State ex rel. Brown v. Lyons

180 P. 802, 104 Kan. 702, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 10, 1919
DocketNo. 21,763
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 180 P. 802 (State ex rel. Brown v. Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Brown v. Lyons, 180 P. 802, 104 Kan. 702, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 339 (kan 1919).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

In this proceeding the appellant was adjudged to be the father of a bastard child and required to give bond for the payment of $1,200 towards the infant’s support.

On July 29, 1917, when the child was bom, the mother, Cecil Brown, was nineteen years old and unmarried. She was a high-school graduate and had attended Kansas University two years. • On August 7, 1917, she swore to the complaint charging appellant, Paul Lyons, a boy sixteen years old and still in high school, with being the father of her child. When the trial occurred, on November 15, 1917, the complaining witness lacked but a few days of being twenty years old; she is [704]*704said to be of prepossessing appearance, and from her testimony it is apparént she is of more than ordinary intelligence and education. Aside from the disparity between her age and that of the appellant; and the fact that she admitted upon the trial to having had intercourse with another person, a brother of the appellant (whether younger fhan he does not appear), the case presents no unusual features, and depends for the most part upon questions of fact which have been found by a jury. We must assume that the unusual features to which we have ref erred-were fully considered by the jury in determining the truthfulness of the story told by the complaining witness, and that the judge of the trial court, who saw and heard the witnesses on both sides, gave due weight to all the facts and circumstances of the case, in refusing appellant a new trial. The purpose of the proceeding is to provide support for the child. The law and the courts are not concerned with the question as to which of the parents was seduced. The conflict in the evidence has been determined by the jury and the court, and unless the appellant'shows error in the proceedings, the judgment must be affirmed.

Miss Brown testified that the intercourse, which resulted in the. birth of the child, occurred about eight or nine o’clock on a Sunday night in the latter part of October, 1916, on the roadside about a half mile wést of No. 6 schoolhouse, and that neither she nor her parents were aware of her condition until her confinement. It was shown by her testimony and that of. the attending physician that the child was fully developed. At' the preliminary examination, Miss Brown testified that the second intercourse with the boy occurred in the stone quarry west of the university some time in the winter, and she thought it was in the month of January, 1917; that it occurred about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, on her way home from the university. At the trial, she testified to having had intercourse with him more than once in October and November, 1916. She lived half a mile from appellant’s home; she had known him and the family about seven years. While there .was testimony from herself and her parents that, Paul Lyons came to her home and. took her out riding on two occasions in the fall of 1916, the evidence does not show that the two were often in company, or appeared together in social gatherings. She ad[705]*705mitted on cross-examination that she had never spoken to him about marriage. '

The appellant did not testify. A number of witnesses called in his behalf testified that on each of the five Sunday evenings in October, 1916, he attended a series of lectures given at a, church in Lawrence, which began at 7:30 and lasted until 9 o’clock, and that he was present all the time during each lecture.

Complaint is made of the refusal to give eight instructions requested' Most of these were quite fully covered by the instructions given. The court refused to give an instruction that the standard period of gestation is 40 weeks, or 280 days. In The State, ex rel., v. Stout, 101 Kan. 600, 168 Pac. 853, it was held that an instruction in respect to this matter might have been given, but that it was not error to refuse it. The instruction as requested in this case would have been contrary to the only medical testimony offered, which was that of the attending physician, who testified that the period varies from 270 to 290 days; besides, if the court had given a proper instruction on the subject, it would not have told the jury anything they did not already know. We think the court was right in refusing to instruct .that the intercourse which resulted in the birth must have-occurred on October 22, 1916. The state’s testimony was that the intercourse occurred some time in the latter part of October, on a Sunday evening, while the witness stated that she thought it was probably October 22. Her entire testimony with respect to her. relations with the appellant was properly left to the jury; and it was likewise for the jury to consider any conflict shown between her testimony at the trial and that given by her at the preliminary hearing. For the same rfeason, an instruction to the effect that if appellant had shown by a -preponderance of the evidence he was at another place upon the date fixed by the relatrix, then the verdict must be in his favor, was properly refused. In the Stout case, supra, the same defense was relied upon, and it was held that, while an instruction upon the evidence respecting an alibi would not have been improper, it was not error to refuse to single out that feature of the defense. Besides, the instruction asked for by the appellant in this case was too broad.

[706]*706Instruction No. 6, to the effect that if the jury should find the evidence equally balanced upon the question as to whether the appellant was the father of the child, they should find in His favor, was rightly refused. The court gave the usual instructions with respect to the burden of proof, the preponderance of evidence, and thé duty of the jury in weighing and giving effect to the testimony of each witness.

The record does not sustain the contention that appellant was denied an ópportunity to show an ulterior motive actuating the relatrix in having him arrested and charging him with being the father of her child. On cross-examination Miss Brown testified that she knew the father of Paul Lyons, and knew that Mr. Lyons had been farming and selling engines. The court sustained objections to the following questions:

“Yes; and you have known all that time that he was the holder of considerable real estate, haven’t you, in this neighborhood?
“You knew and had in mind when you brought this case, that Mr. Lyons was a man with a great deal of property, isn’t that true?”

Counsel then offered to show by cross-examination that the motive which actuated her in making the charge was to obtain a large sum of money from appellant’s father.' The offer was made in writing, and the court ruled that appellant might make the showing by any competent testimony. The appellant seems to have stood upon the ruling and to have abandoned any further effort to show what property Mr. Lyons owned, or any other circumstance tending to prove an ulterior motive on the part of the relatrix. The testimony produced by the state showed that the relatrix had lived with her parents for about seven years within a half mile of the home of appellant’s father; and she had admitted that she knew the boy’s father and the business he was engaged in. We find no error in the ruling.

When Miss Brown was on the witness stand she held the child in her- arms. It was in the court room during the trial. It was not formally offered in evidence, but in her testimony she said it was the child whose paternity was in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 P. 802, 104 Kan. 702, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-brown-v-lyons-kan-1919.