The averment in the complaint is not of an assault merely, hut of a battery also. The plaintiff avers that the defendant, with force cmd arms, made an asscmlt upon her, and then and there debauched and carnally knew her. As every battery includes an assault, it is the usage, in pleading, to aver both, as is done here. (2 Chitty Pl., 851, 6th Am. ed.) The ground of action in this complaint is the debauching and carnally knowing the plaintiff, which is averred to have been done by force. The m et armis clause is not limited to the averment of an assault, but is connected by the copulative with what follows, and relates equally to the debauching and carnally knowing. That this is an averment of an assault and battery does not, in my opinion, admit of a doubt. A battery, *387which, as before suggested, always includes an assault, and the statement of which, in pleading, is always accompanied by an averment of an assault, is any unlawful touching of the person of another, the degree of violence being immaterial; nor is it essential that the act should have been wilfully done, as it will suffice if the facts relied upon show either that the defendant was in fault, or that the act was unlawful. (See cases collected in 2 Greenleaf's Ev., § 84, 85; 1 Saund. Pl. & Ev., 141, 5th Am. ed.) And certainly the averment here, that the defendant by force debauched and carnally knew the plaintiff, is a battery within this definition.
The doubt in respect to this complaint has arisen, I apprehend, from the pleader’s employing the form of averment, “ assaulted, debauched, and carnally knew,” wffiich was usual in actions of trespass vi et armis, brought by a father for the seduction of his daughter, or by a husband for a criminal conversation with his wife. Thus in Woodward a. Walton (1 Bos. & Pul. N. S., 477), which was an action of trespass, the averment was that the defendant, with force and" arms, assaulted, debauched, and carnally knew the plaintiff’s daughter; and in Rigaud a. Gallisard (7 Mod., 80), the court say, “ If a man find another man in bed with his wife, he may have an assault and battery against him.” Thus in the forms in Ghitty, for actions of trespass vi et armis, for criminal conversation or seducing a daughter, the averment is always “ assaulted, debauched, and carnally knew.” (2 Chitty’s Pl., 856, 6th Am. ed.) And to the same effect are numerous authorities. (Macfadzen a. Olivant, 6 East., 382; Bennett a. Alcott, 2 T. R., 166; Bac. Abr., Marriage, E., 2.) Although in such actions the injury is to the relative rights of the father or husband, yet as he is not supposed to assent to the act, it is regarded as done forcibly as against him; and for damages sustained by him gpe/r quod servitvum amisit, or goer quod consortium amisit, trespass vi et armis was considered a proper form of action.
Lord Holt is reported to have said in Russell a. Come (2 Lord Raym., 1032; 1 Salk., 119), that a man could not maintain an action against another for assaulting his daughter, and getting her with child, unless there had been an unlawful entry into the plaintiff; in which case, the assault upon the daughter would be an aggravation. But the accuracy of Lord Raymond’s recollec*388tion of what was said by Holt was doubted in Woodward a. Walton, swpra; and the law was held to be otherwise upon the authority of an earlier case than the one in Raymond (Guy a. Liversey, Cro. Jac., 501; 2 Roll. R., 51), which was an action of assault and battery, in which the plaintiff recovered for a battery inflicted by the defendant upon him, and also for the loss of the service and companionship of his wife, who went with the'defendant and lived with him in a suspicious manner; and Cholmley's case, cited in the foregoing, where a man brought an action for the battery of his wife, and recovered for the injury to him thereby. A man might, therefore, bring trespass m et armis for the seduction of his wife, daughter, or servant, or for an assault and battery upon them, and hence the averment of assaulted, debauched, and carnally knew, in all the forms; for whether the carnal knowledge was with or against the will of the wife or daughter, the action was equally maintainable. Hp forms appear in a case like the one now before us, because for seduction the woman had no cause of action (Hamilton a. Lomax, 26 Barb., 615); and if a carnal knowledge of her person was obtained against her will, it was a rape, and the civil action was merged in the felony. Our statute has changed the law in this respect (3 Rev. Stats., 589, 5th ed.), and a woman upon whom a rape has been committed may maintain an action for the personal injury; and in stating her cause of action, it is sufficient if her complaint conforms to what was essential in the way of averment in action of trespass for injuries to the person.
The averment of the plaintiff here is, that the defendant made an indecent assault upon her, and then and there debauched and carnally knew her. It has been shown from the cases cited, that upon the averment “ assaulted, debauched, and carnally knew,” a father or husband might have an action for the injury done to him by an assault and battery upon the person of his wife or daughter; and if that form of averment would be sufficient in an action by him for the injury done to his relative rights, it would be equally so in an action by the daughter for the direct injury done to her. It is an averment of an injury to the person unlawfully inflicted by force, and sufficiently describes the act that caused the injury, whoever brings the action.
The demurrer in this case was interposed, and sustained by the judge at the special term, upon the assumption that the *389words “ made an indecent assault, and then and there debauched and carnally knew,” imported nothing more than the seduction of the plaintiff, for which she could maintain no action. I have already pointed out the mistake that the party demurring has fallen into, as I suppose, from finding these words exclusively used heretofore in actions for seducing a daughter or a wife, and inferring thereby that they amounted to nothing more than an averment of seduction. And I also apprehend that he has not entirely comprehended the full extent of the meaning of the word “ debauched,” which the plaintiff has used as descriptive of the act or injury done to her, and which in our ordinary dictionaries is defined “ enticed, led astray, vitiated, or corrupted but which, especially when used as a legal word, has a more extended signification. The verb “ to debauch” is a word of French origin, compounded of the preposition “ def from, and “ iauc'he,” an old Armorican word in use in Brittany, meaning shop, and signifying, in its compound sense, to entice, or draw one away from his work, employment, or duty. (Lunier, Dictionnaire des Sciences et des Arts, Paris, 1805.) It is in this sense of enticing and corrupting that it came into use in our language, as will be found by a reference to one of the earliest authorities for the meaning of English words, Phillips’ hi ew World of Words, 1696, where it is defined “to corrupt one’s manners, to make lewd, to mar or spoil,”—a sense in which it had been previously used by Ben Jonson and by Shakspeare. Bailey, in his Dictionary some twenty years after, adds further, “ to seduce and vitiate a woman.” As applied to a woman, the word as thus defined meant merely seduction. But in the folio edition of Bailey by Scott, 1755, the meaning of the word was extended to seduce and violate a woman. It is in this two-fold sense that it is used in the law-form, and which it has now fully acquired as a general word. Mackenzie, in his English Synonyms, London, 1854, defines it, “ to ravish, deflower, violate and it is used in Worcester’s Dictionary, Boston, 1847, as an appropriate definition for the word constuprate, from the Latin constupro, meaning to violate. There is authority, therefore, in the legal forms and in the lexicographers, for the use of the word in the sense in which the plaintiff has employed it. But the complaint would be good even without this word. The words “ assaulted, and then and there carnally knew,” are sufficient. *390In Tullidge a. Worle (3 Wils., 18), which was an action of trespass, the averment was simply that the defendant, with force and arms, made an assault upon the plaintiff’s daughter, and got her with child. Here there was nothing importing seduction—no word capable of .that signification—yet the sufficiency of the averment to sustain an action of trespass was not questioned:—a case in respect to which Sir James Mansfield remarked, in Woodward a. Walton, supra, that there was no doubt that “ every objection would have been made to the form of the declaration which could avail the defendant.”
For these reasons, I think the demurrer to the complaint was not well taken. •
Brady, J.The complaint in this case is, in form, the statement of a rape committed upon the plaintiff by the defendant, and one of the questions presented by the appeal is, whether for such violence the party aggrieved can maintain an action to recover damages.
In England, the civil right to sue for injuries occasioned by a felony was not merged or destroyed, but suspended until' conviction or acquittal. It is there said to be the duty of the party injured to bring the offender to justice, or to make some effort thereto, and that until that duty is performed he cannot maintain an action. (2 Blackstone Com., book 4, ed. 1836, n. 8.) Blackstone, in the text, places the doctrine upon the ground that as the public crime is not otherwise avenged than by forfeiture of life and property, it is impossible afterwards to make any reparation for the private wrong, which can only be had from the body or goods of the aggressor.” The rule suggested will also be found stated in Sedgwick on Damages (741, 2d ed.), with a reference to cases showing that it has not prevailed in this country. It does not now prevail in this State, and I have not been successful in finding any case in which it was ever enforced. The statute is express on the subject: “The right of action of any person injured by any felony, shall not in any case be merged in such felony, or be in a/ny maimer affected thereby.” (2 Rev. Stats., 563, 4th. ed.)
This statute has removed any impediments that may have existed by the common law; and therefore, for the assault and battery committed by the defendant, the plaintiff has a right of *391action which may he enforced; and on the trial of which, she could prove, in aggravation of damages, the consequences of that assault. The gist of the action, however, is force and violence. If the plaintiff consented to the debauchery, she cannot recover; and it should appear by the complaint, that such was not the case. The Code requires a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, and provides that the sufficiency of a pleading shall be determined by the rules therein prescribed (§ 140-141). The plaintiff, in the statement of the violence committed by the defendant, charges that the defendant, “ with force and arms, ill-treated, and an indecent assault made upon her, and then and there debauched and carnally knew her, whereby she became,” &c. Under the former system of pleading, when it was material “ to rely upon actual force,” as in the case of a forcible entry, the words mcmu forti, or “ with strong hand,” should be adopted; but in other cases, “ vi eb cvrmis” or with force and arms, were sufficient. (1 Chitty's Pl., 143, 6th Am. ed.) And in actions of assault and battery, the declaration charged that the defendant, on a certain day and place, assaulted the plaintiff; and then proceeded to state the grievance according to the facts. (See 2 Chitty's Pl., ed. supra, pp. 848, 849.) The complaint herein, in adopting the phraseology of the old forms, has departed from the rules which the Legislature has established; but the facts embraced in the complaint, though improperly stated according to the existing provisions, are nevertheless sufficient to constitute a cause of action. If the defendant, with force, ill-treated the plaintiff, and made an indecent assault upon her, and with force debauched her, upon the conclusions herein expressed a cause of action exists; and though to the form of stating it there may be an objection, that objection is not the subject of demurrer. (Code, § 144.) The remedy, if any, is by motion to make the complaint more definite and certain. (Code, § 160.)
The remaining question is embraced in the proposition, that the complaint is fatally defective in not stating that this court has acquired jurisdiction over the person of the plaintiff or the subject-matter of the action; and this objection is predicated of the fact that it does not appear that the defendant was a resident of, or personally served with process within, the city and county of New York, or within the jurisdiction of this court.
*392The answer to this proposition is simple. The defendant may demur to the complaint, when it shall appear upon the face thereof that the court has no jurisdiction of the defendant or the subject of the action. (Code, § 144.) And when that does not appear upon the face of the complaint, the objection may be taken by answer. (Code, § 147.) It does not appear upon the face of the complaint, either that the court has no jurisdiction of the defendant or of the subject-matter of the action, and therefore the cause of demurrer does not exist. If the court in fact has no such jurisdiction, the defendant must set it up by answer, and his demurrer upon that ground fails.
I think the judgment of the special term should be reversed.