Lind v. Closs

25 P. 972, 88 Cal. 6, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 637
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1891
DocketNo. 13379
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 25 P. 972 (Lind v. Closs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lind v. Closs, 25 P. 972, 88 Cal. 6, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 637 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

The Court.

When this cause was in Department One the following opinion was prepared by Commissioner Belcher. It is hereby adopted by the court in Bank, and for the reasons therein stated, the judgment and order of the superior court are reversed, and the cause remanded.

“The facts stated in the complaint are these: The plaintiffs were husband and wife, and on or about the twenty-sixth day of October, 1887, at their residence in the town of Auburn, Placer County, ‘the defendant wickedly, maliciously, and violently assaulted said Johanna Lind, one of the plaintiffs herein, by jumping upon her while she was in bed, and holding her down, [7]*7and willfully contriving and intending to injure plaintiffs, defendant did then and there ravish and carnally know said Johanna Lind, without her consent and against her will, whereby she was made sick and sore in body/ etc., to the plaintiffs’ damage in the sum of fifty thousand dollars.

“The answer denies that defendant, at the time named in the complaint, or at any time, violently or wickedly or maliciously, or at all, assaulted the plaintiff Johanna, or that he jumped upon her, or held her down; or that he ravished her or carnally knew her against her consent or against her will, and denies that she was made sick or sore in body, or that by reason of the premises plaintiffs had suffered damages in the sum of fifty thousand dollars, or in any other sum.

“The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict returned for two thousand five hundred dollars damages, for which judgment was entered. The defendant moved for a new trial, upon the ground, among others, that the verdict was not justified by the evidence, and his motion was denied. The appeal is from the judgment and order.

“The plaintiff Johanna was called as a witness, and testified that she was born in Germany, and had been married about six years; that she was married in Connecticut, and about a year thereafter came to California; that in April, 1887, she and her husband went to defendant’s place and worked for him for one month; that they then left, but after about three months the husband again worked for defendant for one month; that in September, 1887, they went to live in a house known as the Collins house, and about fifteen minutes’ walk from defendant’s house; and that on the morning of October 18th, the husband went to San Francisco, leaving the witness alone with her two children. What afterwards occurred, the witness relates as follows: —

“‘When evening came I put the children to sleep, and [8]*8I locked my door, and then I sat down to write a letter. Before I went to bed I went again to see if the doors and windows were fastened tight. I then went to bed. I could not sleep. I was afraid, and very near midnight I heard somebody knock. Somebody came then to the house and knocked several times, and asked if Mr. Lind was at home. I didn’t answer the first, but then he knocked again, and said: “Mrs. Lind, open the door. I want to come in to you”; and I could hear then right away it was Mr. Gloss, and I said: “ No, sir, Mr. Gloss,”— I was not going to open the door, — “ if you want to see me, come to-morrow ”; I would be at home; and he went, and it was only a minute and I heard something at the back door, and in a minute he stood in my sleeping-room, where I was lying with my children, and he said that I should make room for him in the bed, so he might come into bed to me, and I told him I would not let him come in the bed, and he said I should not be particular, and that I was such a funny woman. I was not like other women he had ever known in his life. And so in that time he had his clothes off, and he jumped right into bed, and I put my little baby on the side, because I wanted and needed both my hands; and he took off the quilt, and he tried to do several things. He took hold of mo, and was trying to do what he wanted.

“‘I struggled with him fifteen or twenty minutes. I told him he should leave me, and that I should make it hot for him; and so at last he got out of the bed, and dressed himself and went away. I didn’t rest any that night, and in the morning was sick, and remained sick two or three days.

“ ‘ My husband came home the next day, and I was sitting there sick when he came home, and the next day after that we packed up, and the third day we went to San Francisco, and I got sicker and sicker; was sick a month after that. I had pains all over, and brain fever; pains in my head.’

[9]*9“ And on cross-examination the witness said: 1 went to bed on this night about nine or ten o’clock. My bedroom is a front room. To get into my bedroom a person coming in the back door would have to pass through two rooms.

“ ‘ Before Gloss came in, he knocked at the bedroom window several times.

I heard a noise at the back door, and in a moment Gloss was in the room. The door opened with very little noise. I heard no crashing sound. I examined the lock afterwards, and there was nothing broken.

‘ There was a light in the bedroom. I had my two children in bed with me, one on each side of me. When Gloss came in I said to him, “You have no business here,” and that he should walk right out. He commenced talking to me, and while he was talking he was taking his clothes off.

“ ‘He disrobed entirely down to his undershirt. I remained in bed all the time. As quick as he had his clothes off he jumped into the bed, threw the bed-clothes over, and lifted up my clothes.

“‘We did not wake the children up. I was pushing him away from me. He did not beat or strike me. He did not accomplish his purpose. He then got up, dressed, and went away.

“ ‘He did n’t hurt me, but tried to keep me down.

“ ‘ In the latter part of October, about ten days after it occurred, I told my husband. I told my husband just as I have stated here. After talking -with my husband, he said he would fix Gloss, and he would demand one thousand dollars from Gloss; and I sat down and wrote a letter to Gloss demanding one thousand dollars. I first went to a lawyer about it in January, 1888.

“ ‘ Gloss called on me while I was in San Francisco, about three weeks after this trouble. He called again, between Christmas and Ne\v Year’s, and saw my hus[10]*10band and myself. He called on me and my husband at those times in San Francisco to try to settle/

“ The defendant was a witness in his own behalf, and testified that he had a ranch of eighty acres, about one mile from the town of Auburn, on which he had resided for about four years; that in February, 1887, he desired help on his ranch, and advertised for it; that in answer to the advertisement the plaintiffs came to his ranch, and the wife went to doing household work and the husband outside work for him; that they then left and moved into the Collins house, which was about ten minutes’ walk from his house. He then says: ‘In October she told me her husband was going to San Francisco. I went to her house about half-past ten or eleven o’clock. I did not know whether Lind had returned or not; I knocked at the window and asked if Lind was there, and I asked her to let me come in, and she told me first to go away and come to-morrow. Mrs. Lind told me that he was not there, and then I went around and went in by the open back door.....

“‘The door was not locked; I was not obliged to put my shoulder to the door, and made no unusual effort to get in. When I lifted the thumb-latch, the door opened readily.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 P. 972, 88 Cal. 6, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lind-v-closs-cal-1891.