Drish v. Davenport

2 Stew. 266
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Stew. 266 (Drish v. Davenport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drish v. Davenport, 2 Stew. 266 (Ala. 1830).

Opinion

By JUDGE WHITE.

It is insisted in the first place. that the evidence offered affecting the reputation of the plaintiff’s daughter for chastity should not have been rejected by the Court below. It must be conceded that the defendant could prove the want of chastity in the daughter, in mitigation of damages, if the evidence offered for. that purpose was in its own character admissible. The evidence was conversations with young men of the town where the daughter resided, who professed to be acquainted with her, stating their belief that she was unchaste. Such proof as this, if adduced to general character, was too circumscribed, and if desighed to establish any particular act of lewdness, was obnoxious to the objection that the authors of the report were not upon oath when they communicated the facts spoken of in conversation, . nor subjected to the legal test of cross-examination. The Circuit Court then, in rejecting this evidence, did not err. Again, it is insisted that there was error in permitting the plaintiff below to introduce parol, evidence of the contents of letters purporting to have been written by the defendant to the plaintiff’s daughter; the'letters having been shewn to be in the hand-writing of the defendant, and previously lost. The contents of these letters were proven, to establish, first, the fact of seduction, and secondly, a promise of marriage. The objections taken are, that as the knowledge of the plaintiff’s daughter was the best evidence of their contents, and her absence not accounted for, other proof was secondary, and should not have been admitted; and furthermore, that they were illegal testimony under the issue joined. The witnesses sworn had seen the letters, and their knowledge of their contents was the same grade of evidence with that of the daughter to whom they were addressed, and consequently they could be proven as properly by them as by her. They contained admissions of the seduction, a material part of the issue, and to that extent certainly were admissible. But whether in this action by the father for the seduction of his daughter, the Court should have permitted a promise of marriage to be given in evidence to the jury, presents the last and most important inquiry raised by the argument.

The present is in forin an action for the loss of service. But according to the indulgent practice of the Courts, this is often, if not always, the least important consideration for the jury. They may and should, in [271]*271■the language of the boohs, remember that it is an action brought by a parent for an injury to his child, and take Into consideration all that he can feel from the nature of the loss. They may look upon the parent as loosing not merely the service, which is comparatively a paltry thing, but the society of his daughter, in whose blasted virtue even his confiding heart can no longer repose. They may view him as the father of other children, whose morals may be infected by the example of a ruined sister, and whose standing in life cannot but be injured by her disgrace. All these considerations may be weighed by the jury in estimating damage, and proof of the situation of the father, of his family, and other circumstances auxiliary to such an inquiry, may be adduced; but notwithstanding the great latitude allowed to plaintiffs in this kind of action, there are limits beyond which they cannot go. The boundary which the law has prescribed for the different forms of action is so essential to the rights of parties, and the wholesome administration of justice, that they should not be entirely disregarded, even to reach with the severest lash, the vile seducer who has despoiled the daughter of her virtue, and her father of his peace. It is a principle of natural justice, that a man, however great the injury he has inflicted, should not be compelled to pay twice for the same substantial cause of action; and-if he is ever held responsible to more than one, it is because he is considered as having done distinct injuries to each. Hence the existence of the rule, that although you may give in evidence all that really constitutes the res gesta, to explain the true nature of the transaction, and the accompanying circumstances, to enlarge the damages, yet it is with this restriction, that whenever the evidence offered amounts in itself to a distinct and substantive cause of. action, it must be rejected. Apply these principles to the case at bar:, the action is by the father, for a tort; the daughter is likewise entitled to her suit for a breach of marriage contract, and whatever length the law may have gone in its sympathies for the suffering parent, it would be a total destruction of its own land marks, to permit a promise of marriage, which in itself constitutes the distinct ground of a separate action by a different person, to be given in evidence to the' jury. Again, this action is ex delicto, and the promise of marriage ea: contractu, which makes in estimation qf law such an entire distinction, that they [272]*272could not be joined in the same declaration, hy the same-plaintiff. But furthermore, the object of the pleadings jg gjve n0£ice at ]eas^ t0 a reasonable extent; and it is obvious, that if, when called on to answer one cause of action, the defendant could be proceeded against for an injury so essentially different as to require a distinct form of action, he would be taken by surprise, and condemned without an opportunity of preparing for his defence. After this slight view of the case upon principle, I will proceed to examine it upon authority.

In 2d Phillips,

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Bluebook (online)
2 Stew. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drish-v-davenport-ala-1830.