The appellant, Chris Haver-bekken, brought this suit against the appel-lees, Will Johnson, I. M. Solberg, and J. E. *257 Spear, for damages, both actual and exemplary, alleged to have resultеd from an unlawful and malicious assault and battery made by tbe defendants upon tbe plaintiff. It was alleged in tbe petition that tbe assault and battery occurred upon tbe plaintiff’s lаnd, or land belonging to his father. Defendants answered by general denial, and specially that Spear was road overseer, and that they were all working a public road, under оfficial orders, when tbe plaintiff ordered them to desist from tbe work, and made a threatened attack upon them, and that they acted in self-defense. It was also alleged by dеfendants that tbe .work they were doing was upon a culvert outside tbe inclosure of the Haverbekken land, and upon land which had been acquired by Bosque county for road purрoses.
The case was submitted upon a general charge, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants.
The evidence was conflicting as to whether the difficulty occurred on the Haverbekken lands or upon land outside such inclosure and upon a public road, which had been acquired or attempted to be acquired by Bosque county. Thе evidence is also in conflict as to the reasons for the difficulty, the claim of self-defense, the extent of the injuries to plaintiff, and the means with which they were inflicted.
We are of the opinion that these assignments should be sustained. The testimony referred to was legally inadmissible, and was рrobably, if not manifestly, prejudicial to appellant’s rights, especially in view of the argument made by counsel for the defendants, based upon such testimony. We cannot see any proper bearing that the testimony in question could have had upon the real issues of the ease. As a case illustrative of the reasons why testimony of this charactеr is inadmissible, we cite Croft v. Smith,
“Tbe law of self-defеnse is tbe same as in a criminal prosecution, with the exception of tbe rule of evidence which, in a criminal cause, gives the defendant the benefit of a reasonаble doubt. That doubt, however, is as to the facts, not as to the extent of the right. The stage of the difficulty at which self-defense ceases is just the same, whether the question be investigated civilly or criminally.”
Substantially to the same effect are the following Texas authorities: Wallace v. Stevens,
We are of the opinion that the court’s main charge was a correct statement and application of the law, generally, to the case. We entertain no doubt that the charge was not subject to the objections urged by aрpellant. Therefore the assignménts involving complaints at the charge of the court are all overruled.
*258
If, too, a proper charge should be presented upon the issue that plaintiff did no more than forbid defendants from building the culvert, and that for this alone defendants assaulted him, it should be given. The vice in the charge presented is, in our opinion, because it'assumes that defendants were trespassing upon his lands, and because it does not clearly limit the scope of the charge to an assault and battery committed solely on account of the plaintiff’s having forbidden the building of the culvert. A similar criticism is to be found against the other special charge requested by aрpellant on this issue. It is too broad and ignores the plea of self-defense urged by defendants.
We think the above sufficiently indicates our views concerning the special charges requested by plaintiff for the guidance of the trial court in the event of another trial.
Therе are several other assignments, which it is thought do not require discussion. It is deemed sufficient to say that they have been carefully considered, and are believed to be groundless. Therefore we overrule each of them.
For the errors indicated, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for further trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Érs>I’’or other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
