Mainz v. Lederer
Mainz v. Lederer
Opinion of the Court
After verdict for the plaintiff in an action for breach of promise of marriage, the defendant asks for a new trial upon several grounds. As to the claim that the verdict is against the evidence, it is enough to say that a full reading of the record shows that the jury might reasonably have found in the defendant’s conduct strong corroboration of the plaintiff’s testimony of a promise of marriage. While many of the common conventionalities were wanting, still it was a question of fact for the jury and the record shows that the finding had • a sufficient support. Several exceptions were taken to the admission of testimony, which were not pressed in the argument and which were not of sufficient importance to discuss. The defendant refers to one, only, in his brief; but as the record shows no exception on that point and as the fact of an exception taken does not appear by affidavit, pursuant to Gen. Laws E. I. cap. 250, § 15, we cannot consider it. Another ground for a new trial is the use of improper language by the plaintiff’s attorney in his argument to the jury. Eeferring to bh appeal written by the plaintiff to the defendant for the care of her child, the plaintiff’s attorney said: ‘ ‘ And a man who had the least spark of honor in his body (which Mr. Lederer has not) would have responded to such an appeal. Could you or I resist an appeal *372 like that ? Could any man but one of the most brutish, one of the vilest and most lascivious—
Mr. Lapham. That was an appeal for money.
Mr; Owen. My friend on the other side says that is an appeal for money. G-entlemen, outside of New England, if that man had'done what he has to this woman he would have been hanging, or he would have had daylight let into him by many indignant citizens. Bead the newspaper and find where the men outside of Rhode Island are allowed to live where they have done what Lederer has done.
Mr. Miller. I desire to note an exception to that statement of the counsel.”
The defendant knew, all along before the trial, that the plaintiff claimed that a child had been born in April, 1897. He knew that she had claimed to be with child by him in the fall of 1S96. He went with her to consult Dr. Stedman of Boston December 8, 1896, as he now seeks to prove, instead of September,, as the plaintiff testified, and that the doctor could not determine whether she was pregnant or not at that time.
The new testimony offered is the statement of the doctor that if conception had taken place between the middle of June and the first of August the fact would then have been evident. The only effective use of this testimony would be to show that the plaintiff was not with child, and that her claim was a sham. It was an important element of defence, and .the defendant should have produced it at the trial. If he *374 knew that he had been with her to a doctor as late as November or December, and that evidence of pregnancy was not apparent, he should have offered the evidence by deposition or otherwise. With his knowledge of what would probably . be claimed at the trial and of his own visit with her to the physician and its result, it is too late to ask for a new trial on that ground.
The affidavit of Peter J. Smith that the records of New York do not show a return of the birth, as claimed, is of’a purely negative character, which, in view of the positive character of testimony adduced, would not be likely to affect the result.
The only statute on the subject at that time was “An act concerning Crimes and Punishments,” Dig. 1844, p. 392, § 78, which made seduction, by virtue of a promise of marriage, punishable with imprisonment not exceeding five years'or a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars. We are unable to see how such a punishment afforded “the plaintiff a remedy for the injury thus done to her, in a more appropriate form.” The few cases, however, which hold that seduction cannot be shown to enhance the damages for a breach of promise of marriage, proceed upon the ground that the .plaintiff, being equally guilty with the defendant, cannot recover damages for an act to which she was a voluntary party. The court •doubtless had the principle of particeps criminis in mind, and meant no more than to say that, as there was a statute making seduction, by means of a promise of marriage, a crime, the plaintiff was precluded from a civil remedy. But whatever force there may have been in that doctrine, it does not now .apply, for that statute, Pub. Stat. E. I. cap. 244, § 3, was repealed by Pub. Laws E. I. cap. 738, Januai’y, 1889.
With that statute out of the way, we come to the question, as a new one, whether the fact of seduction may be considered in assessing damages. The generally accepted rule is in the affirmative, but aside from that we think that such a rule is reasonable and sound. Por mere seduction there can be no action, upon the principle volenti non fit injuria. Conlon v. Cassidy, 17 R. I. 518. But, assuming seduction brought about solely through a promise of marriage, it ■clearly follows that the injury from the breach of promise is greater than it would otherwise have been-. The reason for the rule is well stated by Sutherland, supra : “An engage *376 ment necessarily brings the parties into very intimate and confidential relations, and the advantage taken of them by the seducer is as plain a breach of trust in all its essential features as any advantage gained by a trustee, guardian, or confidential adviser who cheats a confiding ward, beneficiary, or client into a losing bargain. A subsequent refusal to-marry the person whose confidence has thus been abused cannot fail to be aggravated in fact by the seduction.”
Petition for new trial denied, and case remitted to the-Common Pleas Division with direction to enter judgment on. the verdict.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Trase v. Mainz v. Benedict B. Lederer.
- Status
- Published