142 Iowa 66 | Iowa | 1909
Plaintiff entered into defendant’s employment as a farm laborer, under a written contract specifying a rate per month of compensation for one year, with free rent of a house, to be occupied by plaintiff and his family, on defendant’s premises. At the end of about six months the plaintiff terminated the employment, and left the premises, for the alleged reason that defendant had made improper proposals to, and attempted indecent liberties with, plaintiff’s wife in the house occupied by plaintiff under the contract. Plaintiff sues for the rea
eral character for chastity in the community was good. The court in one of its instructions withdrew this evidence from the consideration of the jury, assigning as a reason that defendant’s character for chastity was not involved in the suit, and directed the jury to consider that for the purposes of the case defendant’s reputation for chastity was good. In general evidence is not admissible in behalf of defendant in a civil suit, charged with a legal wrong, to show good character as tending to raise a presumption or inference that he did not do the act charged. Stone v. Hawkeye Ins. Co., 68 Iowa, 737. Exceptions to this rule have been recognized in particular cases, but the grounds of such exceptions are not very well defined. 3 Elliott, Evidence, section 2001; 1 Wigmore, Evidence, section 64. Without now determining whether in such a case as this defendant was entitled to have evidence of his good character for chastity submitted to the jury, we think it clear