190 Iowa 329 | Iowa | 1920
Lead Opinion
— 1. Plaintiff claims that the defendants assaulted and beat her, and that she was injured and damaged thereby. Defendants deny plaintiff’s claim, and allege that plaintiff assaulted defendant Myrtle Brause, and that any injuries received by the plaintiff were caused by her own act in provoking the assault, and were necessary to repel the assault of plaintiff. No complaint is made of the instructions, and they are not set out in the record. The errors assigned are as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict against the defendants, and as against defendant Rebecca Jane; that the verdict is excessive, and the result of passion and prejudice; that the court erred in not setting the verdict aside and granting a new trial, and in attempting to correct the same by reducing* the amount of damages; that the verdict, after remitting the amount fixed by the court, is still excessive.
Plaintiff is the wife of Rudolph Brause, son of defendant Rebecca Jane Brause and her husband, Dan; the defendant Myrtle Brause is the daughter of Rebecca Jane and Dan, and the sister of Rudolph, plaintiff’s then husband. Plaintiff was married to Rudolph in 1910. They lived in "West Union from the time of their marriage until 1913, Rudolph carrying on his father’s farm near West Union, part of the time. In 1913, plaintiff and her husband moved onto the farm, in a house built by Rudolph under an arrangement with his father. This house was near the house occupied by Dan and his family. At the time of the transaction complained of, plaintiff and her husband and two children, 8 and 4 years of age, were living in the house built by Rudolph, as stated. The trouble in question occurred on the morning of July 10th, after the men had gone to the field. Appellants concede in argument that the evidence as to what happened after the trouble commenced, is conflicting. The defendants’ version of the transaction, and of plaintiff’s injuries, is substantially as follows: That plaintiff went up to the Dan Brause home to pick some cherries, and met defendant Rebecca Jane Brause, who was washing in front of the house, and she told defendant that she came to get the cherries, and was told that there were no cherries; that the birds had been eating them; and that Myrtle had picked them. Plaintiff was disappointed, and felt as if she ought to have stayed at home.
The plaintiff’s claim that Rebecca Jane Brause struck her and beat her, and that Mrs. Rebecca Jane Brause struck her when she was coming down the stairs, is denied by the other witnesses ; and Mrs. Rebecca J. Brause claims that all she did was to try to get the two women separated, and to loosen Nellie’s hands out of Myrtle’s hair; and the uneontradicted evidence shows that she was trying to get Nellie’s hands loose from Myrtle’s hair.
After they separated, Nellie, the plaintiff, and her two children went home, and her sister Bessie and the doctor were called from West Union; and, as a result of the fight, she had a black eye, and the side of her face was contused, and she com
Plaintiff’s version of the transaction is substantially as follows: At the time in question, plaintiff went up past the house of defendants to get some fruit, and, on the way back, stopped at their house to get a carpet which belonged to her. Rebecca J., the mother-in-law, told plaintiff that her carpet was upstairs, and plaintiff said she would go and get it. When plaintiff had gone into the house of defendants, and part way up the stairs for the purpose of getting the carpet, the mother-in-law, Rebecca J., came running after her, passed her on the stairs, got the carpet, and threw it at plaintiff.
Rebecca J. then started to abuse plaintiff, told plaintiff she did not keep her house or her clothes clean; that she was dirty.
As soon as the plaintiff and Rebecca J. came downstairs, the defendant Myrtle Brause, sister-in-law of plaintiff, started to make trouble. Plaintiff told these defendants then that she was going to get out of there, go home, and stay away from there, and started to go.
Plaintiff started home with her carpet on her arm, and both of these defendants followed her, calling her names. They called her a bitch, a liar, a dirty old slut, and a red-headed devil; told her she was trying to snare all the men in the neighborhood, including her father-in-law, Daniel Brause. Rebecca J. then grabbed plaintiff by the shoulder and back of the neck, and said:
“Here, Myrtle, let’s get after her. We will get rid of her. The two of us will get rid of her right now for good. I will hold her while you pound her until she doesn’t know anything. ’ ’
Then, while Rebecca J. was holding plaintiff, Myrtle commenced slapping her. Plaintiff tried to get away from them, but Myrtle got plaintiff by the neck, and Rebecca J. got plaintiff by the hair, and Myrtle said:
“Hold her until I get my teeth into that face of hers, and I will fix her so she won’t be so good-looking.”
Myrtle then came at plaintiff with her mouth open, her teeth showing; and plaintiff then thrust her hand into Myrtle’s mouth, and held her from biting her. Then Myrtle began pounding plaintiff again on the right side of the face, while Rebecca J. held plaintiff. The defendants were calling plaintiff names, and plaintiff was trying to keep them away. Rebecca J. had hold of plaintiff’s hair, and Myrtle was pounding plain
“No, don’t do that; just keep at one side and pound her until she doesn’t know anything, — that is the only way you can do it, and we will have to hurry.”
Then Rebecca J. and Myrtle got plaintiff down on her back. Rebecca J. got plaintiff by the knees, and started to drag her. While Rebecca J. had plaintiff by the knees, plaintiff started kicking, and Rebecca J. then let go her hold, went around to plaintiff’s head, and tried to get plaintiff’s hands out of Myrtle’s hair. Plaintiff sprang to her feet then, and tried to go home; but Rebecca J. grabbed plaintiff by the throat and held her. Myrtle then began beating plaintiff again, and Rebecca J. caught plaintiff by the shoulder from behind. Plaintiff could not hold them off, but did hold Myrtle by the hair; while Rebecca J. Brause kept on pounding plaintiff on the back, the back of the neck, back of the head, and behind the ears. Then defendants got plaintiff down again, down on her knees, with her face in the dirt. ' They kept pounding her on the right side of the face and head, until she could hardly see from her right eye. Rebecca J. got on plaintiff’s back with her knee, put her full weight on plaintiff’s back, and took plaintiff’s head and twisted it around, while Myrtle kept pounding plaintiff all the time. Then Rebecca J. got off from plaintiff, took hold of plaintiff’s shoulder, and tried to get plaintiff’s hand out of Myrtle’s hair. Rebecca J. said she could not make plaintiff let go, and further said, “Maybe I can make her let go;” and then plaintiff felt something on her right arm, something kind of grinding; and then a sickening feeling came over her. Then it went into her arm again. There were teeth marks on plaintiff’s arm, where Rebecca J. had bitten her. At this time, plaintiff had her hands in Myrtle’s hair, and Myrtle was in such a position that she could not have bitten plaintiff at this time. Then plaintiff tried to get up, but Rebecca J. held her arm, and Myrtle at this time bit plaintiff on the arm. Plaintiff was unconscious, part of the time. Myrtle Brause admits, upon her cross-examination, that she might have bitten plaintiff more than once; that she struck plaintiff not more than a dozen times; that she struck plaintiff in the face; that she had hold of plaintiff’s throat; that
Afterwards, plaintiff’s face turned a dark purple, and then kind of blue and green. It was this color for about three weeks. Her eyes were black for a long time. There were black and blue marks on her right shoulder, down her side and limbs. There was a bruise on her back and on the back of her neck between the shoulder blades. When plaintiff got home, she could not stand up alone. Her back ached; she could allow no one to touch it. Her whole body ached. The pain was in her back at the time of the trial. She was in bed several days, had to be helped up and down stairs, and could not dress herself. She could not sleep nights, was very nervous, and her hands twitched. At the time of the trial, she could not do housework, her head ached continuously, and she was still taking medicine.
Before this assault, plaintiff did all her own work on the farm; took care of the garden; had from 300 to 500 chickens; did the washing; cared for the hired man; helped with the farm work; helped to sow oats, hitch up colts, plow, plant and take care of the garden; did the cooking, sweeping, and milking; and attended to the milk cans and separator. After the assault, she was unable to do any work, except to help a little with the dishes
“While the errors relied upon for reversal appear unde** several heads, there is in reality but one question in this case, and that is this: The evidence in this case does not support any such amount as that given by the jury, or even that
It must be conceded that the verdict was large. Though it may be true, as contended by appellants, that plaintiff was not permanently injured, still the jury may well have found that the assault was an aggravated one. We say this without repeating the circumstances before set out, and without stating the elements of damage for which recovery may be had. The elements are well recognized in the law. It may be thought that, because the assault was an aggravated one, it may have had an influence upon the jury. Nevertheless, plaintiff is entitled to adequate compensation, the jury having found that defendants were in the wrong. We have said many times that the assessment of damages, both actual and exemplary, is peculiarly within the discretion of the jury. It is true, of course, as said in some of the cases, that this discretion is not unlimited. The test is, not what amount the court would have allowed, but whether the verdict is so large or small, as the case may be, as to shock the conscience. In Hall v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co., 145 Iowa 291, cited in Ideal C. S. R. Works v. City of Des Moines, 167 Iowa 517, 522, we said:
“The mere fact that the amount assessed is more or less than the court would have been disposed to allow, were the case submitted without a jury, is not controlling, and will not justify the setting aside of the verdict. To call for such action, the amount allowed must be so great and excessive, or so small and inadequate, that the just and intelligent mind is forced to the conclusion that the jury has failed to comprehend the ease as submitted, or has been influenced to its verdict by passion or prejudice. * * * It cannot be said that the sum actually awarded is so out of proportion to the injury suffered as to shock the conscience and point inevitably to the conclusion that the jury were misled by ignorance, passion, or prejudice. This is especially true in view of the fact that the learned trial court,
So here, had the trial court granted a new trial, on the ground that the verdict was excessive, we would have a different proposition. Appellant cites Eastman v. Miller, 113 Iowa 404, as holding that a verdict is excessive and the result of passion and prejudice when it is so excessive as to strike a reasonable mind at once by the disproportion between the amount and the extent of the injuries. In 5 Corpus Juris 709, Section 171, we find this doctrine:
“Courts will not disturb a verdict, in an action for assault and battery, unless it is manifest that the jury were swayed by passion or prejudice, were partial or corrupt, or were misled as to the measure of damages. It is not enough that, in the opinion of the court, the damages are too high, or that a less amount would have satisfied the injury. It must appear at first blush that the damages are glaringly excessive. And it has been held that courts of review should be more reluctant in interfering with verdicts on the ground that the same are excessive, than trial courts.”
Many eases are cited to sustain the text. We are of opinion that, compared with verdicts in other cases of assault and battery where the facts were somewhat similar, which are referred to later, the verdict in this case was not of'a size such as to be shocking to the conscience, nor is it so excessive as to strike a reasonable mind at once to be disproportionate between the amount and the extent of plaintiff’s injuries. We have held that the mere fact that the verdict is too large, and is reduced by the trial court, does not, of itself, necessarily require the granting of a new trial, on the ground that it is the result of passion and prejudice. Doran v. Cedar Rapids & M. C. R. Co., 117 Iowa 442; Schmidt v. Mehan, 167 Iowa 236, 239. In the Doran case, the verdict was reduced by the trial court from $8,300 to $4,500, and the ruling was affirmed. The reduction in that case was much larger than in the instant case. See also citations from 4 Corpus Juris, infra.
“A court, and especially an appellate tribunal, should not interfere in such cases, unless the conclusion is irresistible that the amount is so great as to evince prejudice on the part of the jury.”
See, also, note to International Harv. Co. v. Iowa Hdw. Co., 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 282.
court. Conceding this to be the rule, the question is whether this is such a case. As throwing light upon the question of what may be regarded by the court as a proper amount,- — though not controlling, — appellant cites Jolly v. Doolittle, 169 Iowa 658; Cain v. Osler, 168 Iowa 59; Schmidt v. Mehan, 167 Iowa 236; Zimmerman v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 157 Wis. 514 (147 N. W. 1039); St. Peter v. Iowa Tel. Co., 151 Iowa 294; Rees v. Rasmussen, 5 Neb. (Unoff.) 367 (98 N. W. 830); Kehl v. Burgener, 157 Ill. App. 468; Jansen v. Minneapolis & St. L. R. Co., 112 Minn. 496; Fleming v. Loughren, 139 Iowa 517; note to Padrick v. Great Northern R. Co., 58 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1, 30 (1915 F 1, 30). In the Jolly case, the actual damages were trifling, and the court held that, if the $1,500 awarded was for that alone, it would be excessive. The claim there was self-defense and extreme provocation. The Cain case was an action for slander, and the award was for $2,500, which was largely exemplary. The charge was that a steer had been stolen, and the evidence showed that the defendant honestly believed that the steer belonged to him. In the Schmidt case, plaintiff was not seriously hurt. The trial court held that the award was excessive. There was no pronouncement by this court as to that. In the St. Peter case, the verdict was $2,000 actual damages; no exemplary damages were claimed; the external injuries were superficial; and plaintiff’s injuries were not great. In the Fleming case, it was held only that the award was not excessive. We shall not take the time to review the other cases, but consider the above as illustrative. As said, the holdings vary. On the other hand, appellee cites the Bewtkemeier case, supra, which has been referred to; also Smith v. Smith, 185 Mich. 172 (151
4. Having held that the verdict of $2,000 actual damages is not excessive, the next question is whether that of $1,500 exemplary damages is so. There is, of course, no definite rule, and the award of exemplary damages is also within the discretion of the jury. In a sense, they are, to some extent, eompen
On the whole case, after a careful examination of the record and of the authorities, we reach the conclusion that there is no prejudicial error. The judgment is — Affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
— (concurring). The appellant is entitled to trial by jury. If the verdict shows by its grossly excessive char