Graham v. Wallace

50 A.D. 101, 63 N.Y.S. 372
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 50 A.D. 101 (Graham v. Wallace) 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
Graham v. Wallace, 50 A.D. 101, 63 N.Y.S. 372 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for her seduction by the defendant. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff became an orphan at the age of fourteen years; that she was related to defendant’s wife; that defendant was shortly thereafter appointed general guardian of the person and property of the plaintiff by the surro[102]*102gate of Cortland county; that he filed a bond, took his oath of office and entered upon the trust; that within a year thereafter he took plaintiff to reside at his home, and thereupon, in violation of his trust and of the duties and obligations he, as such general guardian, owed to the plaintiff, he began to make improper suggestions to her, and to take improper liberties with her, resulting in his assaulting and prostituting her to gratify his lustful desires, and in sexual intercourse between them in the month of August, 1893, she being then only fifteen years and eight months of age and he being forty years of age, and that such intercourse continued at intervals for nearly six years. Plaintiff brought this action a few days after attaining her majority. Defendant demurred on the ground that it appears upon the face of the complaint that the same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Plaintiff being under the age of sixteen years at the time of her seduction, the criminal law presumes conclusively that she was incapable of consenting thereto and the defendant was guilty of the crime of rape. (Penal Code, § 278, prior to amendment of 1895 ; Dean v. Raplee, 145 N. Y. 326.)

The question to be decided is whether a female ward may maintain an action in her own behalf to recover damages of her personal guardian for seduction when she was under the statutory age of consent. There being no parent or master to bring the action, if the ward may not maintain it, no one else can, and the guardian into whose custody and control the court delivered the infant may claim and exercise the privilege of seducing his ward without becoming responsible to the infant in a civil action for damages for the wrong and injury. We find the action without precedent. There appears to be no recorded case expressly affirming or expressly negativing the right of a ward to recover damages for seduction committed by the guardian of her person. At common law — and the rule still prevails, at least in ordinary cases, in the absence of a statute removing the disability — a female could not sue to recover damages for her seduction, although her parent or master might. (Hamilton v. Lomax, 6 Abb. Pr. 142 ; 26 Barb. 615 ; Buckles v. Ellers, 72 Ind. 220; Woodward v. Anderson, 9 Bush [Ky.], 624; Weaver v. Bachert, 2 Penn. St. 80; Paul v. Frazier, 3 Mass. 71; Ellington v. Ellington, 47 Miss. 329 ; Smith v. Richards, 29 Conn. [103]*103232 ; 21 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1022; Pollock Torts, 194; 1 Jag. Torts, 454; Bishop Non-cont. Law, § 57.)

This general rule is founded upon certain legal maxims, as in pari delicto potior est conditio defendentis and volenti non fit injuria. Where both parties are equally in the wrong, the law will not afford relief, nor will relief be awarded where a party has consented to the act which resulted in the loss of which he complains. (Bonvier Law Dict.; Broom Leg. Max. 268.)

In Smith v. Richards (supra) it is held that there are and should be exceptions to this rule. The court, in making an exception and allowing a recovery on a note given by the defendant in settlement of an action for seduction by defendant, after fraudulently inducing plaintiff to make her home with him as his servant when she was only fourteen years of age and an orphan, held that the action for seduction could have been maintained on the peculiar facts of that case, and, commenting on the general rule, said: “ This is the general law, we suppose, in a simple case of seduction, but there may be circumstances connected with the act of such a character as to take the case out of the general rule ; and where such circumstances in fact exist, courts may be presumed to be ready to lay hold of them for the purpose of punishing an artful seducer and to indemnify betrayed innocence. * * * The seduced female, it is true, is not allowed to bring suit in her own name, because she is a particeps criminis, and cannot be heard in her complaints in court, though forever ruined through the insidious arts of the most consummate villainy. Be it so. Let the rule of law remain with the qualifications above stated. Perhaps it is the part of wisdom and safety that it should be so, lest by changing it we should unwarily put it in the power of the female sex to become seducers in their turn, and to prefer false claims for a pretended violation of their chastity.”

Can it be fairly said that the plaintiff, in yielding to the advances and desires of her guardian, to whom alone she had a right to look for proper moral advice, care and protection, with whom she was living and upon whom she was wholly dependent, is equally in the wrong, and consented to the act within the fair construction and reasonable application of these maxims ? The defendant, by virtue of his guardianship, stood in loco parentis to the plaintiff. Is it [104]*104just to assume that she possessed such thorough knowledge of the wrongfulness of the act, and such freedom of will as to avoid being-deceived by her guardian, and to know that it was her duty to resist ? In failing to resist to the extent of her physical ability, does any public policy require that she he precluded from obtaining legal redress for her guardian’s perfidy and betrayal of his trust and her confidence ? Let us examine the legal relation existing between guardian and ward, and the obligations thereby imposed upon each to ascertain whether they may not furnish a basis for an exception to the general rule. Eversley, in his work on Domestic Relations (2d ed. 614), says : “ Guardianship is a trust and a trust of delicacy and importance which the good ordering of society requires to be faithfully carried out. * * * It will thus interfere with those'guardians who are appointed to the person of an infant; and this species of guardianship is a more exacting kind of trusteeship than the mere trust to hold or dispose of his property.”

In Schouler on Domestic Relations (5th ed. § 335) the author says: “ As the guardian is bound to promote the moral welfare of the person intrusted to his care, he may warn off from the ward’s premises any persons improper for him to' associate with, and if necessary expel them forcibly.”

“ To the orphan he stands, in some sense, in the place of a parent, and supplies that watchfulness, care and discipline which are essential to the young in the formation of their habits, and of which being deprived altogether they had better die than live.” (Id. § 336.)

Guardians appointed by the court and testamentary guardians are required to take oath that they will well, faithfully and honestly discharge the duties of the office of general guardian of the person and property of the ward. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 2594, 2852.)

In Thomas v. Bennett (56 Barb. 198),' Postee, J., speaking of a testamentary or statutory guardian, says: “ He takes the custody and tuition of his ward, and may maintain an action for taking or detaining him, though the damages which he recovers are for the benefit of the ward.”

In Fernsler v. Moyer (3 Watts. & Serg.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A.D. 101, 63 N.Y.S. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-wallace-nyappdiv-1900.