Pope v. Kincaid

129 S.E. 752, 99 W. Va. 677, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 199
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1925
Docket5287
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 752 (Pope v. Kincaid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pope v. Kincaid, 129 S.E. 752, 99 W. Va. 677, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 199 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The writ of error was issued in this case to review the proceedings in a ease of bastardy prosecuted by Lucile Pope against the plaintiff in error. Upon the trial in the circuit court the plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, was adjudged to be the father of the illegitimate child of the said complainant, Lucile Pope, and the usual order and judgment was entered by the court for the support of such child, as provided by statute.

In 1921, the complainant, then a girl of fifteen, came to Richwood, where she secured work in a clothes-pin factory. She became acquainted with the defendant Kincaid, a widower, aged fifty, who was the owner of a large store and also an extensive dealer in automobiles. Soon thereafter, according to her testimony, she was induced to come to his apartment, where he lived alone. Their liaison continued from the spring of 1922 until January of the following year. As a result thereof she became enceinte a few days after Christmas, 1922. She acquainted defendant with the fact, and he gave her medicine on two different occasions to produce an abortion. In May, 1923, her condition became apparent to factory officials and she was discharged. She was taken in a car to Weston, and finally found her way to Mrs. Mary Mullens, at Rivesville (near Fairmont), where the child was born in September. While at Rivesville, sometime in July, she received the following letter from the defendant:

*680 “For Economical Transportation.
CHEVROLET
J. H. Kincaid,
Richwood, W. Ya.
July 2, 1923.
Miss Lncile, Pope,
I will answer your letter I received a few days ago glad you are well and I take haveing a good time,
I note what you say in your letter I have ben fair, I think the way you are trying to do as I told you it is a scheme that you are trying to pull to get some money now I know to much, to be scared in to any thing as you threaten as to your age. I know that you are helpless there, you have no clue whatever. So you can not scare any one, if you had acted half way decent. I you may have talked, yon say you are broke why did you not make your friend at Camden on G-auley that you .stayed with, gave you some money.
why did Earl leave Richwood, you had him scared when you was at Susie, you layed up stars with some one. now if you want $50.00 I will send you it and let me a lone find enclosed a contract you sign it and return it at once and I will send you the money at once.
if you dont sign this, I will stand you a suit Be fore I will pay any more, I have all the proof'I need, when it comes to it.
. I. sent you a check to the Hospital for $10.00 what be came of that.
let me hear from you
It is not because I half to that I am giving you this, but just to help you out. if you want this money signed this Contract and return it at once, and I will send you the money at once
Yours Truly,”

The contract referred to in 'the foregoing letter is as follows:

“Richwood, W. Ya.
July, 2) 1923
This contract made and entered in to be tween Lucile Pope and J. H. Kincaid this the 2 Day of July 1923 for the consideration of the sum of *681 $50.00 that I will not sue or bring suit and go in to any more detail or canse him any fonther trouble, as to swearing of a Cild to him,
Signed; Lucile Pope
and Return. ’ ’

The complainant signed and returned this contract to defendant and later received a cheek from him for $50.00.

Shortly after the birth of the child, both mother and child were taken in charge by a woman who looked after homeless girls, and both placed with the Salvation Army in Fairmont. From there, complainant was sent back to a woman social worker at Riehwood. In company with this social worker she went to the office of the prosecuting attorney of Nicholas county, and as a result, a warrant charging defendant with the paternity of her child, was issued. The defendant enters a complete denial of any criminal intimacy with the complainant. He admits that she informed him of her condition in January, 1923; that he gave her the medicine, but that it was Chamberlain’s Diarrhoea Remedy, and was not given for the purpose of producing an abortion. He states that she threatened him with prosecution, and sought to extort money by threats. He denies sending her away from Riehwood, or having any part in so doing. He admits writing the letter of July 2, 1923, and that he prepared the contract and inclosed it for her to sign and return. He introduced three witnesses who testified that they had had illicit intercourse with complainant during the month of December— the period of gestation; and other witnesses who stated that they had heard complainant make statements before and at the birth of the child that its'father was another than defendant. In corroboration of the complainant’s statement, a witness was produced who saw Kincaid give her the medicine, and who stated that the same did not correspond to the medicine he claims to have given her. Two witnesses stated that it was a red medicine with no wrapper or directions on the bottle and that complainant “became sick and threw up” as a result of taking it. The letter and contract are features in corroboration of the complainant’s testimony that there had been criminal intimacy between her and the defendant.

*682 The assignments of error relied upon by the defendant will be considered in their logical order.

The first assignment of error is that the plaintiff was a minor and that the suit should have been prosecuted by her next friend. This is without merit. Code, Chap. 80, sec. 3, specifically provides that in bastardy proceedings the action may be prosecuted in “the name of the woman”. In Pierce v. Williams, 95 W. Va. 218, it is held that it is not necessary that a next friend be appointed in a bastardy proceeding for the prosecutrix who is a minor, nor that the suit should have been prosecuted by her next friend.

The second assignment is that the court erred in permitting the child of complainant to be exhibited to the jury on the trial, and in allowing the prosecuting attorney to comment thereon in his argument. This.point does not seem to have ever been decided by this Court. The weight of authority in the United States seems to be against the admission of parol testimony as to the resemblance of the child to the putative father; the cases generally proceeding on the theory that the opinion of witnesses cannot be received for that purpose. While the same conflict exists upon whether the child can be exhibited to the jury as evidence of relationship, the great weight of authority is in favor of such exhibition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 752, 99 W. Va. 677, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-kincaid-wva-1925.