203 N.W. 273 | Iowa | 1925
On the 11th of July, 1921, there arose an altercation *942 between plaintiff and defendant, out of which grew the alleged damages in this case. Such further facts as may be necessary will be stated from time to time as the opinion progresses.
In the trial of the case, over objection of the defendant, the plaintiff was permitted to testify as to the number of persons in his family, the age of each of the children, which was the oldest, and which was the youngest. This 1. EVIDENCE: testimony was properly objected to, and the relevancy, ruling of the court permitting the said competency, testimony to be admitted is the first error and complained of herein. materiality: personal injury: extent of family.
We have had this question before us a number of times, and both sides cite Iowa authority to support their contention. One phase of the matter was finally disposed of in the case of Cawley v.Peoples G. E. Co.,
We have carefully read the Cawley case, supra, which seems quite in line with our former pronouncement in Nicoll v. Sweet,
In the present case, plaintiff is suing defendant for assault and battery committed on plaintiff by defendant. It is for the injury to the person of the plaintiff herein that he is seeking to recover. Just what aid it would be to the jury to permit the plaintiff to testify as to whether or not he had any children, and if so, the number thereof and the respective ages of each, is something that we are unable to comprehend. The testimony seems to us to be wholly irrelevant and incompetent. It could serve no real purpose in aiding an intelligent mind in reaching the proper conclusion as to how badly the defendant was injured, or the amount that he should be awarded for such injury. It could only serve one purpose, which was evidently the purpose of the plaintiff in offering the testimony, and that was to arouse the passion and sympathy of the jury, and thereby enhance plaintiff's damages. Outside of this state, this question has been disposed of in several jurisdictions. The real logic of the best considered cases and the weight of authority seems to support this view of the matter, and to hold that this testimony is not competent. Mahaney v. St. Louis H.R. Co., 108 Mo. 191 (18 S.W. 895); City of Kinsley v. Morse, 40 Kan. 577 (20 P. 217); Cityof Galion v. Lauer,
The United States Supreme Court had this question before it in the case of Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy,
"The plaintiff was permitted, against the objection of the defendant, to give the number and ages of his children, — a son ten years of age, and three daughters, of the ages, respectively, of fourteen, seventeen, and twenty-one. This evidence does not appear to have been withdrawn from the consideration of the jury. It certainly had no legitimate bearing upon any issue in the case. The manifest object of its introduction was to inform the jury that the plaintiff had infant children, dependent upon him for support, and consequently, that his injuries involved the comfort of his family. This proof, in connection with the *944 impairment of his ability to earn money, was well calculated to arouse the sympathies of the jury, and to enhance the damages beyond the amount which the law permitted: that is, beyond what was, under all the circumstances, a fair and just compensation to the person suing for the injuries received by him. How far the assessment of damages was controlled by this evidence as to the plaintiff's family, it is impossible to determine with absolute certainty; but the reasonable presumption is that it had some influence upon the verdict."
The reasoning in this quotation appeals to us as sound and logical; and, while we fully sustain our former decisions on this question, where the injuries for which suit is brought result in death, we feel that such rule should not apply where the injury on which suit is brought does not result in death. It is apparent, therefore, that the ruling of the district court permitting the introduction of this evidence, over objection, was error.
Plaintiff, over objection, was also permitted to offer testimony that he was compelled to hire extra help; that he hired one man at an expense of $40 a month, plus board, and furnished him a horse; that, in addition, he hired two 2. EVIDENCE: extra men, to help take care of the oats. He relevancy, paid them $3 a day. He hired two men in competency, corn-husking time, and paid them 5 cents a and bushel, and board. They husked about 5,000 materiality: bushels. personal injury: employment of extra help.
It is now urged by the defendant that the admission of this line of testimony was error. We think testimony is admissible, under such circumstances, tending to show that there was a decrease of plaintiff's ability to work, and the extent thereof. It is not to be considered as one of the elements for which damages can be allowed. The only Iowa case we have on this subject is Kendall v. City of Albia,
It is said, under the facts in that case, that his testimony *945 was of little practical importance, for the reason that the length of time the man was employed and so paid does not appear. Therefore, the evidence is held nonprejudicial. We are disposed to hold the rule to be that, whenever the evidence shows that the person is injured, and unable to pursue his ordinary vocation, and employs someone to carry out the work for him, such fact is admissible, and the reasonable amount of wages that he paid the one so employed is also admissible: first, as tending to show the extent of his disability or impairment in the carrying on of his business, and second, to be taken into consideration in determining the worth and loss of his time. This seems to be the rule in 4 Sutherland on Damages (4th Ed.), Section 1248, and the cases cited under Note 30 therein. We are of the opinion, however, that such testimony should be restricted to the proof of the employment of the help who did do the work that the plaintiff would have done, had the injury not occurred.
As applying to the present case, the evidence does not show that the employment of all this additional help was necessary to do the work that the plaintiff would have done if the injury had not occurred. In other words, the employment of two men in the harvesting of the oats and of the two men to pick the corn is not shown to be brought about or necessitated by reason of the injury of the plaintiff. Where the evidence does not show that the reasonable necessity for additional help was traceable to the injury which complainant receives, it should not be admitted in evidence.
Exception was taken to Instruction 11 in the charge of the court, which, in substance, told the jury that mitigating circumstances pleaded and shown in the case could not be used for reducing the actual damages, but could only be 3. DAMAGES: used in mitigation of exemplary damages. This is mitigation: not the rule in Iowa. In Gronan v. Kukkuck, 59 applicable Iowa 18, at 19, this court said: to all damages.
"Provocation given at the time of the assault, * * * may be shown in mitigation of damages. But if time for reflection intervened after the provocation, it will not extenuate the violence. This is the settled rule of this state. Thrall v.Knapp,
This doctrine was approved by us in Finn v. Stoddard, *946
"No words alone, however opprobrious or insulting, will justify an assault and battery by the person to whom they are addressed; but the words and the circumstances and the manner in which they are uttered may be considered by the jury in mitigation of any damage to which the plaintiff would be entitled."
If for no other reason, this conflict between these two instructions would be ground for reversal. When conflicting instructions are given, one of which announces a correct view, and the other the incorrect one, the case must 4. TRIAL: be reversed; for there is no means of knowing instructions which one the jury followed. Peterson v.
contra- McManus,
Some other matters are insisted upon in argument, but we do not deem them of sufficient importance to give further attention to them.
For the reasons above specified, the court erred in ruling on the demurrer, and the case is, therefore, reversed. — Reversed.
FAVILLE, C.J., and EVANS and ARTHUR, JJ., concur.