Mensing. v. Croter

I dissent.

The following opinion by Mr. Justice Sturtevant of the District Court of Appeal sets forth my views on this case in better form than I could, and I adopt it as the basis of my dissent.

"The plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant to compel him to support her illegitimate son and alleged that the defendant was the father. He appeared and answered and a trial was had before the court sitting with a jury. The jury returned a verdict against the defendant and from a judgment entered thereon the defendant has appealed under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

"The defendant claims the trial court should have allowed him to introduce, for a limited purpose, evidence of previous acts of sexual intercourse with other men. The plaintiff replies that he was not denied that right.

"That in this class of cases the defendant will be allowed to prove that at about the date of the conception of the child *Page 322 the plaintiff had sexual intercourse with other men is admitted by both parties. (Kelly v. State, 133 Ala. 195 [91 Am. St. Rep. 25, 32 So. 56]; Maynard v. People, 135 Ill. 416 [25 N.E. 740]; State v. Gereke, 74 Kan. 196 [86 P. 160, 87 P. 759]; Burris v. Court, 34 Neb. 187 [51 N.W. 745]; Humphrey v. State, 78 Wis. 569 [47 N.W. 836]; State v. Ginger, 80 Iowa, 574 [46 N.W. 657]; Nimmo v. Simms, 178 Ark. 1052 [13 S.W.2d 304]; In re Gird's Estate, 157 Cal. 534 [137 Am. St. Rep. 131, 108 P. 499].) Furthermore, both agree that ordinarily other acts with other men are collateral matters which are not admissible. But the defendant claims that there is an exception to the proposition last stated. The plaintiff admits there is, but states that the limits of the exception are not as claimed by the defendant. The defendant argues that if it is first shown that the plaintiff, at about the date of the conception, had an association and an opportunity to have sexual intercourse with another man, that then, but not until then, will the defendant be allowed to show that at some date prior thereto the plaintiff actually did have intercourse with such other man. (Odewald v.Woodsum, 142 Mass. 512 [8 N.E. 347]; Walker v. State,165 Ind. 94 [74 N.E. 614]; State v. Woodworth, 65 Iowa, 141 [21 N.W. 490]; State v. Borie, 79 Iowa, 605 [44 N.W. 824]; Guy v. State, 20 Ala. App. 374 [102 So. 243].) The plaintiff admits the rule, but claims that in the instant case there was no showing of `association and opportunity' within the meaning of the rule. In this contention we think the plaintiff fails to take into consideration all of the facts that have been proved. Whether the jury may draw a certain inference depends in the first place on `the facts legally proved.' (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1960, subd. 1.) Now, in this case the witness Smith had deposed that the plaintiff, while with child, called on him as an assistant probation officer and discussed her case. Among other statements she told him that about the date of conception she had intercourse with a man other than the defendant, but she knew such other man was not the father of her child, she `could tell by her woman's intuition.' Prior to the date of conception the plaintiff, Raiche and Millam had been acquainted in Sacramento. About the first of September, 1923, Raiche and Millam went to Los Angeles and took bachelor quarters in an apartment and *Page 323 at that time other men were members of the same household. Raiche was a married man whose wife had obtained a divorce but no final decree had been entered. The men had no woman to cook for them, but one of them did the cooking. In the latter part of September, 1923 (date of conception), the plaintiff, a young stenographer, went to Los Angeles to obtain employment. She was not married, she was unescorted, and had no kith or kin at that place. She knew this defendant, who resided there. She also knew Raiche and Millam. The plaintiff testified that she had had intercourse with the defendant at Sacramento in April, 1923. She arrived in Los Angeles on September 26, 1923, and on that day called at the defendant's place of business. He was out, but they met the next day and had intercourse. There was evidence that while the plaintiff was living at the Y.W.C.A. in Los Angeles she went with Raiche to his apartments, and that at other times she went there with him. She testified that she lived at the Y.W.C.A. September 26, 27, 28 and 29, 1923. At least some of the calls she made to the bachelor quarters were made after night. We think the foregoing facts show an `association' within the rule. We think they also show an `opportunity' within the rule. True, there were contradictory statements, but the conflicts were for the jury to unravel. Now, at one time (Rep. Tr. 287) the defendant, through Mr. Benjamin, said: `I offer to prove on the basis of the testimony in the record at the present time, together with such other testimony as may be admitted, that in 1922 Miss Mensing was the mistress of one Alfred L. Raiche in Sacramento . . .,' etc. The offer was refused. Later (Rep. Tr. 326, 327), when all of the evidence which we have recited above had been introduced, the defendant renewed his offer. The offer was refused. That last ruling, we think, was error and that it was prejudicial.

"The plaintiff contends that the ruling was correct because the defendant had not shown that during their association in Los Angeles the plaintiff and Raiche were seen in any compromising position. That was not necessary. If the defendant could have shown an act of sexual intercourse between the plaintiff and Raiche at Los Angeles in September, 1923, such act, both parties admit, would have been admissible and it would be wholly unnecessary for us to *Page 324 conduct this specific inquiry regarding acts committed at Sacramento in 1922. An association together in Los Angeles in September, 1923, was admitted. Moreover, the uncontradicted evidence was that at that time the two were not restrained by family ties or physical obstacles, and that they were strangers in the large city of Los Angeles and free to claim that they were man and wife and were free to be by themselves and indulge their passions. Therefore, they had `an opportunity' within the meaning of the rule. In the following cases the evidence of `opportunity' consisted of various combinations of facts which were held to constitute a sufficient foundation to introduce evidence of other acts as showing or tending to show such acts also took place about the date of conception. In State v. Woodworth, 65 Iowa, 141 [21 N.W. 490], it was shown that the pair resided in the same house. In Walker v. State, 165 Ind. 94 [74 N.E. 614], it was shown that the pair were alone together for a time on that evening. In State v. Borie, 79 Iowa, 605 [44 N.W. 824], it was shown that the pair took a twenty-mile ride together and the plaintiff stayed at his house two nights, sleeping with the man's mother. In no one of those cases were additional facts shown than those we have cited. Counsel have not cited, and we have searched the books but cannot find, any cases at variance with these authorities.

"There is yet another angle from which we may view the specific question before us. It is settled law that circumstantial evidence of acts of sexual intercourse with other men at about the date the child was begotten is admissible. (Estate of Gird,157 Cal. 534, 547 [137 Am. St. Rep. 131, 108 P. 499].) When following that rule, the courts have allowed to go to the jury a set of facts no more convincing than the offer made by this defendant. (State v. Creager, 97 Kan. 334 [155 P. 29, 30, 32]; De Mund v. State, 167 Wis. 40 [166 N.W. 328, 329];Anderson v. State, 65 Utah, 512 [238 P. 557, 559]; State v. Gereke, 74 Kan. 196 [86 P. 160, 87 P. 759, 761];Maynard v. People, 135 Ill. 416 [25 N.E. 740, 744]; Burris v. Court, 34 Neb. 187 [51 N.W. 745, 746]; Kelly v. State,133 Ala. 195 [91 Am. St. Rep. 25, 32 So. 56, 57].) If in connection with the evidence which was admitted there had been admitted also the testimony of witnesses that in Sacramento, about one year prior to the *Page 325 conception of the child, the plaintiff lived as the mistress of Raiche, there is no doubt but what the jury might have drawn the inference that at Los Angeles, about the date of the conception, the plaintiff had sexual intercourse with Raiche and that the jury might have concluded that the plaintiff had failed to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant and not Raiche was the father of her child."

To my mind, therefore, the judgment should be reversed and the action remanded for a new trial.