Williams v. Hollingsworth
Williams v. Hollingsworth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought in the Circuit Court of Greene county by Narcissa Hollingsworth against Jos. A. Williams for breach of contract of marriage. Upon the trial the jury found for plaintiff, and assessed her damages at $5,000. The defendant has appealed. The declaration avers a marriage contract in May, 1859,
The pleadings in the case are complicated and confused, but after the action of the court on motion to dismiss, and on a demurrer the cause was tried by the jury on two issues — the one of non assumpsit, and the other a plea of accord and satisfaction, with a replication that the accord and satisfaction were procured by fraud and duress.
The plea of former judgment was also put in, and replied to, confessing and avoiding the matter of the plea for duress. The replication was demurred to, and the demurrer sustained, but the court held that it reached back to the plea, and that was ordered to be stricken out.
Defendant then, by leave, filed an amended plea of former judgment. To this plaintiff demurred, and the demurrer being sustained, the plea was held bad.
The court erred in striking out the first plea of former judgment .upon the demurrer to the replication thereto; but it is not material to be further noticed, as the defendant was allowed to file an amended plea of former judgment, which sets out fully the same judgment relied on in the first plea. The demurrer to the amended plea of former judgment was properly sustained, as it was apparent that the judgment relied on was not a judgment on the merits, but merely a judgment of voluntary dismissal of the suit, which eould not be properly pleaded in bar of the present action.
The pleading is further complicated by the fact
The result of this error was to deprive the defendant of the benefit of this decree on the question of duress, and to leave that question Open, to be passed upon by the jury. Looking alone to defendant’s averments in his rejoinder to the replication of plaintiff, we cannot hold that these averments are insufficient to show that the question of duress was finally disposed of and settled by the decree of the Chancery Court and of this court. If, as averred in the rejoinder, the question of duress now relied on by plaintiff was determined in the Chancery suit referred to in the rejoinder, then it is clear that it was error to submit that question again to the jury. Whether-the averments of the défendant’s rejoinder were suffi
For the error indicated the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for another trial.
Various other errors have been assigned and relied on for reversal, but we deem it unnecessary to notice any but those which may be likely to arise on another' trial.
It is insisted that the court erred in permitting evidence of seduction, as well as • breach of promise of marriage, as the declaration contains no averment of seduction, but only a breach of marriage promise. If the defendant resorted to a marriage contract as a means of seduction, then proof of a seduction so procured would be competent in aggravation of damages.
This was the view of the Circuit* Judge, and it was not erroneous.
Defendant offered to prove that when he commenced visiting plaintiff be had heard of her acts of sexual intercourse with other men; but the evidence was rejected. This was error. The proof was competent on the - question whether any marriage contract was
Defendant offered the deposition of a number of witnesses as to the bad character of plaintiff previous to the date of the alleged marriage promise. These depositions were rejected because the court was of opinion that the witnesses had not qualified themselves from a knowledge of the general character of plaintiff to testify on this subject. We think the witnesses state such facts and circumstances as rendered their testimony competent to go to the jury, to be by them weighed and considered.
These are all the errors relied on which we deem it proper to pass upon, in view of the fact that the cause is again to be tried.
For the reasons stated the judgment is. reversed, and a new trial awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.