50 Ind. 355 | Ind. | 1875
Prosecution of the appellant for bastardy. Trial by jury, verdict of guilty, and judgment over motions by the defendant for a new trial and in arrest.
Error is assigned upon the overruling of the motion in arrest of judgment¡ and it is also assigned for error that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter.
These assignments are based upon the following facts, as shown by the record: The cause came regularly into the court of common pleas of Ohio county, and was there pending on April 9th, 1872, when, on the application of the defendant, the venue was ordered to be changed to the Dearborn Court of Common Pleas, and the clerk was directed to transmit the papers, etc., the defendant first paying the costs occasioned by
We are not advised by the record or otherwise upon what ground the court ordered the papers sent back from the Dear-born to the Ohio Circuit Court, but whatever it may have been, the defendant must be deemed to have acquiesced in the action of the court; for he not only did not object thereto, but he appeared to the action in the latter court after the papers had been sent back, again applied for a change of venue, procured a continuance, and finally went to trial without objection. The case stands as if there had been an express agreement of the parties that the venue should be changed back from the Dearborn to the Ohio Circuit Court. The latter court had jurisdiction in bastardy cases, and the consent of the parties gave it jurisdiction of this particular case. There is no foundation for the assignment of error which we have been considering.
Wc come to that based upon the overruling of the motion for a new trial. Two ' grounds are urged here upon which it
The relatrix testified that the defendant was the father of her bastard child; that it was begotten about the 20th of March, 1871, at the town of Milton, in Ohio county, where the relatrix then resided;' that the defendant then resided in the town of Hillsboro, about five miles distant; that the child was begotten at the back end of a blacksmith shop, after dark, but .not very late. She testified that she was standing at her father’s gate, at home, in Milton, when the defendant came along, and after talking awhile at the gate, she went along with him to the blacksmith shop.
William Hunt, the father of the relatrix, testified that he was at home on or about the 20th of March, 1871, when the defendant came past his house in Milton; that he stopped at the gate and‘talked awhile with himself and his daughter; that after talking awhile he, the witness, went into the house, leaving his daughter and the defendant at the gate; that it was after dark.
The defendant testified as a witness, and, amongst other things, denied that he was the. father of the child, and that he had ever had connection with the relatrix. He stated that he did not see the relatrix on the 20th of March, 1871, that he remembered of; that he knew he had no conversation with her on that evening; that he was in Milton that evening, but that he started to go to his home in Hillsboro, about five miles distant, and arrived home between six and seven o’clock in the evening.
This portion of the evidence has been stated in order to an understanding of the questions involved.
The appellant made an affidavit that he was surprised by the evidence of William Hunt, above set out; that Hunt had not been subpoenaed as a witness or brought into court until the day he testified; that he was an idler and a vagabond, having deserted and abandoned his family for a number of years, and having left them without support or protection, and that he was not a resident, for some time, of the county in which his
There was clearly no such case of surprise as the law will relieve against. The examination of the relatrix before the magistrate was on file, in which she stated that the child was begotten on or about the 20th of March, 1871, in the town of Milton, near the blacksmith shop mentioned, after night. The defendant had full notice of the time and place when and where the relatrix claimed that the child was begotten. He must be presumed to have known that any evidence would be competent, and might be introduced, that would tend to corroborate her evidence. No fraud or trickery calculated to mislead the appellant is alleged to have been practised. The fact that the witness had not been subpoenaed or brought into court until the day he testified is of but little importance. Witnesses are thus brought in to testify very frequently. The statements as to the character of the witness can have but little or nothing to do with the question here involved.
We proceed to the other ground, the newly-discovered evidence. The appellant filed his affidavit stating that he expected to be able to prove by Armor Abden that the appellant was in the town of Dillsboro, five miles distant from Milton, at seven o’clock, on the evening of March 20th, 1871. This is but cumulative of the appellant’s own testimony on the same subject. The affidavit also states that the appellant had discovered after the trial that he could prove by one David Jones, who was an acquaintance of the relatrix, that she had stated to him, in a conversation between them, held about January 15th, 1872, that the appellant was not the father of the child; that the reason she charged the appellant with the paternity of the child was, because he was worth something, and the father of the child was a young man who was too poor to pay anything, and she was going to lay it to some person who could pay for it. The affidavit of Jones to the same effect was also filed.
It seems to us, upon an examination of the affidavit, that
We see nothing in this case that should take it out of the general rule.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.