after stating the facts:
1. The first exception is to the exclusion of the evidence of the contents of the note.
There are numerous exceptions to the general rule which requires the production of a written instrument as the best and usually only evidence of its contents. Does the note in question fall within any of the exceptions? The note contained no agreement required to be in writing, its contents were purely collateral to the issue, and, as was said by the present Chief Justice, in the case of State v. Oredle, 91 N. C., 648: “It was, not intended to he preserved, but to serve a temporary purpose and disappear. * * * It was a loose, casual paper, and what it contained might be proved like any other fact or event. The rule that a written instrument cannot be contradicted, modified or added to by parol proof, has no application to it.
*847It was competent to speak of it and what it contained, without producing it or showing that it was destroyed or lost.” We do not think the note in question comes within the general rule excluding parol evidence of the contents of written instruments, and the evidence should háve been admitted. State v. Credle, supra; State v. Wilkerson, 98 N. C., 696; 1 Greenleaf Ev., section 89, and cases cited.
2. The second exception is to the refusal to give the charges requested.
We think the defendant was entitled to the first instruction asked, and if not embraced in substance in the charge of his Honor, as it clearly was not it was error to refuse it, and as the exceptions to the refusal to give the instructions asked and to the charge as given, are kindred in character and rest substantially upon the same grounds, we propose to consider them together.
The act (Laws of 1885, ch. 248) under which the defendant is indicted, declares: “That any man who shall seduce an innocent and virtuous woman under promise of marriage, shall be guilty of a crime, etc.: Provided, however, that the unsupported testimony of the woman shall not be sufficient to convict.”
His Honor not only refused to give the first instruction asked, but after defining the crime of criminal seduction under the statute, as “made up of three ingredients: 1. There must be the act of sexual intercourse. 2. The act must be committed under promise of marriage. 3. The woman must be in the character of an innocent woman, one who has never had illicit sexual intercourse with a man,” and telling the jury “that there must be supporting testimony in order to bring the case within the provisions of the statute,” he tells them, in substance, that if the prosecutrix is supported by the testimony of other witnesses as to the truth of the existence of any one of these ingredients, the case is brought within the provisions *848of the act, and he then asks: “Is there any supporting evidence in this case as to the act of sexual intercourse?” and of the two other material ingredients, and instructs them if there is, the case is brought within the statute.
We think his Honor’s definition of the crime created by the statute is misleading. It is true there can be no crime without sexual intercourse, but there may be sexual intercourse without crime, under the statute.
Sexual intercourse is not made criminal by this statute, nor is seduction made a crime, but it is the seduction of an innocent and virtuous woman, under the promise of marriage, and the concurrent presence of a man and woman may be said to be an essential ingredient, whether in the act of sexual intercourse or seduction, without which neither could be committed, but neither one, more than the other, nor is seduction itself a crime under the statute, but the gravamen of the offence is the seduction of an innocent and virtuous woman, under the promise of marriage; without the promise there can be no crime under the statute, whatever may be the character of the woman. Besides, the woman must be virtuous, that is, pure and chaste, as well as innocent.
The purpose of this statute is to protect innocent and virtuous women against wicked and designing men, who know that one of the most potent of all seductive arts is to win love and confidence by promising love and marriage. In section 1118 of The Code the word “innocent” is used, which Justice Ruffin defines, in State v. McDaniel, 84 N. C., 805, as meaning “a pure woman — one whose character, to use the language of the preamble of the statute, is unsullied.”
In State v. Davis, 92 N. C., 764, “an innocent woman,” within the meaning of that section, is defined to be “one who had never had actual illicit intercourse with a man,” and mere lasciviousness, and the permission of liberties by men, are not contemplated by the statute; and this definition of the words, “an innocent woman,” has been followed *849in State v. Horton, 100 N. C., 447, in construing the word “innocent” in the statute now under review. But the woman must not only be “innocent” but “virtuous.” What force, if any, does the word “virtuous” impart to the act?
In State v. Grigg, 104 N. C., 882, it is said, citing State v. Aldridge, 86 N. C., 680, that a woman, who at some time in her life has made a “slip in her virtue” is entitled to the protection of section 1113 of The Code, if she is “chaste and virtuous” when the slanderous words are uttered.
There is a manifest reason why the words “an innocent woman,” in section 1113 of The Code, and “innocent and unprotected woman ” in section 3763, should be construed to mean innocent of illicit sexual intercourse, as affecting her reputation when the slanderous words are spoken, for the purpose of those sections is to protect women, who, however imprudent they may have been in other respects, have not so far “stooped to folly” as to surrender tbeir chastity and become incontinent, or who have regained their characters if a “slip has been made,” from “the wanton and malicious slander” of persons who may attempt to destroy their reputations and blast and ruin their characters.
But the act of 1885, recognizing the frailty of man as well as woman, superadds to the word “innocent” the word “virtuous,” and before it will condemn and punish the man, who may be seducible as well as seductive, requires that it shall be made to appear that the woman was herself “ innocent and virtuous,” and that the seduction was compassed by winning her confidence and love under the false and alluring means of a promise of marriage; but, if she willingly surrenders her chastity, prompted by her own lustful passions, or any other motive than that produced by a promise of marriage, she is in pari delecto, and there is no crime under the statute. She must not only be innocent, but virtuous— that is, chaste and pure — and if such a woman yields under the promise of marriage to the “studied, sly, ensnaring art *850* * * dissemblingsmooth” of the seducer and is betrayed, she deserves sympathy and pity; and he not only deserves the “curse” of all who love honor and virtue, but the severest penalties of the law.
The woman, however, must be “virtuous” as well as “innocent,” and this implies something more in her conduct than mere innocence of illicit sexual intercourse. If she willingly submitted to his embraces, the mei'e promise of marriage would not make it seduction. 33 Mich., 117. And her evidence must be supported. No such proviso is to be found in sections 1113 and 3763. For illustration, there is no evidence that Potipher’s wife ever had illicit sexual intercourse with anyone, and yet the idea of a “virtuous woman” would hardly be suggested by her name.
In the case before us, was the evidence of the prosecutrix supported as required by the statute, and was his . Honor correct in telling the jury that it was sufficient if she was supported in any one of the three facts, of sexual intercourse, promise of marriage and innocence of the woman, in the sense defined by him? The question of sexual intercourse was not in issue — that was an admitted fact — and, if his Honor was correct, it was needless for him to have told the jury that it was entirely within their discretion to say whether there was any supporting testimony and the weight to be attached to it. He might as well have told them that there was supporting testimony, as the defendant admitted the sexual intercourse, and that was sufficient under the statute.
But we think his Honor erred in his charge. The crime does not consist in the sexual intercourse, nor in the seduction, nor in the innocence and virtue of the woman, but in committing the act under promise of marriage, without which, no crime is created by the statute, and which alone makes the seduction criminal, and in this it is not sufficient that the prosecutrix shall be corroborated, but she must be *851supported by .independent facts or circumstances, and this seems to be the view of the Court in State v. Horton, 100 N. C., 445, in which the late Chief Justice speaks of the “corroborative evidence” and of the “additional supporting evidence under the statutory requirement” — the supporting evidence in that case being the admission by the defendant to the father that he had promised to marry the prose-cutrix.
The supporting evidence need not be an additional witness, or equivalent to the testimony of an additional witness, but, as is said in regard to indictments for perjury, which cannot be sustained upon the simple, unsupported testimony of a single witness, however credible, there must be some independent evidence or circumstance in corroboration. 1 Greenleaf Ev., §§ 257 and 258. And it must be independent of, and other than, that of the prosecutrix. People v. Kenyon, 5 Parker’s Crim. Rep., 288.
The questions presented by the appeal are discussed at length in Bishop on Statutory Crimes, §§ 638 to 652 in People v. Clark, 33 Mich., 112, and in Armstrong v. People, 70 N. Y., 38.
In many of the States there is a statutory provision similar to ours, varying in phraseology, that of New York, for instance, using the words, “ unmarried female of previous chaste character,” but most of them requiring that the prosecutrix shall be supported in her evidence in order to convict.
In the last case cited it is said: “The immediate persuasions which led to compliance may not be proved by the evidence of third persons directly to the fact. They are to be inferred from the facts that the man had the opportunities, more or less frequent and continued, of making the advancements and the proposition; and that the relations of the parties were such as that there was likely to be that confidence on the part of the woman in the asseverations of *852devotion on the part of the man, and that affection towards him personally which would overcome the reluctance on her part, so long instilled as to have become natural, to surrender her chastity.” As to the promise of marriage, the requirement of the statute is satisfied by proof of circumstances which usually attend an engagement of marriage.
The defendant either committed the crime of seduction “under promise of marriage,” or there was no crime. The only independent supporting evidence of the promise of marriage was the conversation with her mother when she went to get her consent, if the defendant heard it, and that was a question for the jury, and the second and third instructions asked were properly refused. There is no other evidence or circumstance, except that emanating from her, that is not as consistent with the conclusion that she submitted to the embraces of the defendant voluntarily, and without seductive arts or promises on the part of the defendant, as that she surrendered her chastity because of any promise of marriage, and persuasion or solicitation because of the promise.
In fact, there is a singular absence of facts or circumstances which usually attend engagements or promises to marry. Her father and mother were witnesses for her, and it does not appear that either of them ever had any conversation with the defendant about so important a family matter; it does not appear that he was in the habit of visiting her before the alleged act of seduction, or that he ever visited her after, or that there was any complaint of his failure to do so, or to comply with his alleged promise, till many months after, when the doctor examined her and found her pregnant, which she at first denied, but afterwards said that she had been seduced by the defendant, under promise of marriage. It appears from the testimony of the doctor that the birth of the child was short of the regular time, but within the minimum limit of gestation, and so far from fur*853nishing independent evidence to support that of the prose-cutrix, it tends to throw suspicion upon it.
The prosecutrix says that the illicit intercourse was at the defendant’s solicitation, but she does not say, and it only appears inferentially, if at all, that she yielded to his solicitations because of a promise of marriage, and, upon her own testimony, there seems to have been very little seductive art employed.
There were a number of witnesses who testified to illicit intercourse with the prosecutrix, but it was f.>r the jury to say what weight their evidence was entitled to, and they seem to have given none. While we do not and cannot approve or commend the example of an eminent personage who is said “to have sworn to a lie like a gentleman” to protect the reputation (f a woman in high social position, we cannot condemn that sentiment which disinclines honest and virtuous jurors to yield ready credence to the testimony of men who expose their own immoral conduct in testifying willingly to their wicked intercourse with a frail woman whose virtue has been assailed. We think, for the reasons stated, there v7as error..
Error.