Powers v. Wheatley

45 Cal. 113 | Cal. | 1872

By the Court:

This- is an action brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for an alleged breach of promise of marriage.

Upon the trial the Court instructed the jury as follows: “ The damages are peculiarly within the power of the jury in eases of this kind; and if the defendant has undertaken to rest his defense, in whole or in-part, on the bad character or improper conduct of the plaintiff’ and failed in his proof, the jury may consider this an aggravation of damages.”

Hone of the defenses interposed in the answer of the defendant set up want of chastity, or any conduct on the part of the plaintiff unbecoming a chaste and virtuous woman. It is true that one of the defenses is, that pending the engagement—for the breach of which the action is brought, and before the alleged breach on the part of the defendant— the plaintiff had engaged herself to marry another person. While this was attempted to be shown as a fact, which, it is claimed, released the defendant from his antecedent promise to marry the plaintiff, there is nothing which fairly imports an assault by the defendant upon her character for chastity. And we have seen nothing in the evidence adduced by the defendant amounting to an attempt in that direction.

Under this state of pleadings and evidence this instruction was not justified. It set prominently before the minds *115of the jury an element which was really non-existent in the case, and left them at liberty to make it an ingredient in the assessment of the damages. But were this otherwise, it is not a correct proposition of law, that a defense of the character mentioned, even if unsuccessfully attempted, ought per se to aggravate the damages. There ought to be something showing, or tending to show, that in interposing such a defense the defendant was actuated by malice, or wantonness, or recklessness, and so, that it was not interposed in good faith. Otherwise the defendant might be punished for even a bona fide effort to defend himself upon a ground, which, if true, constituted a good defense, and this merely because he had in point of fact failed to establish it. The case which probably goes farthest upon this point in favor of the plaintiff is that of Southard v. Rexford, 6 Cowen, 254, where the jury were instructed “ that where the defendant attempts to justify his breach of promise of marriage by stating upon the record as the cause of his desertion of the plaintiff that she had repeatedly had criminal intercourse with various persons, and fails entirely in proving it, this is a circumstance which ought to aggravate the damages.” But the circumstances of that case were that the defense of unchastity had not only been spread upon the record, but it appeared from the testimony of the defendant’s own witnesses that the plaintiff’s character for chastity had not been tarnished even by the breath of suspicion. The jury were told in that case that if the defendant had “ spread the defense upon the record for the purpose of destroying her character,” they would be justified in giving exemplary damages. In Clark v. Reese, too (35 Cal. 89), the defendant set up a similar defense in pleading, and the instruction given by the Court (which was sustained here), was in substantial accord with the rule laid down in the case of Southard v. Rexford.

Bat there is an entire want of similarity between the eir*116cumstances of those cases and the circumstances of this in the respect referred to.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.