46 Vt. 466 | Vt. | 1874
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Of the several points of exception that were taken on the trial in the county court, and have been argued in this court, only upon one do we find occasion to reverse the judgment, though on the others there was not entire concurrence of views. We think the exception was well taken to the exclusion of the testimony offered to show the conduct of the plaintiff with Martha Church. It would seem that the same principle that accords to the plaintiff the right to show, iu aggravation of damages, his rank and quality, would entitle the defendant to show the same, in mitigation. It would be but bringing him to the test of a scale that is graduated both ways from the zero of indifference. If his rank marks plus with reference to that point, ho has the benefit in due proportion ; if minus, he should, by the same rule and reason, be subjected to the resulting disadvantage in like proportion. In 2 Stark. Ev. part IV, 442, it is said that, “ evidence in aggravation usually consists in showing the rank and quality of the plaintiff,” &c. Ib. 443, the case of Wyndham v. Ld. Wy
Not only -these views are entertained by this court, but as to the bearing of the fact that the equally vicious and criminal conduct on the part of the plaintiff took place after the alleged misconduct of the defendant with the plaintiff’s wife, it can hardly fail to be remarked, that such conduct by the plaintiff is not sufficiently accounted for by the suggestion in the brief of his learned counsel that, “ it is among the natural and worst results of the defendant’s offence, that men of previous good conduct are thus driven into bad courses.”
Ordinarily, a man of the age of the plaintiff, and after twelve years of married life, is not driven all of a sudden from the purity of conjugal fidelity into the filthiness and criminality of .adultery with a strumpet, within two months after he has brought his suit to repair the damage to his marital bed and his conjugal affections, solely by the fact that the defendant had debauched his wife, who was still living in his own house, and, for aught that appears, in the ordinary relations and manner of wife with husband, at the time of his alleged misconduct.
As the world goes, it would be a fair matter of question and consideration, whether such conduct on his part, in such a conjuncture in his domestic history, would not evince a condition of mind and character of sentiment, resulting from a progressive growth, such as to render him progressively less susceptible to the kind of injury which the law in such cases regards as the basis and subject for compensation.
It is a mistake to suppose that the municipal law, or the moral or divine law, discriminates between the crime or the beaslliness of adultery, as committed by the husband or the wife, or by another party with either of them. And though it is true that, by the code social, the male adulterer and debauchee has often an unquestioned currency and countenance in society, while the less offending, or only suspected, female is exorcised as a- polluted and polluting thing, and is doomed to irretrievable social perdition, yet, in the eye and hands of the law, the male has no precedence of
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.