Christensen Ex Rel. Christensen v. Boucher

24 N.W.2d 782, 237 Iowa 1170, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 12, 1946
DocketNo. 46897.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 N.W.2d 782 (Christensen Ex Rel. Christensen v. Boucher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christensen Ex Rel. Christensen v. Boucher, 24 N.W.2d 782, 237 Iowa 1170, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 368 (iowa 1946).

Opinion

Mantz, J.

The action is .at law, brought by Naomi Christensen, a minor, by her mother and next friend, Minnie Christensen, against Bernie Boucher, to recover damages because of his forcible defilement of her, resulting in the birth of a child to her. She alleged that said defilement was forcible and against her will and despite any resistance she could make. She- claimed to have sustained actual damages in the sum of $25,000. The defendant denied all of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition both generally and specifically. The jury returned a verdict in ,¡favor, of plaintiff and against defendant for the sum.of $25,000.

Defendant moved the court to set aside the verdict of the jury and to grant a new trial. The court ordered plaintiff;to file a remittitur in the sum of $10,000; otherwise, a new trial, would be granted. Plaintiff filed such remittitur, the motion for.a,new trial was overruled, judgment was entered against the defendant, and this appeal followed.

Appellant relies upon three errors for reversal. None questions the sufficiency of the evidence but all relate to actions and rulings by the trial court. The errors claimed are .as follows :

First: The court erred in refusing.the• defendant’s .requested Instruction No. 4.

Second: The court erred in failing to give defendant a new trial for the reason that the verdict was excessive and appears tó have been influenced by passion or prejudice.

Third-. The court erred in. • admitting testimony that MeNaughton made a trip to Fort Dodge to see plaintiff and her mother, and the error was not cured by the court later- giving an instruction to disregard such evidence. . , ■

Before considering these claimed errors we think that it will be helpful to briefly summarize from the record some of the incidents and events out of which this suit arises. Due to ¡the length of the record and the fact that no question has been *1172 raised as to tbe sufficiency of the evidence we will endeavor to limit our summarization.

During September 1943, Naomi Christensen, then eighteen years of age, made her home with her widowed mother at Harlan, Iowa. Her father died at Audubon in 1936. She was graduated from the Harlan High School in 1943. She took part in school activities, being a member of various musical groups therein; she was a member of the glee club, mixed chorus, sextette, marching band, and concert band. About the time of her graduation she worked in various offices at Harlan and in September 1943 was attending a business college in Omaha, Nebraska.

On September 23, 1943, she met Bernife Boucher, appellant, on the streets of Omaha, and by mutual arrangement she .and Betty Hansen, a girl friend from Harlan who was attending the Omaha school, rode in Boucher’s automobile from Omaha to Harlan. M. F. McNaughton, an employee of Boucher, was also a passenger on the trip.

Bernie Boucher was forty-six years old, had a wife and three children, and for several years had operated a sort of night-club café known as the “Chicken Hut” on the outskirts of Harlan.

The party ate supper at the Mexicali Café in Omaha and then drove directly to Harlan, arriving there somewhere around 9:30 to 10 p. m. Naomi claimed that Boucher stopped at the chicken hut for the purpose of leaving some supplies and then drove into town and let McNaughton and the Hansen girl out and then, over her protests, drove out of Harlan westward on the paved highway and then turned north onto a dirt road and in an unfrequented spot stopped the car and solicited sexual intercourse with her; that she refused and, despite her refusal and over her resistance, Boucher forcibly ravished and debauched her; that the parties were in the front seat and in the struggle her head came forcibly in contact with the steering wheel, causing her to become unconscious; that when she regained consciousness she was alone in the front seat, her clothing disarranged and torn, and she was bleeding and suffering pain in her private parts; that later Boucher came from behind the car and drove her back to Harlan.

At that time, according to the evidence, Naomi weighed *1173 one hundred eight pounds and Boucher two hundred five. Boucher had formerly operated a pool hall in Lincoln, Nebraska, and was a former professional baseball and football player. Naomi returned to Omaha and later began working for the Mutual Benefit Insurance Company and at the time she quit working, in February 1944, she was receiving a salary of $112 per month. She quit working due to the fact that an examination by a physician for the company revealed that she was pregnant. She returned to Harlan and lived with her mother; about May 22, 1944, Naomi made arrangements to go to Fort Dodge, Iowa, and enter the Lutheran Hospital and have her baby. Before leaving she had several talks with Boucher in which he was advised of her condition. Boucher gave her $200 to be used to defray her expenses, and then arranged to have an employee of his take her to the train headed for Fort Dodge, she taking the train at Irwin, Iowa. Boucher claimed that the $200 was a loan and nothing more and was given to help her out. As a witness Boucher positively denied having had intercourse with Naomi and stated that on their return from Omaha he and McNaughton let the two girls off at the chicken hut, where they remained for a time and were then taken away in his car by an employee, Mrs. Hoover.

Naomi went to Fort Dodge and entered the Lutheran Hos-. pital and on June 2, 1944, a male child was born to her. About the twelfth day following the birth Naomi became seriously ill, her left side became paralyzed, and convulsions followed, in which her body jerked and twitched and her eyes rolled. Special nurses were placed on the case, hypodermics were administered, and some ether and penicillin treatment followed. She remained in the. hospital approximately five weeks and was then taken to a tourist cabin in Fort Dodge. There she remained about two months, being nursed in part by a regular nurse and in part by her mother, a practical nurse. While there she was able to get up a little but had little use of her left leg and arm. Later she was put on the train and taken to the home of an aunt at Omaha, where she stayed the last few months of 1945. There is in the record evidence that as a result of the birth of the child and the illness that followed she suffered permanent injuries.

Following a demand on Boucher that he pay Naomi’s ex *1174 penses' for loss of time and damages, which demand was refused, this suit was brought. This is the second trial. In the first, the jury disagreed.' :

I. The first error set forth and argued by appellant relates to the refusal of the trial court to give requested Instruction No. 4, which is as follows:

" ‘‘The claim made by the plaintiff in this case, if true, would constitute a criminal offense. In this connection the law presumes that the defendant is innocent of the acts claimed and this presumption is evidence in his favor. This presumption of innocence continues at all stages of the proceedings until overcome by a preponderance of the evidence and there is no duty’ or burden on the part of the defendant to prove himself innocent of the claim made by the plaintiff.”

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.W.2d 782, 237 Iowa 1170, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christensen-ex-rel-christensen-v-boucher-iowa-1946.