Thompson v. Clendening

38 Tenn. 287
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 38 Tenn. 287 (Thompson v. Clendening) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Clendening, 38 Tenn. 287 (Tenn. 1858).

Opinion

McKinney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action on the case brought by Clen-[294]*294dening for tbe seduction of bis daughter. Yerdict and judgment were rendered for tbe plaintiff, for $7,500, and the case is brought here by an appeal in error.

It is alleged in behalf of the plaintiff in error, that in the progress of the trial various errors intervened in the admission and rejection of evidence, and in the determinations of the Court, in regard to the effect of the evidence, as also in the instructions given to the jury. But the chief error relied upon for the reversal of the judgment, is the refusal of the Court to grant a new trial for the cause disclosed in the affidavits produced after verdict.

'The case is a peculiar one in all its circumstances. The plaintiff’s daughter was examined as a witness on the trial. From her testimony it appears that Thompson, the defendant, was a married man, whose residence was within half a mile of the plaintiff’s; that the families w-ere intimate, and defendant was the family physician of plaintiff’s family. That in the summer of 1854, while the witness was temporarily an inmate of defendant’s family, an illicit intercourse commenced between the defendant and herself, which was continued up to the first of September, 1857 — a period of more than three years — when she discovered that she had become pregnant; and on the 8th of June, 1858, was delivered of a child, of which defendant was the father. She further stated that, upon informing the defendant of her condition, he proposed to give her $100 if she would swear the child to one Peter M. House, who had been visiting her as a suitor; and on her refusal to do so, he proposed that she should take some chemical preparation to destroy the child, and Afterwards sent her a liquid [295]*295preparation in a phial, designed to produce an abortion, accompanied with a note urging her to take it, as she would not swear the child to House. That she took one dose and it made her so sick she threw the rest away.

Numerous witnesses were examined on both sides as to the general character of plaintiff’s daughter for truth and chastity. The witnesses for the plaintiff seem to have heard nothing prejudicial to her reputation previous to her criminal intercourse with the defendant. But some of the witnesses on the other side state, that, before the summer of 1854, the time when it is alleged her intercourse with the defendant commenced, her general reputation for chastity was bad.

One witness (George Sarver) states, that, at a camp-meetmg, in 1858, he had sexual intercourse with her, at her own solicitation. Other witnesses detail instances of indelicacy of behavior on her part, and of liberties with her person by young men, tolerated by her, utterly revolting to female delicacy and decency.

This much of the evidence in relation to the conduct and character of the defendant, and the person seduced, it has been thought proper to state, in view of the question of damages hereafter to be noticed.

1. It is insisted that the Court erred in admitting any evidence of a criminal connection between the defendant and the plaintiff’s daughter beyond the period of three years from the commencement of the present' action.

We do not think so. The whole of the defendant’s intercourse with the person seduced, and all the circumstances of the case, are to be regarded as an entire transaction, and are admissible as evidence to the jury, [296]*296as well in view of tbe question whether the defendant ■is the father of the child, as to show the extent of the ■injury in aggravation of the damages.

2. The Court refused to admit evidence of the general bad character of the plaintiff’s daughter after her seduction. In this, we think, the Court did not err. It is true that the general character of the person seduced, for chastity, is involved in the issue; and if bad, the defendant may avail himself of it in mitigation of the damages. But this inquiry must be restricted to her general reputation as to chastity at the time of, or before her seduction. The necessary result of her seduction would be the ruin of her reputation in the public estimation; and it would be monstrous to hold that the defendant might avail himself of that ruined reputation, caused by his own wrong, to lessen the claim of her injured parent to damages. The proposition is too revolting to our reason and sense of justice to admit of discussion.

3. The defendant proposed to prove, on cross-examination of the plaintiff’s daughter, that she had heard her mother charge her father, the plaintiff, with adultery, and that he admitted the charge to be true. The Court properly excluded this evidence. We have recently held, in Reed v. Williams, that it is admissible to show that the plaintiff is a man of' profligate character and dissolute habits; but that it must be done by evidence of his general reputation, and not of particular instances.

4. The defendant also proposed to prove that the general reputation of the plaintiff’s wife, and mother of the person seduced, as to chastity, was bad. This evidence the Court also properly rejected. The general [297]*297reputation and standing of the family may be shown by the plaintiff, as it seems, with a view to enhance the damages; and, upon the same principle, it would seem that such evidence ought to be admitted on the part of the defendant to diminish the damages. But the reputation of a particular member of the family, other than the plaintiff or the person seduced, cannot be inquired into.

5. The next and only remaining error which we deem it necessary to consider, is the refusal of the Court to grant a new trial.

It appears from the bill of exceptions, that after the examination had been closed on both sides, and after two arguments on each side had been made to the jury, an application was made to the Court on behalf of the plaintiff to examine Peter M. House as a witness, for the purpose, first, of .discrediting George Sarver, a witness examined by the defendant, who proved that he had had sexual intercourse with plaintiff’s daughter prior to her seduction by the defendant; and, in the next place to relieve himself from the imputation made upon him in the evidence and in the argument, of being the father of the child charged upon the defendant. The Court admitted said witness. And he stated, in substance, that in July or August, 1858, Sarver had stated, in a conversation with witness, ‘‘that he never had criminal connection with plaintiff’s daughter, and that he would lay his hand on the Bible and swear it.” Witness likewise stated that he himself never had sexual intercourse with her. But, on cross-examination, he admitted that he had visited her as a suitor, and that he had taken various liberties with her person, which need [298]*298not be here stated. He likewise stated that he had been summoned as a witness for plaintiff, but had got off from attending and had gone to the country, and returned again to the court house during the progress of the argument.

After the examination of House the Court offered to postpone the trial as long as might be necessary to afford the defendant opportunity to produce witnesses to rebut the testimony of House.

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38 Tenn. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-clendening-tenn-1858.