Wallace v. Coil
Wallace v. Coil
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The prosecutor of this certiorari applied to the court of common pleas of the county of Morris, to be discharged from arrest as an insolvent debtor, setting forth in his petition that he had been arrested upon an execution issued out of tbe supreme court, at the suit of Susan E. Coil, in an action of trespass on the case upon promises, and that he ha.d delivered to the sheriff a bond and inventory, pursuant to the second section of the “act abolishing imprisonment on civil process in certain cases.” Upon the day appointed for the hearing, Susan E. Coil appeared by her counsel, and offered to prove that upon the trial of the action in which the judgment was recovered by her, which was an action for breach of promise of marriage, she therein recovered damages for her seduction. This evidence was then rejected, and the petitioner proceeded with his proofs, and was examined upon written interrogatories. During his examination, the counsel of the creditor produced an exemplified copy of the record of the judgment mentioned in. the petition, the reading of which was objected to by the petitioner, but permitted by the court, and then the creditor
It is now assigned as a reason for reversing the order of the court of common pleas refusing to discharge the petitioner, that the court erred in going into the inquiry respecting the seduction, before the creditor made the undertaking mentioned in the eighth section of the aforesaid act, such inquiry being proper on the trial before the jury and not before the court. The first section of the supplement of 1854, (Pam. Acts, p. 522,) however, expressly enacts, that if upon the hearing before the court or jury, as the case may be, it shall appear to the satisfaction of such court or jury, that the object of such application was to be discharged from arrest or confinement on mesne or final process, for any cause of action or for damages recovered for the seduction of any female, then the said debtor shall not be entitled to his discharge. It is thus made the duty of the court to refuse the discharge, if it appears before the said court that the arrest or confinement was for a cause of action or for damages recovered for seduction. This might appear by the admission of the petitioner in answer to the interrogatories propounded to him, or it might appear by evidence produced for that purpose by any creditor who thought proper to make himself a party to the proceeding. The court is required ,by the third section of the original insolvent act, (Rev. Stat., 326,) to hear, consider- and examine into the truth and justice of the application or petition, and this must of course be done by hearing legal and competent.evidence on the part of the petitioner, or of any one or more of the creditors. If upon such examination respecting the truth of the petition, it shall appear that the petitioner will be, entitled to his discharge in case the court
The record introduced by the creditor, proved that the action against the petitioner, was an action for breach of promise of marriage, wherein it was found by the jury that the defendant did undertake and promise in manner, &c., and they assessed the damages of the said plaintiff, on , occasion of the non-performance of those undertakings and promises, to seven hundred dollars, whereupon judgment was rendered for said damages and costs. The creditor
It appears that after the rendering of the Verdict mentioned in the record produced, a motion was made in this court for a new trial, among other reasons, because the judge erred in admitting evidence of the seduction. The decision, however, was, that such evidence was properly admitted, and partly on the ground that the action for a breach of contract of marriage, though in form an action on a contract, partakes more, so far as the question of damages is concerned, of the nature of an action for a tort. Upon the strength of this decision it was urged, that if the seduction could legally enter into the estimate of the damages, it brings the case within the purview of the supplement.
That supplement forbids a discharge where the arrest or confinement was “ for any cause of action or for damages recovered for the seduction of any female.” The phrase, “ cause of action,” refers to the case of an arrest upon mesne process, and the phrase, “ damages recovered,” to an arrest after the judgment; but it cannot be doubted that both are meant to apply to a case of arrest for the same cause. Now there is a cause of action, known in legal and in ordinary language as a cause of action for seduction, and that is the action of trespass or trespass on the case, at the suit of the parent or master, for a loss of service occasioned by seduction. No other cause of action is so known, nor are damages recovered for seduction in any 'other cases. The damages recovered in an action for a breach of contract of marriage may, and ought to be, enhanced by the conduct of the defendant in taking advantage of the contract to seduce his - victim, but such damages are in no just sense,
It was insisted by the counsel of the defendant in this certiorari, that the evidence received did not contradict or impugn the record, but was entirely consistent with it, and that this case was like those where evidence is admissible to show what was really the matter in controversy, where that is not apparent from the record itself. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 532; 3 Phil. Ev. C. & H. notes, 837. But these cases are very different from this, inasmuch as various causes of action may be joined in one declaration; the verdict and judgment will not always show what demands were actually passed upon, and henCe if it afterward becomes necessary to prove what the fact was, it must be done by parol evidence. This does not contradict or vary the record, by making it mean something different from what is expressed on its face, but is consistent with its absolute verity; whereas evidence to prove that damages expressly stated on the record to be for one cause, were, in fact, given partly for another cause, is directly to contradict and vary it. The fallacy of the argument consists in treating that which may justly and legally aggravate the damages for a particular cause of action, as being a constituent partof the cause of action itself; In-my opinion, neither the reeord nor the parol evidence admitted in addition to it, were competent to prove that-the
The creditor’s counsel were constrained to admit that it-was necessary to prove not only that damages might have-been given by the jury for seduction, but that in fact such damages were given; and for this purpose one of the jurors, was called, who testified that the jury allowed two hundred dollars for the breach of promise of marriage, and five hundred dollars for the seduction of the plaintiff, by the defendant. This evidence was objected to, and its admission is now insisted on as erroneous.
No case was cited, nor I am aware that one can be found* where a juror was permitted to give evidence in another suit, of the grounds upon which a verdict was rendered, on which a judgment produced of record, was founded. Stevens v. Payne, 2 Root 83, was referred to, but that only decides that a juror may be called to show whether a particular demand was brought in question on the trial, and not that he may be asked whether the jury allowed it. Even upon the question of awarding a new trial, when the court, in the exercise of its supervisory power over the proceeding's of juries, will sometimes hear depositions respecting the conduct of the jurors, it is well settled that the affidavits of the jurors themselves will not be received to impeach a verdict* for mistake or error in respect to the merits, or for any irregularity or misconduct of the jury. Owen v. Warburton, 4 Bos. & Pul. 326; Jackson v. Williamson, 2 Term R. 281; Clum v. Smith, 5 Hill 560. In the case of Sargent, 5 Cow. 106, the affidavits of jurors were admitted with great hesitation, in a peculiar case, to show a misconception of the rule of damages, derived from the charge of the court, taken in connection with the arguments of counsel. This last case goes to the extreme limit, if not beyond the correct rule ; but it falls far short of what was allowed in this case. There the evidence was received to guide the discretion of the. court, and to enable it to determine whether a verdict ought, to be set aside, on the ground that the case had been im
So plain are these principles, that but for the earnestness with which the counsel sought to free this case from their application, and the respect which is due to the court whose proceedings are under review, I should not have thought it necessary to vindicate them so much at large. Much stress was laid upon the argument, that a female who recovers damages for a breach of contract of marriage, accompanied by seduction, comes as fairly within the reason oí the supplement of eighteen hundred and fifty-four, and is as much entitled to its protection as the parent or master who re
Reference
- Full Case Name
- EPENETUS W. WALLACE v. SUSAN E. COIL
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- Published