45 Iowa 48 | Iowa | 1876
The plaintiff was sworn in his own behalf, and was asked the following question: “ State what expense, if any, you were to in looking after and defending the divorce suit brought against you by your wife.”
The defendant objected to this question on the ground that the damage sought to be proved was too remote. The objection was overruled, and plaintiff answered that he spent thirty days time, worth two and one-half dollars per day, and paid his attorneys twenty-five dollars. The admission of this testimony is assigned as error.
The testimony, we think, was improperly admitted. Dam
An action for divorce on the ground of inhuman treatment is not the proximate consequence of a charge of larceny or adultery.
General damages are such as the law implies or presumes to have accrued from the wrong complained of. Special damages are such as really took place, but are not implied by law; and are either superadded to general damages, arising from an act injurious in itself, as where some particular loss arises from the uttering of slanderous words actionable in themselves, or are such as arise from an act indiiferent and not actionable in itself, but injurious only in its consequences, as where words become actionable only by reason of special damage ensuing. Chitty on Pleading, Vol. 1, p. 458, quoted in Sedgwick on Damages, sixth edition, p. 732. But damages, both general and special, must be the natural and proximate, though not the necessary, consequence of the act complained of. Sedgwick on Measure of Damages, p. 66; Beach v. Ranney, 2 Hill, 309 (314). A man is not responsible for all the remote and possible consequences which may result from his act, although he may be a wrong-doer. Beach v. Ranney, supra.
Now, whilst desertion by the wife of a husband against whom simply a slanderous charge of larceny and adultery had been preferred, might, in exceptional cases, follow, as a consequence of the charge, yet we think that such a result is not the natural and proximate consequence. A rule of law must not be adduced from what might follow in exceptional cases, and with peculiar temperaments, under particular circumstances, but from what is likely to follow under ordinary cir
The petition alleges that defendant charged plaintiff with being a whore-master, and that he was whoring around .Millersburg. Plaintiff being a married man, these words imputed to him the crime of adultery, and they are actionable <per se.
This instruction is erroneous in that it charges that a fact existed; but whether defendant was at all prejudiced by this charge we have no means of determining, for the evidence is not in the record.
The instruction, however, is, we think, otherwise erroneous. If the plaintiff took the pig into his possession with the intention of appropriating it to his own use, he was guilty of the crime of larceny, although he afterward let it go. Harrison v. The People, 50 N. Y., 518; Commonwealth v. Tuckis, 99 Mass., 431. The fact that plaintiff let the pig go was a proper consideration for the jury in determining the intent with which he took it into his possession.
In Forshee v. Abrams, 2 Iowa, 571 (579), it was held that if a defendant imputes a crime, and justifies in his defense, he must, in order to sustain his plea, adduce such evidence as would be required to convict the plaintiff if on his trial for the crime imputed to him. The same doctrine was held in Fountain v. West, 23 Iowa, 9; and in Ellis v. Lindley, 38 Iowa, 461. It is claimed, however, that these decisions refer to the quantum and not to the kind* of proof. This may be admitted. Section 4427 refers to the quantum of proof. It does not make the confession of the defendant inadmissible as evidence, but declares that alone it shall not be sufficient in quantity to warrant a conviction. If the confession of the
For the errors above considered the judgment is
Eeversed.