel took place by referring to the name upon the hotel register as evidently erased and making like statements during his address to the jury. The evidence of Davis, Avho Avas landlord of the hotel, showed that the name was blurred and bore some appearance as if an erasure had been made.
It is also contended that the motion for a new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence should have been sustained. In this motion it is alleged that since the trial defendant has discovered, that one Miller, a clerk in a store at Seneca, Kansas, and one LaRue, a student at Lawrence, Kansas, were present in the hotel in DuBois at the time defendant took supper there, saw defendant there, and will testify to these facts. The affidavits of these persons are attached to the motion, and are to the effect that they attended the Turkey Creek fair, and that evening drove to DuBois to attend a dance at the DuBois opera house; that about dusk they went to the hotel for supper, and that a few moments before they left the dining room the defendant came in. The time they went into or left the dining room is not stated. The defendant must have thought that it was essential to his defense to establish his whereabouts on the evening of September 30, 1909. He produced the hotel proprietor, the waitress, and ITunsicker to show this fact, but apparently made no attempt to discover the identity of the two young men in the dining room until after the trial. He testifies he saw these men in the dining room, but did not know their names until given to him by Miss Nedela, the waitress. If it .was important to him to have the evidence of the other witnesses as to his presence in the hotel at that particular time, it was equally necessary to have that of these men, unless he was prepared to take the
In conclusion, while the .condition of the testimony is unusual, Ave think the well-known difficulty in fixing the exact time of an event by witnesses whose attention has not been called particularly to the time of its occurrence until months afterwards, with nothing special happening at or near the time to call their attention to the particular day or hour, explains to some extent the discrepancy in regard to dates and to the hour of the day. It is perhaps true that nothing in the realm of memory is so illusive and uncertain as the element of the lapse of time. This is pointed out in an interesting manner by Mr. Moore in his work on Facts, vol. 2, sec. 845 et seq. We are further of opinion that the contradictions and inconsistencies in the defendant’s oavii testimony as to his doings on the afternoon and evening of September 30, the admitted fact that the next day after being accused he left the state and remained away for months, and the testimony as to his being seen with the girl under circumstances similar to those which she describes are sufficient to sustain the verdict. The defendant may be innocent, but the preponderance of evidence seems to justify a verdict based upon a contrary view.
The judgment of the district court is therefore
Affirmed.