The authorities are generally agreed that in an action of trespass and assault and battery the defendant may under the general issue give in evidence matters which go merely to the quantum of damages by way of palliating the offence. Where the defendant relies upon provocation it must be so recent as to raise the presumption the assault was committed in heat of blood excited by the conduct or declarations of the plaintiff. The rule which confines the defend
And so where the acts done or words spoken some time previous to the assault are a part of a series of provocations repeated and continued up to the time of the assault, they may be received. Stetlar v. Nellis, 60 Barb. R. 524; 42 How. Prac. R. 103.
In Rawlings’ case,
It would seem to be clear, therefore, that the rule which restricts the proof to acts of recent provocation is not at all infringed by evidence of acts or declarations long anterior to the assault, when the plaintiff himself makes them a part of the res gestae by repeating or by alluding to them at the time, in a manner which indicates a repetition or renewal of, or persistence in, the offensive act or declaration. An allusion to an insult previously given may justly exasperate as much as the insult itself. The fact that the defendant has before submitted in silence to an indignity may but serve to give the subsequent allusion the sharper sting. When that allusion is made in an offensive manner, no other conclusion can be drawn than that a renewal or repetition of the original offense was intended. At all events where there is doubt as to the meaning of the party, it is a matter peculiarly proper for the jury to determine whether the defendant in making the assault was acting* under the provocation then received.
In the case before us several of the witnesses concur in saying that the plaintiff just before the affray, said he had proved a good character by a number of citi
It has been justly said that the affairs of men consist of a complication of circumstances so intimately interwoven as to be hardly separable from each other. Each owes its birth to some preceding circumstance, and in its turn becomes the prolific parent of others; and each during its existence, has its inseparable attributes and its kindred facts materially affecting its character, and essential to be known in order to a right understanding of its nature. These surrounding circumstances constituting a part of the res gestae may always be shown to the jury in connection with the principal fact. In Rawson v. Haigh, 2 Bing. R. 104, 9 Moore R. 217, S. C., Mr. Justice Parke said, it was impossible to tie down to time, the rule as to declarations, and that if connecting circumstances exist, a. declaration may even at a month’s interval form part of the whole res gestae. 1 Wharton on Evidence, sec. 589, 583, and cases cited. And when an altercation grows out of an offensive allusion to a previous decía
It has been farther said that the defendant "William M. Davis has already recovered judgment against the. plaintiff on account of the publication of the alleged libels, and now to permit him to rely upon the same matter in mitigation of damages, would amount in -effect to double satisfaction. In the first place there is nothing in the present record showing any such recovery or even the institution of any such action. This court of course cannot take notice of the mere suggestions of counsel on that subject. But even if it appeared that the defendant had recovered judgment for the alleged libel that fact would not of itself preclude him from relying upon it in the present action. Suppose he has recovered damages for the libel, why may he not show he acted under the same provocation in making the assault. t It is a matter for the jury, who having all the facts before them may graduate their damages accordingly, and do justice between the parties. Even though he recover damages for the libel, he has still the right to show the attack was not wanton. The rule seems to be that where the libel is the subject of a cross-action and recovery, the defendants ought not to derive much advantage from it in mitigation of damages. As in other actions of tort no inflexible rule can be laid down, where so much ■depends upon the character of the libel, the nature •of the assault, and the conduct of the parties.
It is,clear therefore that the circuit court erred in rejecting the evidence set out in the first bill of exceptions, unless indeed that evidence was inadmissible upon another ground now to be stated. And that is in a joint action of trespass against several defendants, it-
The correctness of these propositions need not be controverted here. The enquiry still arises, how are the jury to determine who is the most culpable unless they have all the evidence before them. The defendant who has received the greatest possible provocation may to all appearances be the most culpable in the assault, if all proof of the provocation received by him is excluded, the jury must of course graduate their damages by their estimate of .his guilt, although there are the strongest mitigating circumstances in his favor. Let us take the present case as an illustration. Let us suppose the defendant William M. Davis made the most violent attack on the plaintiff—all proof of provocation being excluded he of course must he considered the most culpable, and the jury would be told they must assess the damages with reference to his guilt. And yet he may have acted in heat of blood excited by the most malignant assault upon his own character, or upon the reputation of a wife or daughter. All this is to be excluded from the jury according to the learned counsel for the plaintiff. And thus all the defendants are to be punished for the supposed guilt of one of them who is in fact the least guilty. It is very true the defendant who acted without provocation
It is also true, as stated by counsel, that the plaintiff cannot rely upon the malignant motives of one of the defendants maldng the assault. The reason is obvious— the plaintiff may sue all jointly or each one separately. If he wishes to show peculiar grounds of aggravation against one of the defendants, he ought to bring his separate action against him. By joining the others he waives any special grounds of action peculiar to one. ^ "With the defendants it is altogether different. ^They have no choice in the matter. The plaintiff has the right to join them in the same action; but they ought not to be thereby precluded from showing any matter which in effect constituted the res gestee, and which may serve to explain the true relation of the parties to each other. It often happens as otherwise that the assault is made by one of the defendants under provocation recently received, and that others unite with him without his consent and without any sort of premeditation or understanding. To deprive him of the right to show under such circumstances, the ground upon which he acted, and to visit upon him all the consequences of a wanton and malicious assault, would be to sacrifice the soundest rules to the merest technicalities. If the defendants have deliberately conspired beforehand to attack the plaintiff in revenge for some previous insult to one of them, the result might be very different. But these are matters justly within the province of the jury—a tribunal by its very nature and constitution peculiarly adapted to pass upon such
The second bill of exceptions involves substantially the same matters as the first. What has been already said renders unnecessary any further discussion of that point. For the reasons already stated, I think the circuit court ought to have permitted the witness to answer the question propounded by defendant’s counsel.
Before passing from this branch of the case, it is proper to notice the fact that the postal card is not incorporated in either of the bills of exception. This was plainly a mere inadvertence. There is enough in the record to show the character of this communication, and that it contained injurious reflections upon the defendant, Wm. M. Davis, and enough to show it was proper for the consideration of the jury. It is, however, not at all material, because the newspaper publication is a part of the bill of exceptions, and its exclusion is sufficient to reverse the judgment.
It is stated in the third bill of exceptions, that the defendant introduced a witness Samuel Green, a man of color, and asked him to state if some time previously, the plaintiff approached the witness in regard to the present case and made any request that the witness would testify for him, and the witness was requested to state the time, place and circumstances of the conversation : and the defendant announced that their object was to discredit the plaintiff who had testified in the cause, by showing that the plaintiff had attempted to fabricate testimony. If it be conceded that the evidence was proper for the purpose intended, it is clear that no foundation had been laid for its introduction. The plaintiff being introduced as a witness, and the object being to discredit him as such, the same rules are appli cable to him that ajjply to any other witness.
It appears from the fourth hill of exceptions, that the plaintiff introduced a witness -who was asked if he wras acquainted with the general character of the plaintiff for truth and veracity; to which the witness replied he had ii known the plaintiff for six or seven years, at Sulphur springs ten miles from Marion and at Marion, and that he knew the plaintiff’s general character for truth and veracity as wrell as any other man’s character against whom he had never heard anything alleged; that he had never heard plaintiff’s character called in question, &c. The defendant moved the court to exclude this’ answer, upon the ground that no proper foundation wras laid for the introduction of the testimony. The court, however, overruled the motion, and the defendant excepted. It will he observed the witness does not say he never heard the plaintiff’s charac
It appears from the fifth bill of exceptions that the plaintiff, for the purpose of sustaining his character for truth and veracity, introduced a witness, who testified that he lived in the neighborhood of the plaintiff, and had never heard anything said against him as a man of veracity until the suits of Davis v. Franke and the present suit were instituted. Upon cross-examination the defendant asked the witness if he had not heard a number of the plaintiff’s neighbors testify in both suits that they were acquainted with the plaintiff’s general character for truth and veracity among his neighbors; that it was bad, and they would not believe him on oath. To the answering this question the plaintiff objected—the court sustained the objection, and the defendants excepted. If the object of the defendants in asking the question, was to impeach the plaintiff’s character as a man of truth and veracity, the question was clearly inadmissible, for it proposed to extract from the witness Avhat a number of persons
On the other hand, if the object was to discredit the witness under examination, or to test his accuracy and means of observation, the question was equally inadmissible. For the witness had just said in effect that the plaintiff’s character had been called in question on the trial of the suits, and the defendants’ question was therefore hut a repetition of the witness’ statement, in the form of an interrogatory; and was obviously hut an adroit attempt to get from the witness what certain persons had stated on a particular occasion in derogation of the plaintiff’s character. The effect of the question was not to test the accuracy of the witness or his means of observation, but to bring into the cause statements made by other witnesses on the trial of other suits as proof of general character. I think therefore the circuit court did not err in excluding the answer to the question set out in the fifth hill of exceptions. This disposes of all the questions arising upon the record, and the result is the judgment must he reversed, the verdict set aside and a new trial awarded.
Christian, Anderson, and Burks, Js., concurred in the opinion of Staples, J.
The judgment was as follows:
This day came again the parties, by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the tran
Judgment reversed.
