151 Iowa 555 | Iowa | 1911
There was evidence tending to show that on the 21st day of June, 1908, the defendant, who had taken the complainant home in his buggy from a dance, had sexual intercourse with her in the buggy near complainant’s home, and that her child born in March following was the result of this intercourse. -
The assignments of error relate to rulings of the court in the admission and exclusion of evidence, instructions given to the jury, and the sufficiency of the evidence taken as a whole to sustain the verdict.
It seems to us, however, that the condition and experience' in life of the complainant was a matter which the jury might properly consider as bearing upon the question whether in fact complainant permitted the defendant under the circumstances ’hereinafter to be more fully stated to have intercourse with her. However this may be, after the witness had been allowed to testify without objection that she was not her father’s oldest child, it could not possibly have been prejudicial to defendant that she was allowed to state that there were two children older than herself.
The first objection to this instruction is that it assumed the illegitimacy of the child, blit as to that fact there was not the slightest controversy during the trial. The fact was practically conceded by the defendant and none of the instructions asked by him indicated that he expected or desired to have any issue on that point submitted. Of course if there had been any such issue raised by the evidence, the court should have instructed upon it without request; but the fact that in the instruction asked" there was no indication that any' such issue was involved confirms the conclusion which must be drawn from the entire record of the trial that the defendant at no stage •of the proceedings questioned the fact of illegitimacy. ■
As to the impossibility of sexual intercourse between defendant and complainant in such a buggy as defendant described, it is sufficient to say that the impossibility, if such might be, was based entirely upon uncorroborated testimony of defendant that the buggy which he and his witness measured was the same buggy in which he drove the complainant to her home. It is needless to say that such conclusive impossibility could not be made out by such testimony of defendant without other testimony as to what actually happened. We are not justified in assuming as a matter of judicial cognizance that' it is impossible for sexual intercourse to take place between adults in a single buggy, nor that it is entirely incredible that defendant should have remained in the buggy on complainant’s body for more than an hour.
In view of the many minor inconsistensies in the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses and the circumspect and quite persuasive testimony of two witnesses for the defendant, who appear to have been entirely disinterested, that defendant was at the dance until after 2 o’clock, a fact wholly inconsistent with the entire story of complainant and her witnesses, the writer of the opinion and Mr. Justice Deemer feel that we should as jurors have reached the conclusion that complainant’s case was not made out by a preponderance of the evidence, and that the account
The judgment of the trial court is therefore affirmed.