Soto v. Chevremont

31 P.R. 363
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 19, 1923
DocketNo. 2384
StatusPublished

This text of 31 P.R. 363 (Soto v. Chevremont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soto v. Chevremont, 31 P.R. 363 (prsupreme 1923).

Opinion

Me. Justice Hutchison

delivered the opinion of the court.

Section 58 of the Code of Civil Procedure, heretofore discussed in Román v. Vázquez, 29 P. R. R. 736, provides that:

“An unmarried female may prosecute, as plaintiff, an action for for Her own seduction, and may recover therein such damages, pecuniary or exemplary, as are assessed in her favor.”

[364]*364Iii an action tiras authorized the court below sustained a motion for nonsuit for reasons stated as follows:

“Undoubtedly there has been a complete failure of proof in this case to justify a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and even Hie evidence examined at the trial was insufficiently presented. The essential element in an action of this kind, that is, deceit, false promises, artifice employed by the defendant to induce the alleged wronged woman to surrender her person to his desires, has not been completely demonstrated. There has been no evidence of persistence in the methods employed by' the defendant to procure that his mendacious promises and cajolery should influence the feelings and mind of the victim in order to incline her to commit acts contrary to her desire and which she would not have committed otherwise. Tt appears, on the contrary, that the frivolous promise made by the defendant to the plaintiff that he would divorce himself in order to marry her instantly lost its character of sincerity and practicability and became a business arrangement by which the plaintiff agreed to live in a house which the defendant would provide for her, with the offer to supply her needs at all times.
“However this may have been, the fact is that the only evidence brought before the court as to the actual facts is the testimony of the alleged victim, and there was no other evidence, direct or . ’circumstantial, to strenghten and corroborate it. If a child was.born as a, result of those transient relations, nothing was easier than to show the fact of its birth. And if there was a criminal prosecution for the abandonment of minors which terminated by the'Offer of the father to give the mother an allowance for its support, why was this tacit acknowledgment by the defendant of the acts imputed to him not brought to the attention of the court? It seems that within the limited circle of the • acts said to have been committed by the defendant there were elements of proof easily available.
“We can not say that what has been suggested would have" been sufficient to convince us fully of. the defendant’s liability. What we do say is that too much confidence has been placed in the plainr tiff’s testimony in. regard to the essential element of this action ,an,d it is not necessary to discuss how dangerous it would be to decree an indemnity for damages of this class based only on the testimony of an interested party which is incomplete even on .those points that could have been easily corroborated.” - .....

[365]*365Upon tlie question of Corroboration the trial judge seems to have overlooked several important details. The answer admits by way of negative pregnant that plaintiff, in December of 1916, visited the office of defendant, a dentist, as bis patient. . The answer further expressly avers that the acquaintance, which is' said to have antedated the occasion last mentioned, soon ripened into more intimate relations, resulting in frequent visits by plaintiff to the mirador above the dental office. • The answer also stated that upon the filing of a complaint by the plaintiff for the desertion of a child, and “in order to avoid the publicity always acquired by judicial controversy,” defendant consented to pay $12 per month for the support of the child Eosalina, “without being-able to say whether or not she is his daughter, as he never lived under the same roof with plaintiff; nor can he say whether she had relations with other men, as had been the case before knowing her.” Moreover, plaintiff testified that the arrangements for the support of the child were made by defendant through his attorney of record herein, and there was no cross-examination by such attorney .on this point. The sharp criticism by the court below of the supposed omission on the part of the plaintiff to adduce additional evidence bearing upon the birth of the child, upon the filing of a criminal complaint ‘charging defendant with abandonment of his daughter and upon his evasion of the issue, not to say admission of responsibility in this regard, is, therefore, wholly without foundation.

The vague averments of the answer imputing to plaintiff a want of previous chaste character could not have received any consideration whatever in passing upon the motion for nonsuit. -Also, notwithstanding the legal presumption of chastity and aside from any question as to burden of proof or admissibility of evidence in this regard that might have been but was not raised at the trial, it was admitted that two absent witnesses if -present would have testified that [366]*366plaintiff at the time of her seduction was living in the home of these witnesses, a widow, Emilia del Llano, and her daughter, and had lived with them since she was two years of age and for a period of about fourteen years; that during all that time plaintiff had a good moral character and her conduct was that of an honest and honorable girl; that they had absolutely no complaint as to plaintiff’s reputation, and that she enjoyed a good reputation for chastity and purity.

"Nonsuit is the name of a judgment given against plaintiff when he is unable to prove his case, or when he refuses or neglects to proceed to the trial of a cause after it has been put at issue, without determining such issue. It is of two kinds, voluntary and involuntary. '* * '* An involuntary or compulsory nonsuit takes place where plaintiff, on being called, when his case is before the court for trial, neglects to appear, or when he has given no evidence on" which a jury could find a verdict. ” 18 C. J. 1146.

Hence, as held by this court in Rosado v. Ponce Ry. & Light Co., 18 P. R. R. 593, to quote the syllabus :

"In deciding a motion for nonsuit on the ground of the insufficiency of the plaintiff’s evidence the court should admit as true all the facts to which the evidence introduced by the plaintiff refers. Sustaining a motion for nonsuit is equivalent to rendering a judgment on a demurrer to the evidence introduced by the plaintiff and courts should allow such motions with great care and only in cases where the propriety of granting such motion is perfectly clear.”

Section 250 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides, among other things, that:

"Upon a trial for seduction under promise of marriage, or for rape, the defendant c.annot be convicted upon the testimony of the woman upon or with whom the offense was committed, unless her testimony is corroborated by other evidence.”

But the instant ease is not a prosecution for the statutory offense of seduction under promise of marriage, and we are not aware of any legislative enactment either requiring [367]*367corroboration of plaintiff’s testimony or making the promise of marriage a necessary element of the tort involved in a civil action.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.R. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soto-v-chevremont-prsupreme-1923.