140 Iowa 540 | Iowa | 1908
— Defendant is charged with being the father of an illegitimate child bom to Lizzie Mnndt on or about May 4, 1901. He denies that he is the father of the child, and in his answer pleaded a settlement with the relator, whereby she, in consideration of the payment of ,$100, acknowledged satisfaction of all demands, and released him of all liability growing out of the matters complained of. The case was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict of guilty. The court rendered judgment on this verdict in the sum of $1,200 for the support and maintenance of the child. Something like forty errors are assigned, and the argument is directed to practically all of them. It is manifest that it would be impossible to cover each and all of these without unduly extending the opinion. We shall deal only with those which are deemed controlling and material, and first with those relating to the admission and rejection of testimony.
• Over defendant’s objections, plaintiff was permitted to show how large a farm defendant’s father owned. This was manifestly immaterial, and certainly prejudicial. State v. Seevers, 108 Iowa, 744.
Some time after the alleged intercourse which resulted in the hirth of the child, and before the birth of the child, the parties met, and in consideration of the sum of $100 paid to relator and $100 paid to her attorney, she, relator, signed the following paper:
I hereby acknowledge that- Henry Meier, son of Adolph Meier, of Charter Oak, Iowa, is innocent of the crime of seduction charged against him by. me; and I further state that he has always conducted himself towards me in a proper and gentlemanly manner at all times, and I herewith dismiss the suit for seduction brought against him by me, alleging that I was seduced by him during the year 1900; the consideration of said dismissal being that said Adolph Meier pays me the sum of $100, the receipt whereof I hereby acknowledge, and Mr. Meier to pay the cost of my attorney’s fee to Mr. Good*543 win for investigating this case. This settlement is made to cover any and all claims .that I now have or any that I may claim to have against said Henry Meier, and he is hereby released by me from all claims-of every name, and any for breach of promise or otherwise, he at' no time having promised to marry ine or ever , had sexual intercourse with me. (Signed) Lizzie Mundt. Charter Oak, Iowa. January 31, 1901.
Over defendant’s objections relator was permitted to prove what her attorney said to her when he paid her the money. This was not said in the presence of the defendant or of any one representing him, and was a declaration to the effect that after the child was bom she was to get five or six thousand dollars more. This was not said at the time the paper was signed, nor was it a part of the transaction, but a declaration made by relator’s counsel after the event, without any sort of authority from defendant. The testimony should not have been received.
Relator claimed that she did not learn the contents of the paper until some time after it had been signed. She was asked if after she discovered what it contained she returned the money received, or did anything to notify defendant that she would not be bound by the agreement. Objection to this matter sought to be brought out on cross-examination was sustained. It should have been overruled. ■ Relator was claiming that she did not know what was in this paper, that she thought it was a mere receipt to be followed by other payments in the event the child which she was then carrying was bom alive. In view of her claim, the matter sought to be elicited was certainly proper cross-examination.
The trial court unduly limited defendant in his attempt to show that relator had had intercourse with other men at or near the time when the child was conceived. We need not set out the testimony which was rejected.
Certáin remarks made by the trial court during the introduction of testimony tending to discredit the witnesses should not have been made. 'For instance, when defendant was asking an attachment for an absent witness, the trial court, after defendant’s counsel .had stated that the witness would testify to intercourse with relator during ■the years 1899 and 1900, said: “Get the warrant. I would like to see him.”
Plaintiff sought to prove during the course of the trial that the child resembled defendant. It was then about one year old, Objections to this line of testimony were sustained; but when counsel for relator came to argue the case he took the child in his arms, exhibited it to the jury, and commented upon the * resemblance which it bore to defendant. This was manifestly erroneous, and the error could not be cured by an objection to the argument. State v. Danforth, 48 Iowa, 43; State v. Harvey, 112 Iowa, 416.
Pelator declared that the contents of certain affidavits which had been read to her were true. These affidavits were then offered by defendant, but upon objection were excluded by the trial court. They were from parties who claimed to have had intercourse with her, and they should have been received. The intercourse referred to in these affidavits was said to have occurred about the time the woman became pregnant, and as she had declared the statements were true they should have been admitted.
II. The -trial court instructed the jury that there was some evidence that relator had had intercourse with another man, and told them the purpose of such testimony. As .there was evidence to the effect that she had had
The court also submitted to the jury the question as to whether or not relator signed the contract or receipt above set out. This was error, as' the relator admitted signing it.
Appellant’s counsel contend that the paper introduced by them was a contract and not a "mere receipt, and that the trial court was in error in-holding it to be a receipt and so instructing the jury. We think the paper was a receipt, and not a contract; but it also contained admissions or declarations which were admissible in evidence showing or tending to show that defendant was not the father of the child. Being a receipt, it was subject to explanation, and the trial court did not err in leaving the question of the settlement of the bastardy proceedings to the jury. At the time the receipt was given relator had brought suit for breach of promise of marriage and for seduction, and it was for the jury to say whether or not the money was paid and the receipt given in settlement of these actions, or of these and the bastardy proceedings as well. The rule established by our cases is that the mother of an illegitimate child may by a fair settlement with the putative father, upon a reasonable consideration, preclude herself and the county from the right to maintain such a proceeding as was here instituted to secure the maintenance of her child. The trial judge so instructed in this case, and there was no error in this respect.
This, among other instructions, was given by the trial court: “There is some evidence before you that the attorney for defendant advised the prosecuting witness not to accept a settlement of one thousand dollars, which it is claimed was offered to her by the father of the defendant in his presence to- settle her claim, and if you find from the evidence that the attorney for defendant, and L. E. Goodwin, the attorney for the plaintiff, acted in
Eor some reason we have not been favored with a brief by appellee’s counsel, and the record is in a very unsatisfactory condition. The errors we have pointed out are manifest, and some other rulings are doubtful, but in the absence of full argument we do not think it necessary to consider them.
The judgment must be, and it is, reversed.