11 Md. 536 | Md. | 1857
The following opinions were delivered in the case.
This is an action of assault and battery, brought by the appellee against the appellant. The pleas were “not guilty and “son assault demesne;” the replication to the second plea was “de injuria et cetera.”
The plaintiff gave evidence of the battery complained of,
The second exception of the appellant, grows out of the court’s allowing the plaintiff to give evidence, with a view of increasing his damages, that he was a laboring man, and had a wife and children to support.
The general rule is, that it is not necessary to state specially any matters which are the legal and natural consequences of the battery, nor are the jury confined to the mere corporal injury which the plaintiff has sustained; but they are at liberty» to consider the malice of the defendant, the insulting character of his conduct, the rank in life of the several parties, and all the circumstances of the outrage, and thereupon to award such exemplary damages as the circumstances may, in their judgment require. 2 Greenlf. on Ev., sec. 89. In McNamara vs. King, 2 Gilman, 436, the court say, that “in actions of this kind, the condition in life, and circumstances- of the par
After testimony given by a witness named Howard, for the purpose of discrediting the witness, Burgess, and also proving certain conversations, the defendant offered to prove, by the witness, Howard, ‘ ‘that, shortly before the shooting and wounding of the plaintiff, he, the plaintiff, told the witness that he did not consider the defendant always in his right mind;” but the court refused to allow said last offered evidence to be given for any purpose in the cause, and this refusal is appellant’s third exception. It does not appear this judgment of the defendant, by the plaintiff, was ever made known to him, nor does it appear there was any mental imbecility, or liability to mental aberration, of the defendant, nor was any proof proposed to be given to show that, at the time of the perpetration of the -wrong, the defendant was not in the full possession of his mind, save as may be gathered from the facts in the cause, he was governed by wricked and bad feelings toward the plaintiff Without intimating that if either or all these eircum
. On the whole testimony, the defendant submitted to the court four prayers, (numbered, in the record, 1, 3,4, 5,-) all of which, in our judgment, were properly rejected. Bach, apart from other considerations, contained the same vicious principle; that is to say, they denied the right of the plaintiff to recover on the second issue for the excessive assault and wounding, he not having replied specially to the plea of son assault demesne.
The view of the counsel for the defendant, as taken in these prayers, on examination, will be found to rest principally on the case of King & Wife vs. Phippard, in Carthew, 280, and in Skinner, 387. Most, if not all, of the elementary writers, refer to this case for the support of the doctrine contended for by the defendant. That case seems to have been this: the plaintiff declared for an assault and battery committed on his wife, to which the defendant pleaded son assault demesne. The plaintiff replied, not generally, but by confessing the assault, and avoiding it; that is, it was confessed she made the -first assault, by gently forcing from her house the defendant, who had entered it and there misbehaved; the defendant’s misbehavior was the justification. To this replication the defendant demurred, but the court held it to be good, observing
These views will be found to be fully sustained by a very able opinion of the Supreme Court of Vermont, in the case of Elliot vs. Kilburn, 2 Vermont, 470, in which there is a clear review of most of the authorities. An examination of that case will fully establish the rationality of the view we have taken of the prayers in this case, supported, as it is, by the principles of pleading, and the judgments of those most reputed for proficiency therein. And, we may add, that the doctrine is also fully sustained by Crogate’s case, 8 Coke, 66, where it was resolved as follows: “The general plea, de injuria sua propria, &c., is, properly, when the defendant’s plea doth consist merely upon matter of excuse, and of no matter of interest whatsoever; et dicitur de injuria sua propria, &c., because the injury properly, in this sense, is to the person, or to the reputation, as battery or imprisonment to the person, or scandal to the reputation; there, if the defendant excuse himself upon his own assault, or upon hue and cry levied, there properly de injuria sua propria generally is a good plea, for there the defendant’s plea consists only upon matter of excuse.” In this case, the defendant’s plea “consists only upon matters of excuse,” and, therefore, the general replication is good.
We agree with the Chief Justice in the propriety of affirming all the decisions of the .court below, which have been excepted to; and we concur in the views which he has expressed in regard to the first, second and third bills of exceptions. In reference, however, to- the fourth exception, we think the prayers of the defendant were properly rejected, even conceding there is proof tending to show that the plaintiff committed' the first assault; and we prefer placing our judgment on that ground.
Our opinion is, that when, to a plea of son assault demesne, •a plaintiff puts, in a general replication of de injuria sua pro
We are aware that upon this subject the authorities are conflicting, but we think it will appear, from an examination of the reported cases, and the elementary writers referred to in the argument, that the weight of authority sustains the view we have taken.
Judgment affirmed.