No. 3,354 | Cal. | Jul 1, 1874

By the Court, Rhodes, J.:

This is an action for breaking and entering the plaintiff’s rooms, and injuring and destroying his property. The jury were instructed that, in awarding exemplary damages, they might take into consideration the expenses which the plaintiff has incurred about this business in and about this litigation. The amount has not been proved, but your knowledge of such matters will enable you to arrive at something like a just calculation as to what should be allowed as counsel fees, legal expenses, and other expenses incidental to this business and growing out of the wrongful act of the defendant; but those damages can only be given, as I have already stated, as exemplary damages. They constitute no part of the actual damages.”

The question of the correctness of an instruction, substantially the same as this, was presented in Howell v. Scoggins, 48 Cal. 355" date_filed="1874-07-01" court="Cal." case_name="Howell v. Scoggins">48 Cal. 355, and it was held to be erroneous. Since this case was argued, our attention has been called to Earl v. Tupper, 45 Vt. 286; and Hoadley v. Watson, Id. 292, in each of which an instruction to the same import as the one in this ease was given, and the Court held it to be erroneous.

Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial. Remittitur forthwith.

Mr. Chief Justice Wallace did not express an opinion.

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