delivered the opinion of the court.
The action of the trial court in overruling the demurrer to the indictment is brought under review by the first assignment of error. The demurrer raises two questions, and we examine them in their order: (1) The indictment does not charge that the woman alleged to have been seduced was of previous chaste character; (2) the indictment does not charge that, at the time of the alleged seduction under promise of marriage, the woman was unmarried.
On the first proposition it is to be said that § 1298, code 1892, prescribes the punishment for seduction of any woman, or female child over the age of sixteen years, by means of pretended marriage or of false promise of marriage. The object is to protect the chastity of women and children above sixteen years of age (seductions in other cases being provided for in §§ 1002, 1004) from attack by false marriages or -false promises of marriage. The statute, ex vi termini, is to be confined to the abuse of unmarried females and unmarried females of previous chaste character. JBut the previous chastity of the female said to have been seduced need be neither alleged nor proved. The presumptions of law spring from and rest upon the general knowledge and universal experience of mankind. In the multitudinous and varying *808conditions and ranks of womanhood, personal chastity is the rule; a lapse from virtue is the rare and painful exception. Until the rare exception has been proved, the legal presumption must prevail, and this legal presumption need be neither charged nor proved.
The adjudged cases and authorities holding the contrary view will be found, on critical examination, to stand on one or the other of two grounds, or on both, viz.: The statutes creating and defining the crime of seduction in some of the states employ the words, “ previous chaste character,’-’ or similar words, and so are supposed to requii’e those words in indictments for such offenses. This fact appears in all, or nearly all, the reported cases which we have examined in which this identical question was passed upon. This is notably true of the early and unsatisfactory case of West v. State, 1 Wis., 186, which is the foundation and perpetual reference of the later cases holding that chastity must be alleged and proved. But in these later cases, which follow the early Wisconsin decision, we shall discover, on thorough inspection of the various statutes of the several states on which the indictments founded thereon were examined, and the sufficiency of their averments passed upon, that the words “previous chaste character,” or other like .ones, are uniformly to be found, as we now remember the results of our extensive and protracted research on this point. Said that eminent jurist, Cooley, J., speaking for the supreme court of Michigan, in People v. Brewer, 27 Mich., 134, commenting on the early Wisconsin case of West v. State, hereinbefore referred to : “ The case of West . . . was decided upon the phraseology of the Wisconsin statute, which was thought to make the‘previous chaste character’ of the person seduced an ingredient in the offeuse. Our statute [Michigan] is very simple, and merely provides that, ‘if any man shall seduce and debauch any unmarried woman, he shall be punished,”’etc. § 7697, L. 1871.
The Wisconsin court itself, in the opinion in West’s case, *809employs this language: “The previous chaste character of the female is one of the most essential elements of the offense, made so by the express words of the statute,” etc. Bishop, in his works on Statutory Crimes, § 1106, and Criminal Procedure, vol. 1, §§ 647-8, suggests, i’ather than declares, that the previous chaste character of the female seduced should be averred and proved in cases where these words are not in the statute. But the adjudged cases to which he refers as his authority for the suggestion do not support his text. The case of People v. Roderigas, 49 Cal., 9, is authority for the proposition involved in the Wisconsin case — West v. State — already adverted to, that when the statute creating and defining the crime makes the previous chaste character an essential ingredient in the offense, then it- is necessary to charge and to prove this ingredient. In the case of Roderigas the indictment, which was demurred to, charged the prisoner with enticing an unmarried female to a house of ill fame for the purposes of prostitution, without alleging that she was of previous chaste character. On an appeal from a judgment sustaining the demurrer, the supreme court held the indictment insufficient for failing to-charge the previous chaste character of the female enticed to the disreputable house, the court saying: “ To entice a female into a house of ill fame or elsewhere for the purposes of prostitution is not an offense under § 265 of the penal code, nor under the provisions of the act of March 1, 1872, unless such female was of previous chaste character.” By reference to the penal code of California and the act of March 1, 1872, of that state, it was, we find, made penal to entice a female of previous chaste character into a house of ill fame. The decision rests upon the proposition that it was not the enticing to a house of ill fame of any female which was made a felony,, but only one of previous chaste character. The other case on which Bishop’s text is supposed to rest is that of West v. State, 1 Wis., 186, already examined.
Counsel for the accused also cite us to 21 Am. & Eng. Enc. *810L., p. 1046, and note 7. But this authority is content to observe that “ propably this averment [previous chaste character] must be-made, even though the statute makes no mention of chastity, as that, as has been stated, is regarded by the courts as an essential feature of the offense.” The cases cited by the author in support of this qualified and guarded remark, and-found in note 7, are Polk v. State, 40 Ark., 482; People v. Clark, 33 Mich., 112; and the People v. Roderigas, 49 Cal., 9. The last-named case, as we have already seen, is not support for the rule as guardedly announced by the Am. & Eng. Enc. L. The decision in that case was upon a statute which made penal the enticing of a female of previous chaste character into a house of ill fame for the purpose of prostitution.
In Polk v. State, 40 Ark., 482, the prisoner was indicted under a statute which made penal the “ obtaining carnal knowledge of any female by virtue of any feigned or pretended marriage, or of any false or feigned promise of marriage.” The question oh the indictment arose thus, as is stated-in the opinion of the court: “ The defendant moved in •arrest of judgment, because the indictment only stated the parties were past the age of puberty, and did not state that they were of full age, and so able to make valid and binding promises to marry without consent of parents or guardian» nor even that they were of sufficient age to be capable in law of ■contracting marriage. This objection is frivolous.” It thus appears that the necessity for the averment and proof of previous chaste character was not raised or passed upon in any rulings in which that point was directly involved. It is worthy of remembrance, however, that fin considering the proper method of impeaching the previous chaste character of the female alleged to have been seduced, the court used this language : “ Since, in the female sex, chastity is the rule and want of the exception, the presumption is in favor of virtue. No evidence is required to establish it in the first instance, and the burden is on the defendant, if he would *811■assail it, notwithstanding the presumption of his innocence.” The remaining case cited in the 21 Am. & Eng. Enc. is that of the People v. Clark, 33 Mich., 112. In this, as in the Arkansas case just referred to, the necessity for averring and making proof of previous chaste character is not raised or passed upon. The error of the editors of that most valuable work is all the more surprising in view of the following passage from the opinion of the court in the Clark case, in 38 Mich., to wit: “ The chastity of the female at the time of the alleged act is in all cases involved, and the presumption of law being in favor of chastity, the defense have the right to show the contrary.” It would appear to necessarily result, from what is said both in the Arkansas and Michigan cases, that the reverse of the guarded statement of the text of the editor of the encyclopedia is correct. If the previous chastity of the woman is a legal presumption, no evidence need ■be offered to prove it primarily. And if no evidence need 'be offered to prove it, its averment would seem to be un•necessary.
It remains to consider the other ground of contention on this point, which is that the previous chastity must be averred in the indictment and established in the evidence; otherwise the presumption of the defendant’s innocence will •be overthrown by the presumption of the woman’s purity. ‘To put it otherwise, the strength of the presumption of the ■defendant’s innocence cannot be weakened by any counter-presumption of womanly virtue. This same view was ably urged upon our attention in the case of Hemingway v. The State, 68 Miss., 371. We need look no farther than the opinion we then delivered in order to silence the present contention : “ By this second proposition we suppose it is meant to be said that the presumption of innocence is affected or destroyed in part by the legal presumption of the correctness of'the records, and that this favored presumption of innocence cannot be met by another presumption, but must be destroyed by positive proof. This contention rests upon the *812unsubstantial ground that the general presumption of innocence is irrebuttable by any other and favored presumption. The rule is, in conflicting legal presumptions, the special and favored must prevail or take precedence over the general, and the practical operation of this rule we see constantly exemplified in trials for murder. In these trials for even capital offepses, we shall constantly find the legal presumption of malice arising from the use of a deadly weapon, and we shall see the presumption taking precedence over the general presumption of innocence, in the absence of any other evidence showing circumstances of justification or excuse for the homicide. . . . But, after all, it remains to be said that ... all that was done was to permit the jury to be informed that there was a legal presumption of the correctness of the official books, and, if this was not permissible, then it must be conceded that the presumption of innocence is irrebuttable by any other presumption — a proposition not to be tolerated in a court of law — for conflicting presumptions must always go to the jury as other conflicting evidence.”
There was no attempt to show .any want of virtue iii the unhappy girl in the case at bar before she fell a victim to the devilish lust of the prisoner. Undeniably, he robbed his victim of the jewel of her virginal purity, and it is with scoundrelly grace only that he can invoke the vanished figment of the legal presumption of his innocence, insisting that the well-founded and universal presumption of maidenly modesty and womanly virtue shall be overlooked and denied the wretched creature whose character he has. put to death.
As to the second ground of demurrer, it is sufficient to say that we are of opinion that the indictment reasonably shows that the female seduced was unmarried. It is to be regretted that the pleader did not distinctly and positively aver that the female was unmarried; but she is twice addressed by ihe prefix to her own proper name which is solely and universally applied to an unmarried woman, and she is described *813as one to whom offers of marriage were falsely made — lawful marriage — and hence, she is, by necessary inference, a female capable of contracting such marriage; that is, that she was marriageable, unmarried. The evidence, too, we see with surprise, is not direct and positive as to her state; but, again, it reasonably appears that she was unmarried, for it is shown that she was a member of her father’s household, and liviug under parental control. She was uniformly addressed by the prefix to her name used only in cases of unmarried females. She received from the prisoner such attentions as mark the courtship of the marriageable female by the man who would make her his wife; and she is called in the letters written her by the accused, “ my girl, my love,” etc, and he writes her: “I,don’t know when we will marry, but some time, of course,” etc. But one conclusion can be ■reached, on the averments of the indictment and on the evidence produced on trial, by an honest mind, and we shall refuse to hunt for or yield to mere technical rules of pleading and evidence, now happily growing less and less regarded by courts striving to administer substantial justice, where the pleading avers, and the evidence proves with reasonable certainty, that which a closer adherence to technical forms would have made stand out in bolder relief.
That the unfortunate girl was of previous chaste character the law presumes, and this legal presumption it Avas not incumbent upon the state to aver or prove primarily. We have no doubt from the pleading and the evidence that she Avas unmarried, and we are therefore of opinion that the demurrer Avas properly overruled.
The second assignment of error draws in review the action of the court beloAV in permitting the unhappy creature seduced to tell the jury that she yielded her person to her loAmr’s embrace because of his promise of marriage and her blind reliance thereon. We approve the action of the court, for, in the very nature of things, it will be impossible, generally, perhaps ever, to make this evidence if the ruined *814victim of the betrayer is forbidden to speak. As she alone knows, she cannot be held incompetent to communicate that knowledge to con rt and jury. We are aware that the authorities are not harmonious here, but reason and the preponderating weight of authority pronounce in favor of the righteousness of allowing the outraged and ruined female to testify that she fell because of the believed promise of marriage of her seducer. Kenyar v. People, 26 N. Y., 203; Armstrong v. People, 70 N. Y., 38; State v. Brinkhaus, 34 Minn., 285.
The third assignment challenges the propriety of the trial courts permitting the female seduced to testify as to acts of sexual intercourse between herself and the prisoner, and as to the’birth of her child subsequent to her seduction. There was no controversy as to these facts. The repeated acts of' sexual intercourse were testified to by the accused, and the birth of the child was not disputed. The evidence, we think, was incompetent, either as connecting accused with the crime of the seduction or as corroborating the evidence of the female seduced. But we are unable to see in what manner it could have excited the minds of the jury against the prisoner. Confessedly, after having first yielded her person to her betrayer, and after the revolting crime of her seduction had been accomplished, she had sexual intercourse many, many times with her seducer, and, confessedly also, the child afterwards born was not the fruit of the first intercourse had when she fell from the path of virtue. We can readily see how this might have prejudiced the victim, who thus continued to yield herself to his embraces, by causing the jury to pause and hesitate in determining whether she was the real owner of a previous chaste character when she took this alleged first step downward on the way to irretrievable shame. How it could have roused the feelings of a jury against the man we are at a loss to conceive. The error is not, in this case, reversible error.
On the fourth assignment, it is necessary only to say that *815whether the accused was married or unmarried was wholly immaterial. If he was, in fact, unmarried, as he testifies, the fact was not improper to be shown to the jury, for it may have had power in facilitating his approaches to his object, and have been potential in moving his victim to listen to him, and, listening, yield.
The second instruction, of which complaint is made in the fifth assignment of error, is not open to the criticisms made by counsel. It does not authorize a conviction on the uncorroborated evidence of the woman seduced; it is silent on that point, but, more than once and plainly, the jury was instructed that, in order to convict, the evidence of the woman seduced must be corroborated. This instruction is free from the fatal vice mistakenly supposed by counsel to inhere in it. By it, the jury were informed that, if their minds and consciences were satisfied by the evidence that the sexual intercourse was brought about by virtue of a promise of marriage made by defendant, before or at the time of the alleged intercourse, and that, if this satisfaction of minds and consciences was produced by conscientious belief of the evidence, then the jury believed beyond all reasonable doubt, and they should convict, although they might believe from the evidence, further, that the woman seduced afterwards (after her fall) yielded herself to the defendant’s embraces to gratify her own passions — her own aroused and now uncontrolled passions — and was not now, since her seduction and fall from virtue, a woman of chaste character. Whether the unhappy wretch continued to wallow in the mire and filth of personal deprav-. ity, to which defendant’s revolting villainy had reduced her, in no way affected his guilt or her previous purity, if these had been established satisfactorily.
The third instruction for the state is neither vague nor uncertain. By this charge the jury were simply informed, at the state’s request, that corroboration of the testimony of the female seduced was necessary before conviction could be had. This was true, and if the accused desired to have de-. *816fined the extent and reach of the general proposition contained in our statute that “the testimony of the female seduced, alone, shall not be sufficient to warrant a conviction,” he should have asked supplementary and explanatory instructions, with ampler definitions of the general statement contained in the state’s instruction now complained of.
The sixth assignment goes to the court’s action in refusing certain charges for the defendant. The first instruction refused is clearly erroneous. The subsequent acts of intercourse it was sought to have the court tell the jury overcame the presumption of previous chaste character. This was not true in and of itself. The subsequent acts of sexual intercourse were matters to be carefully pond'ered by the jury, and their character and value were fair subjects for argumentation before the jury, but nothing more. To instruct the jury that these subsequent acts of illicit personal intercourse had overcome the legal presumption of the previous chaste character of the woman, would have been to charge upon the weight of the evidence, and, in effect, take the case from the jury.
The second, third and fourth instructions refused were properly refused. The second instruction asked the court to direct the jury that it was the duty of the state to prove the character of the female seduced to have been chaste prior to the act of intercourse which accomplished her seduction. We have already seen that this is not sound. The third refused instruction is improper, because without evidence to support it. The fourth refused instruction is manifestly erroneous, for the reason just given. It was unsupported by the evidence. There is no testimony, nor hint of evidence, that this seduced woman “had already fallen, and was not, at the time, pursuing the path of virtue,” and the instruction which assumes as proved that which is not proved would be monstrous.
The fifth refused instruction was also properly rejected by the court below. By it, the prisoner sought to have the jury advised that “all her testimony must be corroborated by *817other evidence upon every fact necessary to make out the crime.” There is much diversity of opinion as to what extent this corroboration must go. There are cases in which it has been held sufficient corroboration of the female seduced if there was other evidence of the promise of marriage only. At the other extreme, will be found cases holding that the corroborating evidence must support all the necessary elements in the constitution of the crime. The cases lying between these two classes announce the true rule, viz. : The testimony of the female seduced must be corroborated by other evidence as to the promise of marriage and the act of sexual intercourse. The object of the law is to prevent the conviction of one' accused on the unsupported testimony of one participating in the commission of the offense. As with the accomplice, so here corroboration to the extent of fairly tending to connect the accused with the commission of the offense, should be held sufficient. The female seduced appears on the witness-stand as quasi partieeps criminis, and under a cloud. Whatever other evidence will fairly satisfy the jury that she is truthful and worthy of belief must be held sufficiently corroborative; and when she is supported as to the promise of marriage and the act of sexual intercourse — the two great fundamental essentials — -the corroboration, we think, will be sufficient. In the case at bar, the corroborative evidence (partly furnished by the defendant’s evidence and by his letters) as to the act of intercourse and the promise of marriage is not wanting, and the jury has passed upon its worth and weight, and has, in our opinion, correctly estimated it.
We have here a fresh exemplification of the truth of the inspired maxim : “ The way of the transgressor is hard.” But if character is to be held safe from infamous attack, and the law for its security is to be maintained and honored, this transgressor should be made to feel just punishment in all its fullness and with inexorable certainty.
Affirmed.