35 Tenn. 29 | Tenn. | 1855
delivered the opinion of'the Court.
This was an action on the case, brought in the Circuit Court of Knox, for the seduction of Rebecca Meek, jr., the daughter of the plaintiff. The daughter was examined as a witness. She testified that when seduced — which was on the 10th of August, 1851 — she was twenty-four years of age; that at the time of her. seduction she was a member of her father’s family and living in his house; that her father died on the 14th of October, 1851, little more than two months after she was seduced; that during the life of her father, she performed services for him, and after his death, she continued to live with her mother, and to perform services for her, up to the time of the birth of her child, which took place on the 24th of April, 1852, and has since resided with her.
Upon the foregoing facts it was insisted, on the Mai, by the defendant’s counsel, that the mother could not maintain this action, the seduction being in the
The question is — did the Court err in this instruction.
The remedy afforded by the common law to a parent for the seduction of a daughter, when followed by- pregnancy, is founded, not upon the relation of parent and child, but upon that of master and servant. The action, in most cases, may be either trespass or case; and the distinction between the two actions, as respects the ground of recovery, is important to be kept in view.. Where there has been an illegal entry into the father’s house or premises, by the seducer, an action of trespass, vi et armis, may be maintained, for the breaking the house, or trespass on the premises, and the seduction of the daughter, and consequential loss of service, may be alleged and proved as an aggravation of the damages: Or an action on the case may be supported, founded merely on the consequences of the seduction.
In the former action, in which the illegal entry of the father’s house is the technical ground of the action, and the seduction and loss of service is considered
When it is said that this remedy is founded on the relation of master and servant, and that therefore, the gist of the action is the loss of service ; it must be borne in mind that such relation, as has been well observed, is “ little more than matter of fiction, made use of to support the action.” 3 Stark, on Ev. 1307. By the common law, a parent cannot, in that character merely, support an action for debauching his daughter. The action is maintainable only in respect of the supposed loss of service. Bl. Com. vol. 3, 142, n. 14. 2 Saund. on Pl. & Ev. 350. This idea of the loss of service to the master, is said to be a necessary fiction of law, in order thgt the person seduced may be a competent witness ; as otherwise the wrong-doer might escape for want of proof; the injury, from jts nature, being susceptible of proof only through the parties to it. See Reeve’s
The case of Dean vs. Peel is denied to be law by several American cases. And it is well settled, that if the daughter be a minor, it is not material that she should be living in her father’s family at the time of her seduction, to entitle him to maintain an action on the case against her seducer. In Martin vs. Payne, 9 Johns. Rep. 387, a daughter of the age of 19, went to live with an uncle, with her father’s con
In Clarke vs. Fitch, 2 Wend. Rep. 459, the daughter, being a minor, left her father’s house, by his permission, to work for and maintain herself. She was seduced and gave birth to a child. From before her seduction until after the birth of her child, she had never been in her father’s house. But the person by whom the expenses of her lying-in had been paid, looked to her father for reimbursement. And on the ground of this liability, it was held that the father might maintain an action on the case for the seduction. Because the father had the right to recall his daughter and control her services ; and the loss fell upon him of the expenses of her confinement and sickness. So, in Hornketh vs. Barr, 8 Serg. & R. 36, the same doctrine was held; and it is maintained by several other cases referred to in the argument. In these cases, the minor daughter is regarded as de jure the servant of the father, though de facto the servant of another at the time; on the principle that the daughter, though not living with her father at the time of the injury, was still subject to his control, and he had the legal right to command her services; and hence the supposed relation of master aad servant was presumed to exist.
This fictitious relationship of master and servant, does not however, exist where the person seduced was of full age at the time of the injury. In the latter case, the .daughter is not, in law, the servant of her parent; nor is he liable • for her maintenance,
Where the action is trespass vi et armis, it is admitted the law is otherwise. In the latter action, the breaking the house, or illegal entry upon the premises, being the legal ground of the action; and the consequential injuries but matter of aggravation; and a justification of the entry into . the house, or upon the premises, in such case, being a sufficient justification of the whole charge in the declaration; it is clear, that if the person seduced were not living in the house of her parent, or in his actual service, at the time of the seduction, this action could not be supported. In such case, the idea of a trespass against the parent is necessarily excluded, and the ground of
Judgment affirmed.