6 Ind. 339 | Ind. | 1855
Case for slander. The declaration follows: “ State of Indiana, Marion county. In the Marion Circuit Court. Rachel C. Hollingsworth, an infant within the
The defendant pleaded the general issue and a sham plea. The sham plea was demurred to, the demurrer sustained, and, as to that plea, the plaintiff had judgment.
The general issue was tried by a jury, and a verdict for 1,000 dollars was returned for the plaintiff.
The defendant prosecuted a writ of error in this Court to test the validity of the declaration which the demurrer to his sham plea brought before the Court below for judgment.
No objection is taken upon any other part of the record. We proceed to examine the declaration. Two objections are taken to it.
1. That it does not aver that the plaintiff, Rachel, is unmarried, and, hence, leaves it uncertain whether adultery, or fornication, or incest is charged.
We think we could not say, after verdict for the plaintiff on the general issue, that the declaration does not show, by reasonable implication, the non-marriage of said Rachel. It avers that she is an infant within the age of twenty years, is still living with her father, and that one person, having sexual intercourse with her, did so on a “corn-ting” visit to her. Now, courting, in its popular acceptation, means wooing or soliciting in marriage. The very charge made against her, then, assumes that she is a feme sole; and it has been decided that where a slanderous charge assumes the existence of a fact, proof of the charge itself is a sufficient proof of the assumed fact. Hays v. Allen, 3 Blackf. 408.—Hesler v. Degant, 3 Ind. 501. By the same rule, the averment of such a charge in the declaration would be a sufficient averment of the fact assumed in it; and especially should it be so considered on general demurrer or after verdict.
So far upon the assumption that it was necessary to aver the want of marriage of the plaintiff; but we do not
2. That the words complained of in the declaration do not support the colloquium, and innuendoes contained in it.
It is urged that the plaintiff, in the colloquium and innuendoes, has elected to insist upon the charge of incest; that she is bound by the meaning she has seen fit to assign to the words used; that they do not amount to a charge of incest, because they do not show the connection charged to have been between persons over sixteen years of age and with a knowledge of their relationship, and, hence, that the declaration is fatally defective, according to Lumpkins v. Justice, 1 Ind. R. 557. This argument proceeds on the idea that it was necessary for the plaintiff to show that a certain charge of a particular offence had been made against her. In this description of cases^where the suit is by a male plaintiff, such is the case. Lumpkins v. Justice, supra. Not so where the plaintiff is a female. By our statute it is actionable to charge a female with whoredom, a thing not in itself necessarily criminal in the eye of the law; for any act of sexual intercourse between a married female and a male person not her husband, or between an unmarried female and a male person, is whoredom, and a single act of the kind, according to the case of Alcorn v. Hooker, 7 Blackf. 58, makes a woman a whore. A declaration for slander, therefore, by a female plaintiff, which shows a charge made against her of whoredom, is good. 2 R. S., p. 205, s. 788. Such is the declaration in the case before us. And it shows such a charge in'its averments, independently of the colloquium and innuendoes, and independently of the question of marriage; for it avers that the defendant charged her with having sexual intercourse, on one day, with her brother Nero, and, on the following day, with John Cropper. Now, both these persons could not have been husbands of the plaintiff, and the intercourse with one, if not both of them, must have been an act of whoredom. It may have been in the one case incest, and in the other fornication; but be that as it may, in either ease the act was whoredom. Whoredom is a compre
The declaration, then, being sufficient without regard to the colloquium and innuendoes, they may be regarded as surplusage. Any erroneous inference of the plaintiff contained in them will not vitiate averments good and sufficient without the inference. Such seems to have been the course of practice in this Court, without expressly deciding the point. See Dodge v. Lacey, 2 Ind. R. 212.— Abshire v. Cline, 3 id. 115.
Colloquiums and innuendoes are only necessary to remove uncertainty that would otherwise exist as to persons, or the meaning of words and sentences and their application. See Hays et ux. v. Mitchell et ux., 7 Blackf. 117.— Worth v. Butler, id. 251.—Roella v. Follow, id. 377.— Stucker v. Davis, 8 id. 414.—Note to Harper v. Delp, 3 Ind. R. 225.—Linville v. Earlywine, 4 Blackf. 469. And in cases where they so become necessary, they form a material part of the declaration, and can not be rejected as surplusage.
The judgment is affirmed with costs.