87 Iowa 355 | Iowa | 1893
On cross-examination the complainant was asked this question: “Did you go into a barn, between two and three o’clock in the morning, in the month of August, 1888, with an unmarried man by the name of Mike Goodwin?” An objection was sustained to the question as immaterial. The defendant claims the question was material, and relies on State v. Borie, 79 Iowa, 606; State v. Karver, 65 Iowa, 53; State v. Woodworth, 65 Iowa, 141.
In the first case cited, it had been shown that one Damon, with whom the prosecutrix, years before, had a marriage engagement, was in her company just prior to the time she alleged the child was begotten. She was then asked if seven or eight years before she was with Damon at a hotel, locked in a room. The testimony was excluded, and this court held it error. The holding was based on the facts of the renewal of the intimacies just prior to the conception of the child. In the Karver case certain testimony touching the complainant’s leaving the defendant’s house on account of imprudent acts with another man was erroneously excluded; ‘ the court holding that the circumstances were such as not to preclude the possibility that the person referred to was the father of the child. In the Woodworth case it appeared that the prosecutrix was the mother of two bastard children, and she was asked who was the father of the first one. It was held error
A careful examination of those cases clearly shows that the facts in each were widely different from those in the case at bar. In this case it is not shown that the prosecutrix was acquainted with Goodwin, or ever saw him. There is no evidence that such a man had an existence, in fact. The circumstance inquired about occurred, if at all, nearly sixteen months prior to the time the child was begotten; and no evidence is adduced, and none promised, to show that Goodwin was acquainted with. Anna Clifton, and that his acquaintance continued up to the time her child was begotten, from which a presumption might arise that Goodwin was the father of it. Counsel say that Goodwin lived near the prosecutrix, and had better opportunities for intercourse with her than defendant had. We fail to find anything in the record showing where he lived, or that he ever knew the prosecutrix. Under the facts disclosed in the record, the testimony was properly excluded. Masters v. Marsh, 19 Neb. 458, 27 N. W. Rep. 438.
IY. We have carefully examined the instructions asked and refused, and- those given, and discover no error. We think, also, that the evidence fully sustained the verdict. Affirmed.