Perry v. State ex rel. Snyder

Decision Date16 February 1917
Docket NumberNo. 9153.,9153.
Citation115 N.E. 59,63 Ind.App. 653
PartiesPERRY v. STATE ex rel. SNYDER.
CourtIndiana Appellate Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Circuit Court, St. Joseph County; Thomas W. Slick, Judge.

Bastardy proceeding by the State, on the relation of Mary Mandy Snyder, against Donald Perry. From the judgment, defendant appeals. Affirmed.Charles Weidler, Orie Parker, and Samuel Pettengill, all of South Bend, for appellant. Chester R. Montgomery, Samuel P. Schwartz, and Du Comb & Du Comb, all of South Bend, for appellee.

HOTTEL, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in a bastardy proceeding instituted before a justice of the peace of St. Joseph county. The justice found that appellant was not the father of the bastard child. There was an appeal to the circuit court of said county, where the case was tried by a jury before Hon. T. W. Slick, special judge, who, on account of the “serious illness” of the regular judge of such court, was by such regular judge appointed “to try all cases and transact all business of said court *** from the 5th day of October, 1914, until further order.” The jury found that appellant was the father of the child, and judgment was rendered thereon and appellant ordered to pay to the relatrix $500 for the education and maintenance of said child. A motion for new trial was overruled. From said judgment appellant appeals, and assigns the following alleged errors:

(1) The court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a new trial.

(2) The judgment appealed from is not fairly supported by the evidence.

(3) The judgment appealed from is clearly against the weight of the evidence.

(4) The court erred in refusing to sign appellant's bill of exceptions No. 2.”

Under his first assigned error appellant first urges that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and insists that, where it appears from the record that substantial justice has not been done, this court should and will disregard a mere scintilla of evidence, citing McClellan v. State, 54 Ind. App. 144, 101 N. E. 387.

The case cited, while recognizing the rule contended for by appellant, holds, in effect, that it has no application in a case where, like the one under consideration, the relatrix herself testifies to all the facts necessary to justify the conclusion reached by the jury.

In the instant case the relatrix testified that on April 8, 1913, her thirteenth birthday, the appellant had intercourse with her in a bedroom at the home of appellant's father; that she never had intercourse with any other person before or since; that her bastard child was born January 11, 1914. The uncontradicted evidence shows that relatrix stayed all night at the home of appellant's father the night of April 8, 1913; that appellant's father and mother were away that evening until 10 o'clock; that appellant, relatrix, and four other children were left together during their absence. The attending physician testified to the birth of the child on January 11, 1914, and that it was fully developed; that the usual period of gestation is nine calendar months. Other witnesses testified to statements made by appellant in which he told them that he had had intercourse with the relatrix.

Appellant denied ever having had intercourse with relatrix, and denied the admissions testified to by other witnesses. Other witnesses contradicted some of the facts testified to by the relatrix. There was opinion evidence given to the effect that conception, under the facts and circumstances testified to by relatrix, was unusual, but there was no evidence that it was impossible.

[1] It is apparent, we think, that the evidence in appellant's favor which we have indicated supra is more than a scintilla upon each of the facts essential to the verdict of the jury, and that on appeal it must be held as sufficient to warrant the jury in concluding, not only that appellant had intercourse with the relatrix as testified to by her, but that her conception resulted therefrom, and hence that appellant is the father of her bastard child. See Michael v. State, ex rel., 108 N. E. 173;Evans v. State ex rel., 165 Ind. 369, 74 N. E. 244, 75 N. E. 651, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 619, 6 Ann. Cas. 813.

[2] Before the trial appellant filed a motion to exclude the child of relatrix from the court during the examination of the jurors and the trial. This motion was overruled, and appellant excepted. This action of the court was made a ground for appellant's motion for new trial, and is here urged as reversible error. This was not error. The mere fact that the mother was permitted by the court to have her child with her in court at the trial where the jury might see it affords no cause for reversal. State v. Stark, 149 Iowa, 749, 129 N. W. 331, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 362;State v. Clemons, 78 Iowa, 124, 42 N. W. 562;Hutchinson v. State, 19 Neb. 262, 27 N. W. 113;Benes v. People, 121 Ill. App. 103;Rose v. People, 81 Ill. App. 128;Esch v. Graue, 72 Neb. 719, 101 N. W. 978;Johnson v. State, 133 Wis. 453, 113 N. W. 674; 7 C. J. tit. “Bastards,” 994, § 125.

[3] And, in any event, any possible harm which might have resulted to appellant by such action of the court was carefully guarded against and cured by the following instruction given by the trial court:

“No. 3. In passing upon the question as to whether or not the defendant is the father of the child of Mary Mandy Snyder, you should not take into consideration the appearance of the countenance of the child, nor should you draw any conclusion whatever from the appearance of the child. (Our italics.) And in considering and determining this case you should look only to and consider only the oral testimony given at the trial.” La Matt v. State ex rel., 128 Ind. 123, 27 N. E. 346.

See, also, Reitz v. State ex rel., 33 Ind. 187.

Appellant, in his motion for new trial, as ground 9 thereof, set out alleged misconduct on the part of the state as follows, viz.:

“It permitted the relatrix to exhibit her child to the jury during the trial of said cause contrary to the direction of the court, all of which facts more fully appear by the affidavit of Charles Weidler, Samuel Pettengill, Bert Perry, and defendant, Donald Perry.”

The affidavits referred to were nothing more than sworn statements made by each of such affiants to the effect that he was present in court during the trial of said cause, and that the matters and facts set out in grounds 9 and 10 of said motion for new trial are true. Such alleged misconduct is not available for a reversal of the judgment below for either of two reasons.

[4] 1. No such misconduct is shown by the record. The misconduct relied on is an alleged violation of an order or direction of the court. The only action taken by the trial court in reference to such matter, disclosed by the record, was the overruling of appellant's motion above indicated and the overruling of a second motion made by appellant at the conclusion of appellee's evidence, in which he asked the court to make the record show that the relatrix on several occasions during the progress of the trial brought her child into the court and sat with it in her arms near the table of her counsel in full view of the jury. The record before us shows no order or direction of the trial court directing relatrix not to bring her child into the presence of the jury. It should be stated in this connection, however, that it appears, from a third bill of exceptions set out in the record that a second bill of exceptions was tendered by appellant to the regular judge for his signature, in which said motion and the action of the trial court (the special judge) thereon were set out in full, and it appears from such second bill that the court at the time it overruled appellant's first motion supra made the following statement:

“While the court overruled this motion, the court does not think that it would be fair to the defendant to allow the child to be brought up to the counsel tables and held there in full view of the jury. I therefore direct that the child be kept back in the audience where the jury will not see it or know whose child it is.”

This second bill further states, in substance, that after this direction was given by the court the relatrix on several occasions during the progress of the trial brought her child in her arms to the table of her counsel in full view of the jury. Such second bill, however, was not signed by the court, and it gets into the record by being incorporated into the third bill, which expressly shows the court's refusal to sign it; the purpose of the latter bill being an attempt to save and present the exceptions taken to such refusal.

[5] It follows that the matters set out in said second bill are not authenticated by the court's signature, and hence cannot be considered.

2. If, however, all that is contained in such bill could be considered by the court, the mere fact that it shows that the relatrix brought her child into the court and sat with it at the table of her counsel in full view of the jury, in the absence of some further showing, would not show reversible error under the authorities above cited, and any possible harm that might have resulted from such conduct because of an exhibition of such child to the jury (if there was such exhibition) and an observance or inspection of its appearance or features by the jury with the idea that such appearance and features could be considered by it in determining whether appellant was its father was guarded against and cured by the instruction supra.

In his motion for new trial appellant assigned as one of the grounds thereof misconduct of appel...

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