delivered the opinion of the Court:
We find no grounds in this record for reversing the judgment. The admission of testimony that the defendant had promised marriage was in conformity with nearly all the authorities. The evidence was admissible, because tending to show that the defendant sought the society of plaintiff’s daughter under the pretense of honorable motives, and that the illicit intercourse was, therefore, the result of seduction on his part in the strict sense of the term. The court properly instructed the jury that they were not to consider the promise of marriage in aggravation of damages in this action. The evidence taken in connection with this instruction was not improper.
It is objected that the court erred in not permitting defendant to prove that the parents of defendant were opposed to his “ beeping company ” with plaintiff’s daughter, because “ of his youth and indiscretion,” and that the plaintiff was notified of their objections. If the offer had been to prove that the plaintiff had been warned against the defendant on account of his bad habits or profligate character, the evidence would have been admissible. But the proposed proof was not of that nature, and the defendant did not offer to show that his parents had directly stated to the plaintiff that they were opposed to any intercourse between their son and his daughter, but only that he had been in some way notified that such was the fact. If the parents of the defendant had desired to put the plaintiff on his guard against their son, they should have done so directly and in plain terms. One of plaintiffs daughters had married a brother of defendant, and this circumstance would naturally lead to unreserved intercourse between the members of the two families. If the defendant’s parents feared the consequences that have resulted, they should have cautioned the plaintiff, and should have placed their objections to the intercourse on the true grounds. Mere opposition to the intercourse, on the ground of “ the youth and indiscretion ” of their son, even if this opposition were known to plaintiff, would not indicate to the latter that they feared their son would seduce his daughter, or that such a result was to be apprehended.
The- record shows that the court, when about to adjourn for the day, directed the sheriff, in the absence of defendant’s attorney, to allow the jury, if they should agree upon a verdict, to seal it- and disperse, and meet the court in the morning to deliver it. This was done. We do not consider this a sufficient ground for reversing the judgment. The jury met the court in the morning, and the counsel for defendant were present, and had an opportunity of polling them when the verdict was delivered. It is not claimed that the defendant was, in fact, prejudiced by the irregularity, and unless he was so, it is not a sufficient ground for setting aside the verdict. Smith v. Thompson, 1 Cowen, 221; Wharton v. Wharton, 2 id. 589.
It is objected that the defendant was an infant when the suit was brought, and appeared by attorney instead of guardian. This question was not in any manner raised in the court below, and there was, therefore, no adjudication upon it. The fact of infancy, if it was a fact, appeared only incidentally on the examination of one of the witnesses. A motion should have been made to set aside the verdict and judgment. On that motion the court would have heard the evidence on both sides, and its decision could then "have been re-examined here. As now presented, the alleged error is merely an error of fact. The case, in this respect, is like that of Beaubien v. Hamilton, 3 Scam. 215.
The judgment must be affirmed,
Judgment affirmed.