Court Opinion

ID: 5461258
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:37:08.638852+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:53.748902
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Bockes, J.
The action is brought by a father for the seduction of his minor daughter.
- The daughter was seduced by the defendant, became pregnant, and died suddenly, about four months after conception. A post mortem examination disclosed a dead and putrefying foetus ; also a congested brain, caused as was supposed, by nervous, excitability or extreme mental agitation; or perhaps by both combined. At the time of the seduction, and until her decease, the daughter resided with her father, except when employed as a school teacher, under contract made with him for suck service. She was thus engaged at the time of her decease. It is conceded that there existed in this case the relation of master and servant, and that the action was well established by the father as regards that point; but it is insisted that there was no proof of any loss of service,, produced by the seduction. This raises the principal question on the appeal.
*50The action of seduction has its foundation in the relation of master and servant, and loss of service or actual injury to the plaintiff’s rights as master must be averred and proved. Whatever may have been the former ruling in some cases, it is now well settled that this action is not maintainable upon the mere relation of parent and child—that proof of seduction merely is not sufficient; but the plaintiff must show that a direct injury to his rights as master resulted therefrom. Such is the distinct and unmistakable ruling in White v. Nellis, (31 N. Y. Rep. 405,) and in Knight v. Wilcox, (14 id. 413.) But proof of the slightest loss of service, or the most trifling injury, if the direct result of the wrongful act, is sufficient to uphold the action. (Badgley v. Decker, 44 Barb. 577.) These principles are made especially applicable to cases where pregnancy does not ensue as a conse» quence of the seduction. Mere seduction, without pregnancy, consequent ill health, or injury to the servant, will not give the right of action. . But most if not all the cases assume, as I think, that where pregnancy and consequent incapacity for physical exertion and endurance follows from the wrongful .act, the technical requirement of the law in regard to actual loss or' injury to the master’s rights is met and answered. In such case, sickness and temporary if not permanent de» rangement of the system is the necessary result, and there» fore it becomes as matter of law an injury of which the master, as such, may complain. In Mulvehall v. Millward, (11 N. Y. Rep. 343,) the daughter was seduced and became pregnant while a minor residing away from her father. She remained absent until after the birth of the child, and until after her recovery from accouchment. There was no evidence that her father took any care of her, or expended any money on her account during her pregnancy or sickness. The objection was there taken, as it is here, that no expense or actual loss of services to the plaintiff (the father) had been proved. A recovery was allowed, and the judgment was sustained, in the Court of Appeals. It was held sufficient that the father *51was at the time entitled to the services of the daughter and might have required them if he had chosen so to do. To the same effect are the remarks of Judge Bronson, in Bartley v. Richtmyer, (4 N. Y. Rep. 44.) See also cases cited by Judge Bronson'. That "the father did not require them, and consequently suffered no actual loss, did not change the fact that there was a wrongful interference with his right to his daughter’s services. Had he required the services, he could not have obtained them—at least to the same extent as if pregnancy had not existed. Therefore there was a positive injury to the plaintiff’s rights, equally available as a ground of action, with actual loss of service. The master has a property in the labor of the servant, and any wrongful act creating or producing a disability in the servant to perform what the master has a right to require, operates as a disturbance or infringment of such right, to which the law will attach at least nominal damages as a result of the injury. It is on this principle that the action may be maintained by the parent in affluent circumstances, for the seduction of a daughter, from whom no menial service was ever required. True, mere seduction, unattended with pregnancy or other continued; physical disturbance of the system, will not supqiort the j action; for the parent may, notwithstanding, obtain all which the relation of master secures to him. So this great and humiliating outrage to his sensibilities gives no right of action unless, as a necessary consequence, the daughter is disqualified, at least in some trifling degree, from performing what the parent may rightfully require. But if pregnancy ensue, she is thus disqualified. Her physical condition is affected—is disturbed—as a physiological necessity, impair ing her ability to render, to the fullest extent, all that her relation as servant might impose. In this view the rights of the parent are interfered with by a wrongful act against which protection and indemnity may be claimed through the enforcement of just and salutary principles of law.
Let us now consider the case in hand. Was the plain*52tiff’s daughter, at any time after conception, as well able to meet all the just demands incident to her legal relation^ to her father as before the illicit connection occurred ? All 'must know that from a time immediately following conception she required tender consideration, and careful attention, to avert the catastrophe which caused her death. Was the destruction of the foetus brought about by undue exertion in the performance or attempted performance of the duties imposed upon her by her regular and ordinary avocation ? bio one can now certainly say. It is in proof that she was enciente ; hence her system was of necessity more or less excited and deranged. She was in this condition for about four months, and subject during that time to physical agitations, often as prostrating as if laboring under the effects of actual malady. For several days prior to her death her condition must have been distressing and dangerous in the extreme. As a matter of necessity she must have been in no condition for ordinary physical exertion for weeks prior to her death; and such condition was the direct consequence of the seduction. In my judgment, an injury to the plaintiff’s rights was proved in this case, clearly giving him a right of action against the defendant. Under this view of the case, the facts standing uncontroverted, the court was right in refusing to dismiss the complaint on the objection that there was no proof of any loss of services as a consequence of the seduction; nor was this a question, under the conceded facts, to be submitted to the jury.
The remaining question relates to the amount of the verdict. I would have been better satisfied with a smaller amount, in view of the defendant’s circumstances and posi-= tion in life. The plaintiff was undoubtedly entitled to exemplary or punative damages. But a less verdict would have been a sufficient vindication of the law, as I think, and would have been more consistent with the probable pecuniary condition of the defendant. The question of damages was, however, for the jury, and the amount awarded is not, per*53haps, so extravagantly excessive as to imply partiality, corruption or undue influence in that body. The court should, not, therefore, interfere with the verdict. (5 Coen, 106, 118, 119, and cases there cited.) The judgment must he affirmed.
[St. Lawrence General Term,
October 2, 1866.
Bockes, James, Rosekrans and Potter, Justices.]