In re Maples

105 F. 919, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 384
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedJanuary 8, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 105 F. 919 (In re Maples) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Maples, 105 F. 919, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 384 (D. Mont. 1901).

Opinion

KNOWLES, District Judge.

Edward B. Maples, on the 12th day of November, 1900, filed his petition in this court praying to be adjudged a bankrupt. On the 13 th day of said month the prayer of said petitioner was granted, and the said petitioner was adjudged a bankrupt, and the matter referred to Henry A. Frith, referee in bankruptcy, residing at Billings, Mont. On the 27th of November of said year, Annie Olson filed her petition in this court asking that said adjudication of bankruptcy be set aside, and that said Maples’ [920]*920petition in bankruptcy be dismissed. . The grounds upon- which this petition is based are that the only debt set forth in the petition from which the said Maples asks to be discharged is a judgment in favor of the said Annie Olson for the sum of $3,131.80, recovered in the district court of the Seventh judicial district of the state of Montana in and for the county of Ouster; that said judgment was obtained in an action for a willful and malicious injury to the person of said Annie Olson; and, this being a debt from which he, the said Maples, could not be discharged, the court had no jurisdiction of the matter. The facts set forth in the petition are as follows: The only debt scheduled by the said Edward B. Maples in the schedule annexed to his said «petition is that of this petitioner, Annie Olson, which is a judgment against him, the said Edward B. Maples, for $3,131.80, damages and costs, recovered in the district court of the Seventh judicial district, of the state of Montana in and for the county of Custer in an action for damages for seduction. The said Maples files an answer to this petition, but fails to deny that the said judgment was obtained in an action for seduction. He denies, however, that said judgment of Annie Olson set up in her petition and scheduled by Edward B. Maples, bankrupt, was. obtained in an action for a willful and malicious injury to the person of the said Annie Olson, within the meaning of section 17a of the United States bankrupt law of 1898. In this answer it is not denied that the judgment was obtained in an action for damages for seduction. This is, in legal effect, admitted. In the schedule óf indebtedness this debt is described as follows: ..

“This- claim is a judgment against petitioner in favor of Annie Alson, rent dered in the district court of the Seventh judicial district of the state of Montana in and for the county of Ouster for the sum of $3,131.80, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, obtained October 12, 1899, in the suit of Annie Olson against this petitioner for seduction under a promise of marriage.”

The question is thus presented to the court as to whether this judgment was obtained in an action for a willful and malicious injury to the person of the said Annie Olson. The statute of Montana (section 576, Code Civ. Proc.) provides:

■ “An unmarried female may prosecute, as plaintiff, in an action for her own seduction, and may recover therein such damages, pecuniary or exemplary, as are assessed in her favor.”

In the statutes of Montana (section 4336, Civ. Code) it is provided:

“The damages for seduction rest in the sound discretion of the jury.”

At common law a woman could not maintain an action for seduction in her own name. The action had to be maintained by her parents, or some one standing in their place, or by some one entitled to h.er services. When a woman brings an action in her own name for seduction, is the foundation of the same a personal injury? There can be no doubt but it is, under the statute law of Montana, under which the judgment was obtained. Section 3476 of the Code of Civil Procedure of Montana, provides:

“An injury is of two kinds: (1) To the person, and (2) to. property.”

[921]*921Sections 3477 and 3478 of said Code provide:

“The injury to property consists in depriving its owner of the benefit of it, which is done by taking, withholding, deteriorating or destroying it.”
“Every other injury is an injury to the person.”

A woman suing for her own seduction should be entitled to the same rule in assessing her damages as is awarded to her parents under the law that permitted them to recover in such cases. It has been frequently held that the parent’s right to damages extends not only to the loss of the services of his child, hut also to the disgrace brought upon his family by the seduction of his daughter. Bigelow, Cas. Torts, p. 294. In the case of Barbour v. Stephenson (C. C.) 32 Fed. 73, Judge Jackson, in charging a jury, said:

“The plaintiff is entitled to recover as damages all that yon choose to give him for his wounded feelings up to the sum claimed in his declaration, which is $20,000. A father, of'course, feels a consolation in the virtue of his daughter. s= # You may -give the plaintiff damages in your discretion up to the limit claimed in his declaration for the loss of that comfort and consolation which he had a right to feel in the purity and virtue of his child. You may take into consideration his loss of hope in ihe future of his daughter, and compensate him' for the same. You may await! him damages not only for his mental anguish in the disgrace of his daughter, but for his anxiety as to what is to become of her in the future. You may look to the loss to him and Ms family of social standing and position by reason of the daughter’s disgrace; you may consider his mortification, humiliation, and sense of dishonor.”

The injuries for which damages were awarded in the above cause, when applied to the person seduced, are certainly personal-injuries. Wounded feelings, loss of hope in the future, mental anguish in the disgrace, loss of social standing and position, mortification, humiliation, and sense of dishonor are to he considered in weighing the damage to the father. Much more should they be weighed in considering the damage to the injured woman. These are all injuries that pertain to the person.

The next point to be considered is, did the bankrupt willfully and maliciously perpetrate the same? “Willful” means “intentional” or “deliberate.” It may mean, when used in a statute, an intentional and deliberate doing of a wrongful act. How seduction can be other than a willful act it is difficult to- comprehend. Certainly it is done intentionally. A malicious injury may not always include personal ill will or hostility to (Ik; person injured. The definition of the term “malice” given in Rap. & L. Law Dict, is as follows:

“Malice, in the legal acceptation of the word, is not confined to personal spite against individuals, hut consists in a. conscious violation of the law to the prejudice of another.”

In the note to Terwilliger v. Wands, 72 Am. Dec. 429, it is said of this term:

“Malice means a want of legal excuse. This is the sense in which the form is most frequently employed,’and it is probably the only sense in which it is properly employed. Substitute ‘absence of legal excuse’ for ‘malice’ in many opinions in the reports which are difficult to he understood, and they will become easily intelligible. * * * Malice, in law, does not mean malice or ill will towards the individual affected by libel or slander. In the ordinary sense of the term, ‘malice’ in law, or absence of legal excuse, is an implication of law from the false and injurious nature of the charge, and differs from [922]

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Bluebook (online)
105 F. 919, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-maples-mtd-1901.