Coxe v. Whitney

9 Mo. 527 | Mo. | 1845

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This whs an action of trespass, assault and battery, brought by Whitney against Coxe, Christy, Mitchell and Schumburg. Each defendant pleaded separately “not guilty,” and a separate plea of son assault demesne. To these pleas, replications were filed, traversing the pleas and the issues taken were tried at the last April term of the St. Louis circuit court. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment against all the defendants for sixteen hundred .dollars.

The plaintiff Whitney was the editor, or one of the editors, of a newspaper printed in St. Louis, called the “ Picket Guardand was also an engraver, and took daguerreotype likenesses, at a room in the second story of a house at the northeast corner of Market and Fourth streets. This was also his lodging room. On the 6th September, 1842, an article appeared in the Picket Gruard reflecting upon the wife of Coxe, one of the defendants; the other defendants being nearly connected by blood or marriage with Mrs. Coxe. On the 8th, the defendants went to the room of the plaintiff, and made the assault complained of. No person was present at the commencement of the assault. The first words heard by a witness, who had been attracted to the spot by the cries of murder, were from one of the defendants. “We asked him to sign this, and he refused.” To which Whitney replied, “I wanted to make some alterations before I signed, and they struck me.” Some one asked Whitney why he did not defend himself, to which he replied, “ he had no weapons.” The defendant, Christy, swore he would have satisfaction, and attempted to strike Whitney with a knotted varnished hickory cane, but was prevented. A pistol was also seen in Christy’s possession.

Whitney was badly hurt, having received several wounds on his face, nose, head and ears, which occasioned great effusion of blood, and tem-pory deafness in one of his ears. He was confined to his bed for a fortnight, by the severity of his wounds.

On the part of the defendants, it was proved, that Coxe was the President of the Mutual Insurance Company, whose office was at the corner of Main and Locust street, and whose residence was up town from the place where the Picket Guard was printed. The defendants then -proposed to read the article printed in the Picket Guard, on the 6.th September, and which was understood to reflect upon the wife and brother of said Coxe, as follows : “Another Affair. We learn that the wife of an officer of one of our public institutions, residing up town, *531was sent from home last evening by her husband, in company with her gallant — the lady having given very unequivocal evidence of her preference for her new lover. The gentleman with whom she left, has been, as we learn, a resident in the family during some months past. 5Tis said they left the house arm in arm, with the most perfect resignation and nonchalance.”

This paper was not admitted to go in evidence. The defendants then proposed to read another article from the same paper published on the 9th September, which was written by the co-editor of the said paper, and which purported to give plaintiff’s own account of the assault made by the defendants. This also was excluded.

All the instructions which were asked on either side were given. A motion was made for a new trial but was overruled, and the case is brought here by appeal.

The principal ground upon which the plaintiffs in error rely for a reversal of this judgment, is the exclusion from the jury of the defamatory article published by Whitney a day or two before the assault. This libel, it is contended, should have gone to the jury, not as a justification of the assault, b.ut as an outrage upon the feelings of the defendants, calculated to mitigate the damages. A number of authorities are cited by the defendant in error to show that facts and circumstances which took place previous to the assault complained of, have never •been regarded as evidence in mitigation of damages.

In See vs. Woolsey, (19 J. R. 321) Judge Spencer says, that in an action for assault the evidence of provocation which is allowed to mitigate the damages, must be so recent “as to induce a fair presumption that the violence was done during the continuance of the feelings and passions excited by it. On any other principles the law would countenance the most revengeful feelings, and indirectly also an appeal by persons conceiving themselves injured to force and violence.” The court, therefore, approved of the action of the circuit judge in excluding from the jury a defamatory paper written by the plaintiff, which had ■come to the defendant’s hands but a few days previous to the assault, and also insinuations made by the plaintiff orally, derogatory to defendant’s character, which came to his knowledge the evening before the assault.

The same doctrine has been applied by the same court to suits for libel, in the cases of Beardsley vs. Maynard, 6 Wend. 337, and Maynard vs. Beardsley 7 Wend. 560. This is also the doctrine of the English courts; 3 Barn & Cress, 113; 1 Ryan & Moody, 422.

In Rochester vs. Anderson, (1 Bibb, 429) Judge Boyle states with *532sufficient precision, the principles by which courts of law are governed in matters of this sort. “The law, out of respect to the frailty of human passions, may look with an eye of some indulgence upon the violation of good order, produced in the moment of irritation and excitement from abusive language. But where there has been time for deliberation, the peace of society requires that men should suppress their passions, and neither reason or law will suffer them to claim a diminution of their responsibility for their'misconduct. If opprobrious words, for which the law allows an action, have been used of a man, the law furnishes a remedy, and will not permit him to redress his own wrong. If they are so frivolous as not to be deemed by the law actionable, a peaceful citizen, when he has had time for reflection, will consult the peace and good- order of society, as well as his own dignity, in disregarding them.

What, therefore, is done under the influence of a passion provoked, by the opposite party, at the time of the assault, is proper to be considered by a jury in extenuation of the offence. But ira furor brevis estr what is done twenty-four, or forty-eight hours after the provocation received, is not the result of that passion, but is the deliberate infliction-of vengeance for an injury real or supposed; and this spirit of retaliation, however consonant it may be to the customs of society, the law does not countenance or tolerate.

We have been referred to the case of Peabody vs. Winchester, lately decided in Boston, and reported in the 8th No. of the 7th vol. of the Law Reporter, in which Judge Wilde is reported to have laid down a very different doctrine. The opinions attributed to Judge Wilde in this case, are certainly very different from those entertained by the supreme court of Massachusetts in the case of Avory vs. Ray, 1 Mass. Rep. 11.

As to the refusal of the circuit court to permit the article in the ‘Picket Guard’ of the 9th of September, purporting to give an account of the assault upon the plaintiff, to be read, we think there was no error in this. The article was proved to have been written by the plaintiff’s co-editor, and not by the plaintiff. It was therefore no statement or confession of the plaintiff’s. If designed to prove the statement as a confession by the plaintiff, the writer should have been called as a witness. As a mere statement or confession by a co-editor or partner, it could not bind any one but the person who made it.

Judgment affirmed.