30 Ind. App. 428 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1903
Action for damages by appellee against appellants for personal injury. The cause was tried upon the amended third paragraph of the complaint, demurrers to the first and second having been sustained. In substance said paragraph alleges that on the Ith day of June, 1900, the appellant Mary P. Golibart who was then the wife of her co-appellant Francis L. Golibart, assaulted and unlawfully and maliciously beat the appellee, tied his hands together with a piece of rope and line, thereby badly bruising his arms, hands, and legs, causing great welts to raise on his arms, hands, and legs, and after so unlawfully and maliciously placing him in said condition, she, Mary P. Golibart, unlawfully and maliciously locked the appellee in a room in her house on Park avenue, in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, and kept him there for a space of some three hours; that Francis L. Golibart, her husband, and said Mary P. Golibart owned said real estate, together with the house in which the appellee was so confined; that the acts aforesaid of the appellant Mary P. Golibart were committed by her in the presence, of her husband Francis L. Golibart, and with his consent; that appellee was not released until some time after his mother had appeared and demanded it, and not until other persons in the neighborhood where the appellee was so imprisoned had demanded his release; that after appellee’s release the appellants unlawfully had possession of his hat, and unlaAviully and maliciously refused to return it upon demand, and he Avas compelled to go to his home, situated some two miles from Avhere the appellee Avas confined, bareheaded and Avithout cover for his head; that by reason of said unlawful and malicious acts of the appellants he has been sick; that his nervous system has been greatly shocked; that he has suffered, and will be compelled to suffer, great pain of body and anguish of mind, — and demanded judgment against both appellants in the sum of $5,000.
Appellants filed separate answers. The answer of Fran
The assignment of error consists of six specifications.
The causes assigned in both of said motions are the same, and may be considered together. Mrs. Lottie Sullivan, the mother of the appellee, testified as a witness in his behalf, that she went to the residence of the appellants after her boy. She was ashed “Just tell when you got there.” She gave a detailed account of what she saw and did after she reached the home of the appellants. In concluding her statement she said: “I said, ‘Are you that woman’s husband?’ and he never uttered a word. I says, ‘Are you that woman’s husband ?’ and he said nothing; and I set my foot in the door, and my hand on the door, and she -forced me back and pinched a blood blister on my finger and foot, until I had to take my hand away, and then she pushed me back and locked the door again, and brought the boy out, or, I unlocked the door and called for help, and— I can not call his name, but there was two men, one was Mr. Sullivan,- — not my husband, another Mr. Sullivan,— and a railroad man came to my rescue, and they came in the house, and that is when she released him. ILe had no hat on. I says, ‘Where is the boy’s hat ?’ She says, ‘Let him go with me and get his hat.’ I says, ‘No; we will go home without the hat.’ That is as far as it went with me. And I never got him until these men came into the front door.” At the conclusion of the statement, counsel for appellants moved to strike out what the witness “last volunteered.” Counsel contends that this was a conclusion of the witness. The motion was indefinite, but taking it to apply to the last statement, to wit, that she “never got him until
To the same witness the following question was aid-dressed: “Describe fully to the jury everything about it.” The witness answered: “The next day he was so nervous and excited I had to take him to the doctor. He has been so ever since. He is so nervous that everything excites him, and he is frightened, it just seems like — The witness, in answer to a previous question, had testified that when she took her boy home she examined him and found welts on his hands made by the rope, and that the skin was broken around his feet, and that his legs and arms were bleeding in places. No objection was made to the question. Counsel moved to strike out the answer. The only reason given by counsel in support of the motion was that the statement was prejudicial to appellants’ cause. ■ This is not a sufficient reason.
• Lewis W. Montgomery, a patrolman of the city of Indianapolis, testified in behalf of appellants. After Mrs. Sullivan had taken her boy away from the house of the appellants, the witness had a talk with appellant Mary P. Golibart, in which she said she told him “about the trouble.” Counsel for appellants then asked the witness this question: “I will ask you if you did not ask Mrs. Golibart if she wanted the boy arrested, and if she did not say to you she did not ?” The counsel stated “We offer to prove in answer to this question that he asked Mrs. Golibart if she wanted Herbert arrested, and she said, ‘No,’ that all she wanted to do was to teach him a lesson.” The court sustained the objection. The transaction was concluded. Appellee had been released, and left appellants’ home. The objection was properly sustained.
Objection was sustained to the following question propounded to appellant Prancis L. Golibart: “You may state whether at any time you gave your consent to her tak
The following question was propounded to Mrs. Golibart on her direct examination: “Now, when you released him, you say there were no marks on his wrists ? A. There were no marks. He was not hurt in any way at all. I had no intention of hurting him.” Upon motion the court struck out of said answer all after the word “marks.” The motion was properly sustained. The portion of the answer remaining answered the -question. The portion stricken out was not directly responsive.
Objection was sustained to a question to Mrs. Golibart, asking her to state who had been at the house wiih her during the day, from the time that Mr. Golibart went away in the morning. The question was immaterial.
The court refused to permit appellants to show that during the day of the assault, from 6 :30 in the morning until the time that the appellee was discovered in her cherry tree she was alone in the house.
Objection was sustained to the following: “I will ask you how many times before the time you discovered Herbert Sullivan in the cherry tree, these trees had been robbed by hoys on that date ?” The court on redirect examination refused to allow appellants to show that during that same day there had been a raiding, either by these bojs or some other boys, on these trees, stealing cherries. There was no error in either of these rulings.
Appellee, in rebuttal, on direct examination, was asked by appellee’s counsel: “What did you say? A. I said she twisted the rope around my wrists right there, and then made a knot here, then put this hand here that way, and made a knot here.” Immediately preceding this question
The court, of its own motion, gave, as instruction number five and one-half, .the following: “We have a statute in this State which provides that ‘Whoever unlawfully enters upon the lands of another, and severs from the soil any product or fruit growing thereon, the property of another, of the value of ten cents or upward; upon conviction thereof shall be fined in any sum not exceeding $100, to which may be added imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six months.’ As you will observe, the penalty provided by such statute is by way of fine not exceeding $100 to which may be added imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six months; and I instruct you that if the plaintiff were guilty of taking cherries from the defendant or defendants without their consent and against their will, such offense would not be a felony. It would be what is known in law as ‘criminal trespass.’ If the value of the cherries so taken amounted to. ten cents or upwards, and would constitute a misdemeanor if it were committed by the plaintiff, the defendant Mary P. Golibart would have no right to seize and tie plaintiff, and, without any warrant or process, confine him in the house of defendants against his will, unless it was reasonably necessary to do so for the purpose of preventing such act of trespass on his part. If you find from the evidence that the
Appellants especially object to the part of the instruction inclosed in brackets. Counsel for appellants affirm the law to be that a private citizen, when either a,misdemeanor or felony is committed in his presence, not only has the right, but it is the duty of such citizen, to capture the perpetrator, if in his-power, and to hold him and to turn him over to the officers of the law; that the only obligation resting upon such citizen making such arrest is to use no unnecessary delay in turning over the prisoner to the custody of the law. The instruction, considered as a whole, correctly states the law. Upon the evidence of appellant, plaintiff was guilty only of misdemeanor.
In Doering v. State, 49 Ind. 56, 19 Am. Rep. 669, it is said that: “The law applicable to arrests by a private person is stated with great precision and clearness by Tilghman, C. J., in Wakely v. Hart, 6 Binn. 316, where,
Instruction seven given by the court of its own motion was excepted to. It is as follows: ''If you find for the plaintiff you will award him such damages as will fairly compensate him for any injuries or indignity he may have sustained. In awarding such damages you may consider the character of his injuries; what physical injury, if any, he sustained, and also the mental suffering, if any; also any sense of shame or humiliation he may have suffered on account of such wrongful acts, if any, that were committed against him; and award him such damages as will be a fair compensation in the premises.” The objection made to this instruction is that it assumes that appellee suffered, when it is not shown by the evidence that he suffered; also that it told the jury that they might consider his sense of shame or humiliation, without confining it to the acts of Mary P. Golibart. The award of damages is limited to any injury he may have sustained. This is a conditional statement, it is not an assumption. The jury, as persons of average intelligence, must have understood that the court limited their consideration to the acts of the appellants, or either of them, and to which the evidence related.
Appellants, in their first instruction requested, asked the
In this connection it is proper to state that there is evidence that on the day on which the occurrence in question took place, a number of school children had attended a musical entertainment at public school No. 45.. These children, of whom appellee was one; were nearly all regular attendants at other schools within the city. After the adjournment of the entertainment the children left the No. 45 school, being between the hours of three and four o’clock in the afternoon on the day in question, and started for their respective homes. Several of them, amongst whom was the appellee, went southward in Park avenue, and finally reached the home of appellants. Upon arriving there the boys got the impression that the house was vacant and unoccupied, there being no blinds at the windows, or any other evidence of occupation in the front part of the house, that being the only part where the children could see from the Park avenue front of the property. They noticed some cherry trees loaded with cherries in the yard where appellants’ house stood, and several of them went into the yard to get some of the cherries. There is evidence that the appellee did not go into the yard, but probably went fifty feet east on Twenty-first street, until he came to a place on
There is evidence that appellee was never in appellants’ yard or on appellants’ premises until after the appellant Mary P. Golibart forcibly and without his consent carried him into appellants’ house. The next day the appellant Mary P. Golibart, before a justice of the peace in the city of Indianapolis, was charged with having on the 7th day of June, 1900, committed an assault and battery upon the appellee in this ease, to which charge she pleaded guilty, was fined by the justice of the peace, and payed or stayed
In view of the evidence the court could not have given said instruction without invading the province of the jury. The evidence as to portions of the foregoing statement is conflicting, but it was for the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses, and to pass upon the conflict. Appellant Erancis L. knew for about an hour before the re-, lease of appellee that appellee was in his (appellant’s) home, tied, and held as a person accused of stealing cherries; it was for the jury to determine from his conduct, and the expression “all right,” he. used in reference to the condition of appellee, at his home, whether he approved of the conduct of appellant Mary P., and consented to appellee’s further confinement. See Little v. Tingle, 26 Ind. 168.
The substance of instruction five requested by appellants, and refused, is covered by instruction number four given by the court of its own motion. The instruction given is not discussed.
• Instructions six and eight requested by appellants, and refused by the court, so far. as they correctly state the law, were substantially given in other instructions.
It is also insisted that the damages assessed are too large. Plaintiff was entitled to damages for physical and mental pain, including humiliation, if any, caused by the injury. There is nothing in the evidence to induce the belief that the jury acted from prejudice, partiality, or corruption. This court would not therefore be justified in disturbing the judgment. Lauter v. Duckworth, 19 Ind. App. 535.
There is no error for which the judgment should be reversed. Judgment affirmed.