
    Hanson, Respondent, vs. Johnson, Appellant.
    
      January 14
    
    February 1, 1910.
    
    
      Breach of promise: Damages: Seduction: Instructions to jury: Special' verdict: Evidence: Precedents: Curing errors: Immaterial errors: Reducing award.
    
    1. In an action for breach of promise of marriage, where seduction was pleaded in aggravation of damages, a charge to the jury that the only bearing the evidence as to seduction had in the case was to enhance the damages, if any, from such breach off promise, and that in order to find that plaintiff was seduced by defendant the jury -must find from a preponderance of the evidence that she had no intercourse with defendant prior to such promise and that she consented to such intercourse solely by reason of such promise, if they found such a promise was made,— presented the question to the jury in a manner sufficiently favorable to the defendant.
    
      2. It is not error to refuse to submit in a special verdict a question as to which there is no evidence which would warrant an answer favorable to the party requesting such submission.
    3. The evidence in this case (consisting of the testimony of the parties) would not have warranted the jury in finding that the parties had sexual intercourse prior to any promise of marriage between them.
    4. Precedents for the exclusion of evidence must be read, not only with reference to the issues made'by the pleadings in the particular case, but also with reference to the other evidence in such case.
    5. In an action for breach of promise, where evidence that a child was born as a result of intercourse came into the case inadvertently, and afterwards letters which were otherwise competent referred to the child, an instruction to the jury to disre- ' gard this fact in assessing damages cured the error, if any, in the 'admission of such evidence.
    6. Error in admitting evidence is cured by a direction to the jury to disregard it, unless it appears that notwithstanding such direction the appellant was prejudiced by the error.
    7. In an action for breach of promise, evidence as to the length of time the marriage engagement lasted and the number of years plaintiff waited for defendant to marry her, and as to the degree of intimacy between them, is competent upon the question of damages.
    8. Evidence as to the wealth of defendant, including testimony as to the amount of-the monthly sales in his saloon, was competent in such a case. -
    9. Admission in evidence, among the presents given by defendant to plaintiff, of a button bearing the photograph of a child which had been referred to as the result of intercourse between the parties, was an immaterial error, the photograph not being offered for the purpose of proving resemblance.
    TO. An award of $8,000 as damages for breach of a marriage promise was not excessive under the evidence in this case.
    11. The supreme court will encourage the trial judges to exercise their judgment in cutting down excessive verdicts, and so far as possible will sustain the estimate of such a judge where he has reduced an award to the amount which in his judgment is proper.
    Appeal from a judgment of the circuit court for Pierce county: E. W. Helms, Circuit Judge.
    
      Affirmed.
    
    Eor the appellant there was a brief by Thos. M. Oasey and White & Skogmo, and oral argument by F. M. White.
    
    
      Eor the respondent there was a brief by George Thompson, attorney, and Arctander, Johnson & Berg, of counsel, and oral argument by J. N. Berg.
    
   Timlin, J.

The plaintiff in this action for breach of promise of marriage pleaded in aggravation of damages her seduction by defendant under such promise. This was met by a general denial. According to the testimony of the plaintiff she became acquainted with the defendant in the year 1895, and soon thereafter there was a marriage engagement entered into between them, and, relying upon this engagement, at the solicitation of defendant she yielded to sexual intercourse, which continued thereafter for thirteen or fourteen years, when defendant breached his promise to marry. Defendant admitted this intercourse, but testified that there never was at any time a promise of marriage. There was a special verdict, complete in other respects, but which contained no finding covering the fact of seduction. The defendant requested that the court submit to the jury the following question: “Did plaintiff and defendant have sexual intercourse with each other prior to any promise of marriage between them ?” ■ The court refused to submit this question, and charged the jury concerning this matter as follows:

“The only bearing such evidence has in this case is to enhance the damages, if any, arising from such breach of promise to marry.” “In order to find that plaintiff was seduced by defendant, you must find from a preponderance of the evidence that said plaintiff had no intercourse with the defendant prior to the time of such promise of marriage, and that she consented to such act of intercourse solely by reason of such promise of marriage, and that she would not have consented to and had intercourse with the defendant if it had not been for such promise of marriage, if you- find such was made at the time of such act of intercourse.”

.While not literally accurate, this instruction presented the question to the jury in a manner sufficiently favorable to the appellant, if we regard merely the instruction. It has been ruled by Tris court that where'an issuable material fact is averred in the complaint and controverted by the answer, a defendant who has by compliance with the statute entitled himself to a special verdict may insist upon a question in the special verdict calling for a finding upon such fact if he made proper and timely request therefor (Rowley v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 135 Wis. 208, 115 N. W. 865; Bredlau v. York, 115 Wis. 554, 92 N. W. 261), but not then if there is no evidence to support the finding so requested (Reed v. Madison, 85 Wis. 667, 56 N. W. 182) ; nor where there is a mere scintilla of evidence with overwhelming evidence to the contrary (Hogan v. Cushing, 49 Wis. 169, 5 N. W. 490). Assuming, for the purposes of this discussion, that in the instant case defendant was otherwise entitled to' have this question submitted to the jury, there is, we think, no evidence which would support an answer to such question favorable to appellant. The evidence on this point is confined to the testimony of plaintiff and defendant.

Plaintiff testifies that she first became acquainted with the defendant in March or April, 1895, at a boarding house where he was a boarder and she a servant, and that she saw him every day, and that he was accustomed to come upstairs where she was at work. At an interview upstairs at the boarding house and two or three months after their first acquaintance the engagement of marriage took place, and she had more than one conversation with the defendant concerning marriage before his visit to Dakota., which is definitely fixed as August, 1895. She testifies that the first act of sexual intercourse took place quite a while after this engagement. The defendant met this by his testimony, which closely follows that of plaintiff as to'time. He first met her at this boarding house in the spring of 1895. He had seen her “a month or so” before he “first went out with her.” The first time he went out with her was in June, 1895. The second time be went out with ber there was sexual intercourse. There was never at any time any promise of marriage. It will be observed that be does not fix the time of this first act of sexual intercourse, except that it was after some day in. June, 1895, and that it was the second time be went out with ber. I-Iis version of the occurrence is that there never was at any time a promise of marriage. The plaintiff charged him by ber testimony with a promise made at the boarding bouse before this first act of intercourse. In order to find a promise of marriage (and this question was submitted to the jury) the jury must believe the plaintiff. The requested question assumes that there bad been a promise of marriage. Would it not be the merest guess on the part of the jury to say from the foregoing evidence of defendant and against the positive evidence of plaintiff that there was a promise of marriage, but that the first act of sexual intercourse antedated this promise ? Upon what could such finding rest ? The defendant does not give any date or fix any time for the act nor any date from which the jury could compute time, except it was after a day in June. We think there was no sufficient evidence to warrant the submission of the question as proposed to the jury. At least it can be said that the appellant was not prejudiced by the refusal of this question, for it is highly improbable that any tribunal for the trial of questions of fact would have answered the question in his favor upon the evidence in this case, and the court fully instructed the jury concerning the legal effect of the fact of seduction, and the neces sity of being convinced that such seduction was in fact accomplished as hereinbefore quoted.

Seventeen errors are assigned upon the admission of evidence. We cannot undertake to notice them all in detail. Precedents for the exclusion of evidence must be read, not only with reference to the issues made by the pleadings in the particular case, but also with reference to the other evidence in such case. It is easy to be misled by them or to magnify their generality as legal rules. Most of such errors here assigned are technical and unsubstantial.

Error is, however, assigned because evidence was admitted’ that a child was bom to the plaintiff as a result of the intercourse mentioned. The weight of judicial authority and the-natural logic of the situation seem to justify the admission of such evidence. Musselman v. Barker, 26 Neb. 737, 42 N. W. 759; Giese v. Schultz, 65 Wis. 487, 27 N. W. 353; Stewart v. Anderson, 111 Iowa, 329, 82 N. W. 770; 3 Suth. Dam. (3d ed.) § 985. But it is not necessary to pass on this question in the instant case, and the plaintiff was perhaps precluded from such proof because she had not pleaded this fact in aggravation of the usual and ordinary damages flowing from a breach of the promise of marriage. The evidence of' the existence of this child came into the case quite inadvertently, and afterward in connection with letters from defendant to plaintiff, which letters were otherwise competent evidence,, but also referred to the child, and the trial court instructed the jury to disregard this fact in their assessment of damages.. The appellant contends that this direction of the court did not cure the error of admitting the evidence in question, and cites Dr. Harter M. Co. v. Hopkins, 83 Wis. 309, 53 N. W. 501, and Johannesson v. Borschenius 35 Wis. 131, while the respondent relies on Rooney v. Milwaukee C. Co. 65 Wis. 397, 27 N. W. 24; Waterman v. C. & A. R. Co. 82 Wis. 613, 52 N. W. 247, 1136; Beggs v. C., W. & M. R. Co. 75 Wis. 444, 44 N. W. 633; and also Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy, 102. U. S. 451, and Jones, Ev. § 895 (898) and cases cited. The rule of this court on this subject, differing somewhat in this regard from other courts, is to the effect that such direction of the trial court will cure an error in the admission of evidence; except in such cases where all the evidence is. before this court and the court is satisfied from an examination of the same that the appellant was prejudiced by the- ' erroneous admission of the evidence notwithstanding the instruction mentioned. Cases supra and Radichel v. Kendall, 121 Wis. 560, 99 N. W. 348. In tbe case at bar this was the proper disposition to make o£ the evidence, because the fact •could not be wholly excluded from the jury and at the same time give the plaintiff the benefit of all her evidence otherwise competent in the case, notably defendant’s letter of July 25, 1899.

The length of time that this marriage engagement lasted and the number of years that plaintiff waited for defendant to marry her were proper items of evidence bearing upon the amount of plaintiff’s damages, and it would be a rather illogical and technical rule which would exclude the degree of intimacy between the parties which existed during this fourteen years. We think the latter was competent and proper evidence.

The testimony relating to the wealth of the defendant was ■also competent. Salchert v. Reinig, 135 Wis. 194, 115 N. W. 132. The amount of the monthly sales of his saloon was an item bearing upon this question also competent. Plaintiff’s counsel, in offering proof that the defendant made presents to the plaintiff, offered with such oral proof a ring, a watch, and a photographic button, all of which were produced and offered in evidence. The photograph on this button was that of the child in question. There may have been some legal skill exercised in grouping this present, insignificant in intrinsic value, with the others, but it was not offered for the purpose of proving resemblance, and the fact that the photograph of this particular child was on the button would not alone render it incompetent. This court does not reverse judgments for such trifles.

We find no error in refusing to submit the other questions ■of the special verdict requested by defendant, nor in the instructions of the court to the jury.-

The jury rendered a verdict of $10,000 damages, which ■the court reduced to $8,000. It is contended in this court that tbe damages are still excessive. We do not so view tbe evidence. Tbe affair between plaintiff and defendant covered a period of about fourteen years, including all that part of ber life when ber chances for an advantageous marriage were best. Tbe matter in aggravation was very serious, and tbe defendant appears to be of ability to respond in considerable damages. Damages in sucb cases are very difficult to-estimate, and ordinarily tbe proper tribunal for that purpose-is tbe jury. Besides, it is tbe rule of this court to encourage tbe circuit judges to exercise tbeir judgment in cutting down excessive verdicts; and in order to give effect to that rule, Avbicb we believe, founded in legal principles-, we must, as far as possible, sustain tbe estimate- of tbe circuit judge where be-bas actually passed on tbe question and reduced tbe verdict to .such amount as in bis- judgment is proper. We find no reversible error in tbe record, and tbe judgment must be affirmed.

By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.  