29 Minn. 132 | Minn. | 1882
The complaint in this case is very nearly in the language of the statute. It states, at any rate, all the facts which the statute seems to contemplate as necessary. Gen. St. 1878, c. 17, § 1. The allegation that the child “is a bastard” implies that it is alive at the time of making the complaint. The transcript of the justice’s docket returned to the district court shows proper proceedings had before him, and their nature, fully. The omission to formally entitle the proceeding or action in the docket (who were the parties appearing therein) was at most only an irregularity, which could not 'possibly prejudice or mislead any one, and should be disregarded. The same is the case with the form of the verdict rendered. No one could misunderstand what the jury intended by it, nor to what case it related.
None of the questions asked of complainant was obnoxious to the objections made. The question, “Was this child begotten at the intercourse in July?” did not, as the case stood when it was asked, call for an opinion, but for a fact that might well be within her knowledge. Thus, if that was the only act of intercourse within the time when the child must, as shown by the time of its birth, have been conceived, she would certainly know as a fact that it was begotten on that occasion.
The point that the county attorney was permitted, against defendant’s objection, to comment, in his argument to the jury, on the omission of defendant to be sworn in his own behalf, depends on the last clause in Gen. St. 1878, c. 73, § 7, prohibiting such comments in certain eases. That clause applies to the-“trial of all indictments, complaints, and other proceedings against persons charged with the commission of crimes and offences;” that is, proceedings for punishment for crimes and offences. These are not such proceedings.
In State v. Becht, 23 Minn. 1, this court said: “The infliction, upon the father, of a punishment for the act of begetting a bastard child, as for a criminal offence, is not the purpose of our statute, nor is such its effect.” The proceedings are sometimes spoken of as quasi criminal; neither wholly civil nor wholly criminal, but having many of the features of both. State v. Becht, supra; State v. Jager,
There is nothing in the point that the verdict is not justified by the evidence. The case was peculiarly one for the jury, who, having the witness before them, were the best judges of how much the contradictions in her testimony appearing on the record should detract from the credit to be given to her testimony.
Order affirmed.