Hein v. Holdridge

81 N.W. 522, 78 Minn. 468, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 18, 1900
DocketNos. 11,706—(52)
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 81 N.W. 522 (Hein v. Holdridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hein v. Holdridge, 81 N.W. 522, 78 Minn. 468, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 423 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

START, C. J.

This is an action by a father for the alleged seduction of his daughter by the defendant. Verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $531, and the defendant appealed from an order denying his motion for a new trial. The assignments of error present two general questions for our decision. They are:

1. Did the trial court err in refusing the defendant’s request to instruct the jury that, to justify a verdict for the plaintiff, it must appear that the alleged debauching of his daughter was accomplished by some act, influence, promise, or deception naturally calculated to mislead a virtuous woman, and in instructing them that if the daughter was a virgin, and the defendant deflowered her, the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict? The evidence was such as to require the giving of the requested instruction, if it was a correct statement of the law as applied to a civil action by the father for the seduction of his daughter.

The contention of the defendant, briefly stated, is that this action is one given by statute (G. S. 1894, § 5163), and that the word “seduction,” as therein used, is to be taken in the technical and limited sense in which it is used in penal statutes. This is not strictly a statutory action. It is a common-law action modified by statute. The only change made by the statute is to dispense with the necessity of proving loss of service, — a Action invented to enable the father to recover damages for the shame and suffering brought upon him and his household by the debauching of his daughter. The injury to the father is, as stated by the learned trial judge:

“Not only * * * his subjection to material loss and ex[471]*471pense, but it is the degradation of his daughter, and the consequent dishonor of himself and family. It is the conversion of the chaste child of his loins into what the world deems an unclean thing. It is a wounding of his paternal pride, and a forcing of grief and shame into his home and domestic circle. On principle, what matters it by what particular means this wrong was inflicted?”

Our statute, while dispensing with the fiction as to the loss of services by the father, uses the word “seduction,” not in the sense in which it is used in penal statutes, but in the same sense as it was used in common-law actions by a father for the seduction of his daughter. In such actions “seduction” and “debauching” were used as substantially similar terms, and it was not important which word was used in the declaration. Nor were the special circumstances of the daughter’s debauchment material to the father’s cause of action, except as to the amount of his recovery. The adjudged cases are not uniform on the question here under consideration. But upon principle and authority we hold that, in an action under our statute by the father for the seduction of his daughter, it is not necessary to show that her debauchment was accomplished by seductive arts, in order to entitle him to damages, including those which are exemplary, in excess of his actual pecuniary loss. The age of the daughter, and the circumstances under which she was debauched, may aggravate or mitigate the damages to be awarded; but they do not afford any basis for limiting, as a matter of law, the father’s damages to his actual money loss. Fox v. Stevens, 13 Minn. 252 (272); Russell v. Chambers, 31 Minn. 54, 16 N. W. 458; Stoudt v. Shepherd, 73 Mich. 588, 41 N. W. 696; McAulay v. Birkhead, 13 Ired. 28; Kennedy v. Shea, 110 Mass. 147; Barbour v. Stephenson, 32 Fed. 66; Lawrence v. Spence, 99 N. Y. 669, 670, 2 N. E. 145; White v. Murtland, 71 Ill. 250.

It follows that the trial court rightly refused the defendant’s requested instruction, and correctly instructed the jury.

2. Did the trial court err in excluding evidence offered by the defendant to show' that his general reputation for chastity was ■good? The only evidence as to the alleged acts of sexual intercourse between the defendant and the plaintiff’s daughter was the testimony of the daughter and of the defendant. They flatly contradicted each other. The daughter, who was at that time a serv[472]*472ant in the family of the defendant, testified to such acts, and that the defendant was the father of her illegitimate child. The defendant, who was a married man, positively denied her testimony. Thereupon the defendant offered to show, by witnesses who had known him from his birth, and lived near him, that his general reputation for chastity was good. The court excluded the evidence, and the defendant duly excepted. Was the ruling correct?

The charge against the defendant involved the commission of a crime by him, and, if this were a criminal case, it is certain that the excluded evidence would have been admissible. The accused in a criminal case, whether the charge be a felony or misdemeanor, may always prove his previous good character, of which his general reputation is evidence, as tending to disprove the commission of the offense; that is, as tending to show the improbability of a person of his previous character committing the. act charged. The rule is not limited to cases where the probative force of the evidence against the accused is weak. There would seem to be no logical reason why the same rule should not apply to civil actions in which the defendant is charged with a crime. But the accepted general rule is that evidence of the general character of parties to civil actions, where character is not a part of the issue, is inadmissible. The rule seems to be one of practical convenience, for the purpose of avoiding the confusion of issues. 1 G-reénleaf, Ev. (16th Ed.) § 14b, subd. 4. On principle, however, it would seem that there ought to be exceptions to this general rule. In this state, whatever may be the case in other jurisdictions, such exceptions are recognized.

Inasmuch as the general rule is not based upon any philosophical reason, but is merely one of convenience, it ought not to be applied to cases where justice to the defendant requires that the inconvenience arising from a confusion of the issues should be disregarded, and he be permitted to give evidence of his previous good character; or, in other words, such evidence ought to be received in a civil action when it is of a character to bring it within all of the reasons for admitting such evidence in criminal cases. Civil actions for an indecent assault, for seduction, and kindred cases, are of this character; for such cases are not infrequently mere speculative and blackmailing schemes. The consequences to the [473]*473defendant of a verdict against him in such a case are most serious, for the issue as to him involves his fortune, his honor, his family. From the very nature of the charge, it often happens that an innocent man can only meet the issue by a denial of the charge, and proof of his previous good character. Ought a defendant in such a case to be deprived of the right to lay before the jury evidence of his previous good character, because it will tend to confuse- the issue, while a defendant in a case where the state charges him with a simple assault, involving no more serious consequences than the payment, perhaps, of a fine of five dollars, is accorded the absolute right to give such evidence? The question has been answered in the negative by this court. If evidence of the previous good character of a defendant is admissible in a civil action for an indecent assault, it necessarily follows that such evidence is admissible in a civil action for seduction, for the cases in this respect cannot be distinguished.

Now, in the case of Schuek v. Hagar, 24 Minn.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.W. 522, 78 Minn. 468, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hein-v-holdridge-minn-1900.