21 Iowa 379 | Iowa | 1866
The following are the instructions complained of, the first of which was given and the last refused. No question is made as to their relevancy under the testimony in the case.
“ Damages are of three kinds, nominal, compensatory and exemplary.
“ 1. Nominal damages are proper where any right has been invaded, and no evidence is given of any particular amount of loss, and is some very small sum, such as a cent — merely sufficient to carry costs.
“ 2. Compensatory damages are given when no elements of oppression or malice enter into the commission of the offense, and ai;e designed merely to furnish actual compensation for the injury sustained.
*382 “ 3. Exemplary damages are given whenever elements of oppression or fraud or malice enter into the commission of the offense: and in such cases the jury are not limited to actual compensation, nor are they required to scrutinize very closely the amount of their verdict, but blending together the rights of the injured party and the interests of community, they 'may give such a verdict as will compensate for the injury, and at the same time inflict some punishment upon the defendant for his wrongful act, pro-, tect society and manifest the detestation in which the act is held by. them. In this case you may give either nominal, compensatory or examplary damages, as you may believe yourselves justified by the evidence.” (Given and excepted to by defendant.)
“ In a case of assault and battery the law provides for the punishment of the offender by a criminal prosecution against him; and in a civil suit against him by the party injured, the jury are not to give a verdict against the defendant for the purpose of punishing him.” (Refused and excepted to by defendant.)
It will be observed, that in the first instruction as given by the court to the jury, they are told, first, that they are not limited to actual compensation; secondly, that they are not required to scrutinize very closely the amount of their verdict; and, thirdly, that they may Mend together the rights of the injured party, and the interests of community and thereby compensate the plaintiff for her injury, to which compensation they may-add another amount as punishment upon the defendant for his wrongful act, then add still another amount to protect society, and yet further and finally they may add another amount to manifest the detestation i/>% which the act is held loy them.
We shall have occasion, in a subsequent part of this opinion, to notice the authorities' (case and elemental) going to support the various above italicized portions of
Without passing, just here, upon the correctness of the other portions of the instruction, we think that after telling the jury that they may compensate the plaintiff, punish the defendant, and protect society, and not scrutinize these amounts very closely, that they may also add such further sum as will manifest the detestation in which the act is held by them, is, to speak mythologically, “ piling Pelion and Ossa on Olympus,” and is without good foundation, as we think, in principle or precedent.
This question has been discussed by counsel only to a limited extent; and that, too, in connection with the instruction as refused, in which the court was asked to instruct the jury that since assault and battery was punishable by criminal prosecution, they could not “ give a verdict against defendant in this case for the purpose of punishing him.” We propose to examine the questions separately, and, first, as to the right of the jury to give damages by way of punishment.
Without now stopping to review or discuss at any length the numerous cases in which this question, has been discussed or decided by the courts of-England and ■this country, we may state that we have carefully examined over one hundred different cases, and find that a majority of them decide (the necessity or propriety of the decision being involved in the determination of the case) that vindictive or punitory .damages may be given
He would be a bold jurist who, in view of these authorities, should hold that the doctrine of exemplary, vindictive, or punitive damages had no foundation in law. Since the time of the controversy between Professor Greenleaf and Mr. Sedgwick (1847) on this subject, a large majority of the appellate courts in this country have followed the doctrine advocated by Mr. Sedgwick in that controversy; and our own Supreme Court has expressly denied, on the authorities, the correctness of Professor Greenleaf’s views [Frink & Co. v. Coe, 4 G. Greene, 555); and in the same case expressed the opinion that, under certain circumstances, exemplary damages should be entertained. In a case against a physician for malpractice, it was held by our court that the plaintiff was not restricted to actual damages. Cochran v. Miller, 13 Iowa, 128. And in other cases our court has indirectly recognized the same doctrine. Thomas v. Isett, 1 G. Greene, 470; Denslow v. Vanhorn, 16 Iowa, 476; Kinyon v. Palmer, 18 Iowa, 377. See also Rev. 1860, §§ 3112, 3113, 3183.
It seems that the terms exemplary, vindictive, punitive, imaginary, presumptive, speculative and smart money, are used in law as synonymous; and the first three were expressly held in Chiles v. Drake (2 Metc. [Ky.], 146) to be synonymous terms. While these words certainly have a critical or technical difference of signification, as defined by lexicographers, yet they have been too long used as synonymous by legal writers to now justify the making
The controversy on this subject between Professor Greenleaf and Mr. Sedgwick may, perhaps, after all the attention and discussion it has excited, be found to be a controversy as to the terminology of the law, rather than as to the extent of the right' of recovery or the real measure of damages. Professor Greenleaf holds that while the plaintiff' can only recover compensation, he is not confined to the proof of actual pecuniary loss, but that the jury may take into consideration every circumstance of the act which injuriously affected the plaintiff, not only in his property, but in his person, his peace of mind, his quiet and sense of security in the enjoyment of his rights; in short, his happiness. But it must affect Ms happiness, not his neighbor’s; and therefore to this question alone the jury should be restricted. Sedg. on Meas, of Dam., 609. While Mr. Sedgwick holds that whenever the elements of fraud, malice, gross negligence, or oppression mingle in- the controversy, the law, instead of adhering to the system or even the language of compensation, adopts a wholly different rule. It permits the jury to give what it terms punitory, vindictive, or exemplary damages; in other words, blends together the interests of society and the aggrieved individual, and gives damages, not only to recompense the sufferer, but to punish the offender. Sedg. on Meas, of Dam., 623. ’
The difference arises, not in ,the statement of the respective propositions, but in the restatement or construction which each puts upon the rule stated; “in short ” says Professor Greenleaf, “ Ms happiness,” while Mi’. Sedgwick says “ in other words blends together the interest of society and the aggrieved .individual,” etc. But some of the'courts, which follow the rule as stated
Under the rule, as stated by Mr. -Greenleaf, this increase of damages resulting from the character of the defendant’s conduct, showing fraud, malice or oppression, is given to the plaintiff as compensation for the invasions of his “ peace of mind, his quiet and sense of security in the enjoyment of his rights;” while under the rule, as stated by Mr. Sedgwick, this increase is given as “punitory, vindictive or exemplary damages.” In either case, and under either rule, the amount given by the jury is “ imaginary,” “ presumptive ” or “ speculative,” with them; that is, the jury have not, and in the nature of things cannot have, in either case, any pecuniary standard by which to measure the amount of compensation or damages, to which the plaintiff is entitled.
It is, perhaps, true that the broad and general language -of the rule, as stated by Mr. Sedgwick, tends more to convey to a jury the idea of their unlimited and unrestrained power, jurisdiction or control over the amount of their verdict, than the rule, as stated by Mr. Greenleaf; and that, under that rule, jurors would more frequently
It must be remembered that the doctrine of giving damages as a punishment for the malicious or oppressive act of the defendant, if they are construed as punishment, must be limited to cases where the act done is not punishable by the penal or criminal laws of the State. For it is a principle of the common law, and one which is embodied in many of the State Constitutions that no person shall be twice punished for the same cause — nemo Ms <oexa,ri pro eaclem causa.
And if the rule of giving damages as a punishment cannot be applied in cases where the act is punishable by the criminal laws of the State, then it cannot be a general rule and would operate unequally.
Take this case for illustration. If the petition contains a true statement of the acts of the defendant, the verdict is certainly little enough. But the statute limits the penalty for the crime those acts constitute to one hundred dollars and thirty days imprisonment. Now, if no damages by way of punishment can be given when the act is punishable by the criminal laws of the State, thé penalty in this case would amount to a positive benefit to the criminal. The term “punitive damages,” as contained in Mr. Sedgwick’s rule, is construed in some States as a punishment for the act, and the rule is, therefore, held in Massachusetts and Indiana, and perhaps other States, not to apply in cases where the act is punishable by the criminal laws of the State. Austin v. Wilson, 4 Cush., 273; Tabor v. Hutson, 5 Ind., 322; Butler v. Mercer, 14 Id., 479; Nossaman v. Rickerts, 18 Id., 350. While
In New York it has been held that punitive damages are given as a punishment, and may be given where the act is criminally punishable also; and that in such cases the remedy for the defendant is to procure a suspension of the judgment in the criminal case until the civil ease is tried, and then avail himself of the verdict in the civil action by way of mitigation of the penalty in the criminal case. Cook v. Ellis, 6 Hill, 466; see also Cole v. Tucker, 6 Texas, 266; Wilson v. Middleton, 2 Cal., 54; Corwin v. Walton, 18 Mo., 71.
But the clear weight of authority is with the rule as laid down in Chiles v. Drake, supra; in substance, that the damages allowed in a civil case by way of punishment, have no necessary relation to the penalty incurred for the wrong done to the public / but are called punitive damages by way of distinction from pecuniary damages, and to characterize them as a punishment for the wrong done to the mdwidual. In this view, the awarding of punitive damages can in no just sense be said to be in conflict with the constitutional or common law inhibition against inflicting two punishments for the same offense.
The instruction as given, aside from the portion .discussed in the first part of this opinion, being fully sustained by the authorities, was not erroneous; nor was it error to refuse to give the second instruction (copied above) as asked by the defendant.
Reversed.