Kenyon v. People

12 N.Y. 203
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1863
StatusPublished

This text of 12 N.Y. 203 (Kenyon v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenyon v. People, 12 N.Y. 203 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

Wright, J.

,The prisoner was indicted under the Statute of 1848, “to punish seduction as a crime.” (Laws of 1848, chap. 111.) A number of exceptions were taken on the trial, and to the charge of the court, some of which are clearly frivolous; while others, and especially those involving a construction of the statute, require some consideration.

1st. The defendant offered to prove on the trial that the character for chastity of the witness and prosecutrix was, by general reputation among her neighbors, bad. This was excluded, and I think properly. Evidence that a female is by reputation unchaste, is not competent by way of impeachment. Indeed, a witness cannot be impeached by proof of any specific immorality. It must rest on general moral character, or character for truth. (Bakeman v. Row, 18 Wend., 146, and cases cited.) Nor can “ character,” as the term is used in the statute under which the prisoner was convicted, be proved by reputation. The statute is: “ Any man who shall, under promise of marriage, seduce, and have illicit connection with any unmarried female, of previous chaste character, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” &c. Character, as here used, means actual personal virtue, and not reputation. The female must be unmarried and chaste in fact, when seduced. By the terms “chaste character,” the legislature could only have meant personal qualities that make up the real character, and not public [200]*200reputation, which is the estimate of character formed by the public. It could not have been intended to substitute reputation for character in this, its primary and true sense. The accused may, by proof of specific acts of lewdness, on the part of the female, and not otherwise, show that she was in fact unchaste.

2d. The judge charged the jury that if they were fully satisfied from the evidence that the defendant promised to marry the prosecutrix, if she would have carnal connection with him, and she believing and confiding in such promise, and intending on her part to accept such offer of marriage, did have such carnal connection, it is a sufficient promise of marriage under the statute. This seems to me unobjectionable. It is not necessary that the promise should be a»valid and binding one between the parties. The offence consists in seducing and having illicit connection with an unmarried female, under promise of marriage. It is enough that a promise is made which is a consideration for or inducement to the intercourse. But if the statute required the promise to be a valid one, the charge was correct. A mutual promise, on the part of the female seduced, is implied if she yields to the solicitations of the seducer, made under his promise to marry. As nothing appeared to the contrary in the case, the defendant is to be regarded as of full age, so far as that may affect his promise. All that is necessary to make any contract is, that the minds of both contracting parties should meet upon the subject matter. The charges implies such mutual assent.

3d. The statute provides “ that no conviction shall be had on the testimony of the female seduced, unsupported by other evidence.” It was claimed by the defendant’s counsel that no conviction could be had unless the prosecutrix was supported by other evidence, not only as to the promise and illicit intercourse, but also as to the facts of her being unmarried, and her previous chaste character. The judge, however, in substance, instructed the jury that no corroboration or support was necessary as to her being unmarried, or as to her chastity. On the point of her being “ unmarried ” she was abundantly [201]*201supported by other evidence; but as to her previous chastity, there was no affirmative testimony, as there could not well be, except her own. But the judge was right in his construction of the statute. It does not contemplate that the female shall be supported or corroborated upon every material fact alleged. It is enough if the support extends to those facts which go to prove the offence charged. Ho corroboration or support is necessary to the points which merely indicate the person to be protected by the statute, viz.: that she was an unmarried female and of previous chaste character. It was only necessary that she should be supported by direct evidence or proof of circumstances, as to the facts constituting the crime. These were the promise and the intercourse.

4th. The defendant offered to prove, from general reputation among the neighbors, that the house of the mother of the prosecutrix, with whom the latter lived, was a house of ill-fame. This evidence was clearly incompetent. The character of the house could not be shown by general reputation. That a house is disorderly, is to be proven by particular facts. (1 Russell on Crimes, 825.) The general rule is, that hearsay evidence is incompetent to establish any specific fact which is, in its nature, susceptible of being proved by the witnesses who speak from their own knowledge. In this case, if it were at all material to show that the house kept by Mrs......... was a disorderly one, the fact was susceptible of better proof than hearsay, such as the harboring of persons of unchaste character, and permitting it to be a common resort of disorderly persons. Besides, the offered evidence was irrelevant Evidence that Mrs........’s house was a disorderly one would not necessarily affect the character of the¡ prosecutrix for chastity, as she was a minor, residing with her mother. These are the only exceptions that need be noticed; and I think none of them were well taken.

The judgment should be affirmed.

Denio, Ch. J., Davies, Selden, Emott, Rosekrans and Marvin, Js., concurred.

[202]*202Balcom, J.,

delivered an opinion for affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court, but for other and different reasons, on some points, than those assigned by Judge Weight. He con curred with Judge Weight that the phrase “unmarried female of previous chaste character ” as used in the act under which the prisoner was convicted, means one who has not lost her virtue by illicit intercourse with the other sex; and that she must be regarded as having a “ chaste character ” within the meaning of such act, if she has not been defiled by illicit con nection with a man, though her reputation for chastity be bad. He was of the opinion the offer of the prisoner to prove that the reputation of the prosecutrix for chastity was bad, was in the present tense, and not one to show it was bad prior to her illicit connection with the prisoner, and that for this reason it was properly rejected, but said if the offer was to be regarded as one to prove the reputation of the prosecutrix for chastity bad previous to her connection with the prisoner, it was improperly rejected; and his reasons for this conclusion were as follows: “On the trial of a person charged with the crime of rape, or an assault with an intent, &c., the general character of the prosecutrix, as a common prostitute may be shown. (The People v. Abbott, 19 Wend., 192.) This evidence is admitted in such a case, to create the probability that the prosecutrix consented to the carnal connection instead of being forced to submit to it; and the courts assurpe, by the reception of such evidence, that it tends to prove the prosecutrix'was, in fact, a prostitute at the time of the commission of the acts alleged to have been a rape, or an assault with an intent to commit one.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.Y. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenyon-v-people-ny-1863.