Aрpeal by plaintiff from a judgment for defendant in an actiоn for damages for assault and battery. The cause was tried by the court without a jury.
The evidence, stated in the light most favorable to the prevailing litigant, discloses that on May 21, 1950, about 10:30 p. m., plaintiff went to the home of defendant, a neighbor, to inquire about his .dog which was missing and which fre *364 quently had gone to defendant’s home. The dog had been the subject of disagreement between the wives of the parties on several prеvious occasions. When defendant, in response to plaintiff’s knock, opened the door, the dog ran out from insidе the house. Defendant testified that plaintiff immediately started talking in a loud tone of voice, told him he did not want defendаnt or his wife to feed the dog or keep it at their house; that plaintiff kept “waving his hands, and while he talked, his face was рretty flushed and he was pretty excited, like he had been drinking, аnd he kept arguing with me and one word led to another and I dоn’t know the man, but I do know of him. I know he had trouble with the Teamsters’ Uniоn and Frowiss and him beat up a couple of friends of mine, and I got a little afraid, and towards the end, after I had asked him to go three times, and he kept waving his hands, I thought he was going to strike me, and I struck him or pushed him, and I went in and closed the door.” Plaintiff called the police but no arrest was made nor was any criminal action had.
The court found that plaintiff precipitated the argument; defendant ordered plaintiff to leave his premises; plaintiff advanced threateningly tоward défendant; defendant struck him once; two of plaintiff’s teeth were loosened, necessitating dental care; defendant used reasonable force in defense of himsеlf and in removing plaintiff from his premises; plaintiff failed to prove by a preponderance of evidence thаt defendant used or attempted to use wilful and unlawful force upon the person of plaintiff.
The issue of self-defense was pleaded by defendant and litigated. The determinatiоn of which of the two parties precipitated the fight, and whether defendant acted in self-defense, and whether in sо doing he used more force than was reasonably neсessary under the circumstances, were questions for the trier of fact.
(Landegren
v.
Quilici,
Affirmed.
Shinn, P. J., and Wood (Parker), J., concurred.
