Marston v. Jenness

12 N.H. 137
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 N.H. 137 (Marston v. Jenness) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marston v. Jenness, 12 N.H. 137 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1841).

Opinion

Gilchrist, J.

No reason is given by the respondent why the father of the complainant is an incompetent witness. He is not a party to the record, is not infamous, nor interested in the prosecution, nor are there any reasons of public policy against his admission. His credibility is a question for the jury, and they have it in their power to make what deductions they please from his credit, on account of his relationship to the complainant. We think this exception must be overruled.

Two exceptions are taken to the competency of the complainant as a witness, one of which is that there was no evidence that she had continued constant in her charges against the respondent.

The third section of the act of June 28, 1827, (N. H. L. 296, Ed. of 1830,) which is now in force, provides that where the complainant shall have voluntarily made her complaint on oath, charging the respondent with being the father of the child, and stating the time when, and the place where the same was begotten, and shall have declared in the time of her travail the same person to be the father of the child, to [140]*140the person attending her, if any person may have attended her at the time, and shall have continued constant in such accusation, she shall be a competent witness on the trial.

It is contended' by the respondent, that the constancy of her accusation is to be proved by the testimony of other witnesses than the complainant; and that she is not admissible as a witness, unless it be proved affirmatively, by other evidence than that contained in her complaint, that she has accused the respondent of being the father of her child.

A provision, not essentially different from that in the statute above stated, is to be found in all our legislation upon this subject. The fourth section of the act of the 13 Wm. m., Province Laics 17, provided that “he that is accused by any woman to be the father of a bastard child begotten of her body, she continuing constant in her accusation, &c. &c. shall be adjudged the father thereof.”

The provincial act remained in force until the passage of the act of the 11th of February, 1791, although it was not expressly repealed until the 20th of June, 1792. The act of 1791, after requiring a complaint on oath before a magistrate, provides, as a further pre-requisite to her competency, that “ she shall continue constant in such accusation.” N. H. Laws 352, (Ed. o/1815.) This act was not repealed until the passage of the act now in force.

There is, then, no express provision in any of the former statutes on this subject, which requires the complainant to make any other statement of the paternity of the child, than that contained in her complaint before the magistrate ; and we can derive no aid from their language on this subject, because the expressions used in them are substantially like the language of the present act. The counsel for the respondent has referred us to several authorities on this point.

There are some remarks of Parsons, C. J., in the case of Drowne, Plff. in Error, vs. Stimpson, 2 Mass. R. 441, which appear to support his view of the question. In that [141]*141case it appeared that the complainant did not charge the respondent, in the time of her travail, with being the father of the child, but declared that she did not know who was the father; and that a short time after her delivery she made oath that Drowne was not the father, but another man. She afterwards made a complaint, stating that Drowne was the father, and was admitted to testify on the trial, and a verdict returned against Drowne. Upon these facts, it was held that she was not a competent witness. The chief justice then proceeds to say: “ There has been some question whether the complainant may not be sworn, and if by her testimony she prove that these prerequisites have been complied with, she is not within the statute. We are satisfied that she is not, for several reasons. One is, that the prerequisites thus testified to by her, have no tendency to support her credit. Another is, that although made a competent witness by the statute from necessity, yet her testimony ought not to be given'to facts equally within the knowledge of other persons not interested.”

The question in the case was, whether, as she had not charged the respondent during her travail, and had charged another person, and so had not continued constant in her accusation, she was competent to testify, and the prosecution was maintainable. But it was not necessary to settle the question, whether, if she had charged the respondent according to the statute, there must be affirmative proof from other sources, that she had continued constant in her accusation. And the chief justice, in pronouncing the judgment of the court upon the questions that arose on the case, says : She must have remained constant in her accusation, or at least it must not appear that she has been inconstant. ” The marginal abstract of the case states that u it must appear that the mother charged him in the time of her travail, and continued constant in her accusation, and these facts must be proved by other testimony than her own, before she is to be received as a witness.”

[142]*142But the question before us did not arise in that case ; and even if the eminent judge alluded to intended to intimate an opinion favorable to the position now taken by the respondent, which we consider somewhat doubtful, we do not think it a sound construction of the statute.

There are also some remarks by Richardson, C. J., in the case of R. R. vs. J. M., 3 N. H. Rep. 140, which appear to warrant the position taken by the respondent. One of the exceptions taken in that case was, that the complaint did not contain an allegation that the complainant had been constant in her accusation. This was overruled. But the only question before the court being whether the complaint should contain certain allegations, the chief justice proceeds to Say that “it must be shown that she in the time of her travail declared the respondent to be the father of her child, and that she has been constant in her declarations. All this must be shown before she can be permitted, while she has an interest in the cause, to be a witness. Her credit must be fortified by proof of these circumstances, before she is entitled to testify in her own cause.” These remarks were not made because the admissibility of the complainant was the question for decision, but incidentally, and in illustration of the views of the court upon the matter before them. They cannot, therefore, be regarded as settling the question before us, for future cases ; and the result at which we have arrived is, that if the learned judge meant to say that the complainant was an incompetent witness, until she had produced affirmative evidence that she had been constant in her declarations, such a construction is not rendered necessary by the words of the statute, and is exposed to many inconveniences in practice.

What affirmative evidence is to be required that the complainant has remained constant in her declaration ? If she has charged the respondent on oath with being the father of the child, and has made such a declaration to the person attending her, if there were any such person, in the time of her [143]*143travail, she has certainly not been inconstant in the absence of other evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.H. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marston-v-jenness-nhsuperct-1841.