Austin v. Barker

110 A.D. 510, 96 N.Y.S. 814, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 3, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 A.D. 510 (Austin v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Barker, 110 A.D. 510, 96 N.Y.S. 814, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Nash, J.:

This case comes here a second time on appeal from a recovery by the plaintiff. The case is briefly outlined in the syllabus of the, former appeal (90 App. Div. 351), as follows: “ Upon the trial of an action for the seduction of the plaintiff’s daughter, who was delivered of a fully-developed child in August, 1901; the only evidence tending to show -that the defendant had had improper relations with the plaintiff’s daughter was given by the daughter herself. She testified that the improper relations cotnmenped October 30,1900, and continued until January 1,1901; that all the improper acts occurred in her father’s house in a room which was separated by an ordinary door from a room in which her mother or father usually sat. In speaking of the first of these occasions she testified that the defendant made an improper, proposal to her which. she [511]*511indignantly rejected; that they then sat and talked a few minutes, after which the defendant forcibly took her and placed her upon a couch and accomplished his purpose; that she resisted and struggled, but did nothing to attract the attention of her parents, one or both of whom were in the adjoining room.

“ The defendant denied his guilt,' and gave testimony tending to show that he was at other places on some of the occasions'when the plaintiff claimed that he was with his daughter. The defendant also testified that although he lived near the plaintiff- no suggestion that he was responsible for the condition of plaintiff's daughter was made until many weeks after the birth of the child.”

Referring to the circumstances of the case, as thus stated, the court said (Id. p: 354): “While some of the circumstances in the case thus briefly outlined are somewhat unnatural, they'perhaps are not so extraordinary that we should feel justified in refusing to accept and abide by the verdict of the jury upon them, if there were nothing else to be considered. Other evidénce, however, to which we shall now refer, was given upon the trial of so unusual a character that we feel unwilling to allow the verdict to be based upon it.

“After the daughter had been quite extensively examined, both on behalf of the plaintiff who called her and by counsel for the defendant, and had left the stand, she was, upon the urgent request of the defendant’s counsel," predicated upon new information received by him, recalled and examined. She then in effect testified that she was entirely unconscious of defendant’s various acts of relation with her at the. various times when the same were occurring; that she did not know and was-unaware that they had at all occurred during the entire term of her pregnancy and down to a period of several weeks after the birth of her child ; that upon the first occasion of improper conduct she simply realized and understood what was taking place up to the time the defendant placed her upon the conch; that in October, 1901, she was visited by the plaintiff’s attorney, and as the result of what then occurred her mind was so influenced and awakened that it grasped a recollection or consciousness of defendant’s acts with her in the fall of 1900, so that from that time on, down to and including the trial, she had a present knowledge and recollection that the defendant had committed with her acts resulting in her seduction and childbirth..”

[512]*512On this trial, as upon the former, the daughter testified to the several acts of intercourse had with the defendant as if they were fresh in her. recollection, recalled without any indication that there had been at any time any lapse of memory.

She testified that on the first occasion, October 30, 1900, defendant called about eight o’clock iri the evening and remainéd until about half-past ten. . “We visited for some" time and then. Mr. Barker remarking that he_ was tired, laid down upon the couch' and slept for a few minutes, and then he' came and sat down beside me, * * * rested his hand upon my shoulder and suggested that we ■ have, sexual intercourse and I objected: After that he took hold of me; * * after a slight struggle he placed me upon the couch and we had sexual intercourse; '* * * my father and mother sat in the'next room ; the door was. unlocked ; the light was burning; perhaps I didn’t try to arrest the attention of my father and mother.” “I had never had sexual intercourse with anybody before that.”

- She-proceeded'in her testimony in chief to give the several dates of other acts of illicit intercourse at'her father’s home, under similar surroundings, during the months of November, December and January following, giving the precise datés, November fourth, eighth, eleventh, sixteenth, twentieth, December first, twenty-second and about the middle of January.

As upon the first trial it was not until her cross-examination that the' extraordinary facts she testified to were brought out. She endeavored to break the force and- effect of her former testimony, attributing, to hypnotic influences'alone the' phenomenal return of recollection, by stating on the last trial that she did have some recol-’ lection of. the occasions that defendant had intercourse with her,' before she was hypnotized by her father’s counsel, Mr. Searle; She ’ says! “I did at one time remember before Searle hypnotized me, of the occasions when Barker had intercourse with me ; it Was immediately after my baby was born. Q. Prior to the time your, baby was born you' never knew and never had any consciousness' that Barker had connection with you, did you ? A. No, sir; not to' be sure. Q. And that was momentarily? A. Tes. Q. Now,'all' the time that you have described and the events which'you há'yó’ narrated with reference to having connection with Barker, were" [513]*513unknown to you, except you think that there was a flash of a thought that he had had connection with you just after the baby was born ? A. Yes. Q. And you didn’t know another, thing about'it; didn’t have any recollection that any such .thing had occurred; any consciousness that it had ever occurred until after Searle hypnotized you ? A. Hot to be sure of it-; no, sir.”

Upon further examination she fully assented to her former testimony, and by answers to direct questions made more prominent the fact that her recollection as to the several occurrences of alleged intercourse had with the defendant is- wholly based upon hypnotic influence."

To defendant’9 counsel: “This question was asked.me on the former'trial, speaking of the fall of 1901, at my house. Q. How long were you hypnotized?’ ‘A. I don’t know.’ ‘Q. What did lie do to hypnotize you, I mean Mr. Searle?’ A. Why, he tolcl me to sleep.’ I swore to that. I don’t know whether it was true or not. Q. Have you doubt about its being true ?' A. Doubt about what ? Q. Doubt about your evidence being true on the former trial that I have just read to you ? A. Why, in substance, yes, some of it. I don’t know that I was hypnotized by Mr. Searle in the fall of 1901, but I think so. He told me to sleep and I slept. I didn’t go to sleep right off, not for a few min-utes. .Mr. Searle hypnotized me .at my house,• twice before the suit was brought;-the second time was some time the latter part of September. I did not tell Mr. Searle before he hypnotized me on what days Barker had had intercourse with me. He put me to sleep the last time about six weeks, perhaps, before the law suit was brought. On the first occasion that Searle put me to sleep he smoothed my hair, and told me to go to sleep. I don’t remember that lie did anything else.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 A.D. 510, 96 N.Y.S. 814, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-barker-nyappdiv-1906.