Lipe v. . Eisenlerd

32 N.Y. 229
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 229 (Lipe v. . Eisenlerd) 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
Lipe v. . Eisenlerd, 32 N.Y. 229 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Denio, Ch. J.

The plaintiff’s daughter being above the age of twenty-one years at the time she was seduced, and no express contract for service bétween her and her father being proved, the question arises, if that can now be considered a question, whether the relation of master and servant, in the sense required to sustain the action, existed between them. I lay out of view, for the moment, the circumstance that she was at the' defendant’s house at the timeof the intercourse, assuming that to have been accidental, and not of such a character as to interrupt the relation which she habitually sustained toward the plaintiff. As father, he had no right to claim her services against her will, and he was under no legal obligation to provide for her support. But by a tacit understanding, such as almost always exists in such cases, she continued to per *233 form such service in his household as she was capable of, and such as were required; and on his part, he supplied her with food, clothing and lodging, suitable to her condition and wants. Either party could put an end to the arrangement at pleasure; but, at the time of the seduction, neither had elected to do so, and it then existed in its fall force. Although the daughter could have broken it off without incurring any legal liability, third persons had no such right, but were bound to respect it; and any illegal act by which the right of the father, such as it was, to her services was interfered with to his detriment, was a legal wrong, for which the law affords redress. The right to damages in such cases is very analogous to that of a plaintiff in slander, for words not actionable in themselves, but. by the speaking of which the plaintiff has been deprived of employment or hospitalities, or some other advantage, which no one would have been bound to provide, but which naturally would have been furnished but for the wrongful act of the defendant. But I need not enlarge upon the theory of the. plaintiff’s right to sustain the action, since it has been repeatedly adjudged that it would lie under similar circumstances. The precise point was presented in Bennett v. Alcott (2 Term, 166.) It was a suit by the father for the seduction of his daughter, who was over. thirty years of age, but lived with him, and occasionally did acts of service, though no contract between them was proved. The plaintiff had a verdict for £200. A motion to set aside the verdict was denied. Bulles, J., said, “In .actions of this kind the slightest evidence is sufficient; even milking cows. Here, instances of actual service were proved, and, therefore, it is immaterial whether the daughter was of age or not. Heither is it material whether the servant be or be not hired for a year, or whether she has any wages; it being sufficient that she is a servant de facto? Edmonson v. Matchell, in the same book (p. 4), was a case in which an aunt brought the' action for debauching her niece, who lived with her as a servant, without any contract appearing. The plaintiff recovered, and a new trial was denied. Some doubt was expressed as to the measure of damages, but none in respect to the right *234 to maintain the action. Irvin v. Dearman (11 East, 23), was an action for the seduction of the plaintiff’s adopted daughter. The circumstances precluded the idea of a contract, the plaintiff having taken the female into his family to bring up, from motives of humanity, and on account of his friendship for her deceased father. The question arose upon the amount of the verdict, exemplary damages having been given. It was held that they were properly allowed. "Where the party seduced was a married woman, living separate from her husband, at the house of her father, for whom she performed various acts of service, it was held that the action was maintainable. By her marriage she was emancipated, and she was, without' doubt, over age, as the case states she had been separated from her husband eight years. It was argued by the defendant’s counsel that she could not make a contract of service on account of her coverture, and no express contract was proved. Lord Tektebdeh observed, such contracts are, no doubt, liable to be defeated at the will of her husband. He may put an end to that relation of master and servant; but unless he interferes, it by no means follows that such a relation may not exist, especially as against third persons who are wrongdoers. It appears to me that such a relation might and indeed did exist in this case, and that in the absence of any interference by the husband, .it is not competent for -the husband to set up his rights as an answer to the action.” (Harper v. Luffkin, 1 Barn. & C., 387.) In Marvel v. Thomson (2 Car. & P., 303), the action was by an uncle for the seduction of his niece, who lived with him, and the plaintiff recovered without any proof of a contract. This places the doctrine on the ground on which I have supposed it ought to rest. It is not necessary that the arrangement by which the relation is established should have any permanent binding force between the parties to it. If it exist in fact, and the immediate parties are acting under it at the time of the seduction, however imperfect its obligation may be, the defendant, who by his wrongful act has interrupted it, cannot set up that it was liable to be revoked at any time without the consent of the master. The particular *235 point involved in the case under consideration, was also decided against the defendant in Moran v. Dawes (4 Cow., 412).

I have not thus far taken into account the circumstance that the daughter was at the defendant’s house when the intercourse took place. I am of opinion, upon the evidence, that it was merely temporary, and in the nature of a visit, and that it did not at all affect the relation which subsisted between the plaintiff and his daughter. It appears that a considerable number of the neighbors of the plaintiff assisted-the defendant in preparing for the entertainments which he gave at his house, in the enjoyment of which I presume they were all to participate. The plaintiff’s daughter was one of these. She remained longer than the others, but her staying was not in any other character than the one in which she went there in the first instance; and there is some reason to suppose that the defendant induced her to remain for the purpose which he finally accomplished. If the question were at all doubtful whether the daughter, by these acts, entered into the service of the defendant, so as to bring the case within the principle of Barclay v. Ritchmeyer, relied on by the defendant (4 Comst., 38), it was proper to submit it to the jury. This the judge did by instructing them that to maintain the action it must appear that the. agreement between the father and daughter had not been annulled, but was in force at the time of the seduction. In a late case in the English Common Pleas, a similar defense was set up, where the facts were far stronger against the continuance of the relation than in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipe-v-eisenlerd-ny-1865.