31 S.E. 709 | N.C. | 1898
This is an action to recover damages for the unlawful seizure and detention of personal property, and also for mental suffering caused thereby. The plaintiff alleges that a writ of possession was issued in favor of the defendant Ellis against her husband and herself, and also directing the sheriff to make the sum of $197 with interests and costs out of her said husband; that her said husband had not been living with her for two years, having abandoned her and removed to the State of Indiana; that the defendant Thorpe, deputy sheriff, in obedience to said writ, removed her from the premises; and, also, under the direction of the defendant Ellis, levied upon the following personal property belonging to her, to wit: "About 35 bushels of corn, 5 bushels of peas, 1 yearling calf, and 2 shotes, and delivered the same to the defendant Ellis against the will and over the protests of the plaintiff, she at the time informing Thorpe that she was the sole owner of said property; that the said Ellis took the said property to his home and kept it for more than a week, when he returned a part of the corn and peas, the yearling and one shote; and that the property not returned was reasonably worth $20." She further alleges: "That she is old and infirm, having reached the age of 64 years, and has to depend upon her own labor and exertion for a support; and after the removal of the said property by Thorpe and Ellis, she had nothing upon which to live and no home to shelter her body; that by the wrongful act of Thorpe and Ellis in taking from her the said property, contrary to the writ aforesaid and without authority in law, and depriving her of the only means of support she then had in her advanced age in life, she has suffered (261) greatly in body and mind, to her damage $500."
It is unnecessary to consider the answers or the general testimony, as the jury evidently believed the plaintiff, as they found every issue in her favor. We see no error in the charge of the court of which the defendants can complain, as it appears from the record that every instruction asked by them was given. Therefore, their third assignment of error, "For that his Honor failed to instruct the jury as prayed by defendant *200 in the prayers numbered 1 to 9 inclusive, and failed, except the 8th, given," cannot be considered by us. The record states that "the defendants asked the following special instructions in writing, which were given bythe court." Then follow immediately eight numbered prayers, one or two of which it would be difficult to sustain under exception by the plaintiff.
But there is one exception by the defendants which we think must be sustained, and that is to the testimony of the plaintiff's witness Reavis. He was asked, "What was the condition of the plaintiff next day?" and answered, "She was crying and going on considerably; seemed to be in great deal of trouble, and was in trouble for weeks afterwards." As this testimony tended to show mental suffering, and as it is evident that the greater part of the damages awarded was based upon such suffering alone, the exception becomes of vital importance. The doctrine of mental suffering or "mental anguish," as we prefer to call it, as indicating a higher degree of suffering than arises from mere disappointment or annoyance, contemplates purely compensatory damages, and, as far as we are aware, has never been applied to cases like that at bar. This case would come under the rule of exemplary, punitive, or vindictive (262) damages, as they are variously denominated. Such damages, which look not only to the loss sustained by the plaintiff, but still more to the conduct of the defendants, can be allowed only where there is shown, on the part of the defendants, malice, wantonness, oppression, brutality, insult, gross negligence, or certain cases of fraud. Hale on Damages, secs. 85 and 86; 1 Sedgwick Damages, 520; 7 A. E., 450, 451; Duncan v. Stalcup,
It is urged on behalf of the plaintiff that this case should be governed by the principles laid down in Cashion v. Tel. Co., at this term. We see no resemblance. Our opinion in Cashion's case was hinged on the solemn fact of death and the associations inseparable from the final severance of all earthly ties by an immortal Spirit. The anguish of a mother bending over the body of her child, every lock of whose sunny hair is entwined with a hearstring, and kissing the cold lips that are closed forever, cannot come within the range of comparison with any mental suffering caused by the loss of a pig.
We are not insensible to the pitiable condition of the plaintiff, thrown upon the highway without shelter and with but little to eat, but we must remember that her shelterless condition, which probably caused the greater part of her distress, was the result of a lawful eviction. Charity would have dictated a different course, but that great virtue is not enforceable in a court of law.
But it is urged that the principle of the Cashion case, if carried out to its fullest extent, would directly lead to the recovery of damages for all kinds of mental suffering. It may be, but we feel compelled to carry out a principle only to its necessary and logical results, and not to its furthest theoretical limit, in disregard of other essential principles.
The one universal law of nature is that all action, animate as well as inanimate, is the result of conflicting forces. The orbit of the earth depends upon the exquisite adjustment of two conflicting forces, the centripetal power of attraction and the centrifugal force of momentum. The preponderance of either would lead to inevitable destruction. The trajectory of every shot is governed by three opposing forces: (264) momentum, friction, and gravitation — the speed with which it leaves the gun, the resistance of the atmosphere, and the attraction of the earth. It is so with human action. Government itself is recognized as springing from the love of personal liberty on the one hand and the desire for personal protection on the other. It is said that their just equilibrium produces a government of liberty without license and of law without tyranny, but that its disturbance would lead to anarchy or to despotism.
We do not feel at liberty to adopt any one principle as the sole guide of our decisions and to carry it out to extreme and dangerous limits, regardless of other great principles of justice and of law so firmly established by reason and precedent. *202
For the error of his Honor in admitting evidence which tended simply to show the mental suffering of the plaintiff, disconnected with any allegation of malice or wantonness on the part of the defendants, a new trial must be granted.
New trial.
Cited: Carter v. R. R.,