139 Va. 388 | Va. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
Anchor Company, Inc., is here complaining of an adverse verdict and judgment in favor of Adams and Barbour. These facts are clearly shown:
The defendant corporation owned a building in the city of Roanoke upon which Mrs. Henry Turner had a lease which expired December 31, 1921. The room
There are eighteen bills of exception and six
As to the admission of letters written by the attorney for the plaintiffs to the attorney for the defendant, after the controversy arose and a few days before the eviction, it was clearly shown that they were not admitted for any other purpose than to contradict the testimony of one of the witnesses for the defendant who undertook to show that the action of the plaintiffs was sudden, unexpected, without notice, and without any previous complaint of the defendant’s action. These letters show that all of these matters were under discussion between the attorneys for the parties, and that an earnest demand had been made upon the defendant to respect their contract and the rights of the plaintiffs thereunder. It might have been more regular to have proved this by parol, but this irregularity was not prejudicial to the defendant.
Then, as to the instructions which authorize the imposition of punitive damages: These present no doubtful questions: That the wilful and unauthorized destruction of one’s business is ground fo'r the imposition of punitive damages on the wrongdoer has been set-
The verdict was for $2,250.00 damages, and there is nothing in the amount of the recovery to suggest that the jury were influenced by any passion or prejudice. The plaintiffs had paid $1,000.00 in cash and had bought additional equipment suitable for their business, the value of which business, by the conduct of the defendant, has been destroyed, and the excess over the amount of the actual monetary loss sustained cannot be fairly criticized.
Our conclusion, then, is to affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.