This was an action for an assault and battery. The Court instructed the jury: “In actions of aggravated as-
sault and battery, the jury are not limited in assessing damages to mere compensation, but may give exemplary damages, and may take into consideration the plaintiff’s expenses in the prosecution of the suit.” In a note at the 'foot of this charge, Hilliard on Remedies for Torts, and Sedgwick on damages are cited as authority for it.
Hilliard, at the page referred to (442), only says that it “has sometimes been held” that the jury may take the plaintiff’s expenses into consideration.
The instruction given would authorize a jury to take into consideration all the plaintiff’s expenses.
But in Connecticut—one of the States in which it has been held -that the probable expenses of the plaintiff may be considered by the jury as part of the exemplary damages—it has also been decided that the jury cannot take into consideration the taxable costs paid by plaintiff, and which he would recover of defendant as an incident to the judgment, otherwise the defendant would pay the'se costs twice. (Beecher v. Derby Bridge Co.
The bald question presented by the charge is whether the jury can guess at the probable amount paid, or agreed to be paid, by the plaintiff to his counsel, or at the amount of his other expenses, and include such amount in their estimate of exemplary damages.
In a note to the sixth edition of Sedgwick’s Measure of Damages (p. 111), it is said: “It is difficult to see why such expenses should be allowed under the head of ‘ exemplary damages.’ There is nothing especially punitory, as regards the defendant, in the fact that the sum in which he
Except that taxed costs are never allowed, the law, as laid down in the charge, accords with the views expressed by the Supreme Court of Connecticut and of Alabama.
But after full consideration it was held by the Supreme Court of the United States (Day v. Woodworth,
Mr. Justice Greer said: “It is true, no doubt, and is especially so in this country (where the legislatures of the different States have so much reduced attorney’s fee bills, and refused to allow the honorarium paid to counsel to be exacted from the losing party), that the legal taxed costs are far below the real expenses incurred by the litigant; yet it is all the law allows as expensa litis. If the jury may if they see fit’ allow counsel fees and expenses as part of the actual damages incurred by the plaintiffs, and then the Court order legal costs de incremento, the defendant may truly be said to be in misericordia, being at the mercy both of Court and jury. Neither the common law nor statute law of any State, so far as we are informed, has invested the jury with this power or privilege. It has sometimes been exercised by the permission of Courts, but its results have not been such as to recommend it for general adoption, either by Courts or Legislatures.” (372) Again: “The expenses of the defendant over and above taxed costs are usually as great as those of plaintiff; yet neither Court nor jury can compensate him, if the verdict and judgment be in his -favor, or amerce the plaintiff pro falso • clamore beyond taxed costs.”
In Fairbanks v. Winter, (
In Lincoln v. S. & S. R. R. Co., (
The damages found by the jury were not excessive, and if we could be at liberty to disregard the error of the Court below, or were satisfied that it did not influence the action of the jury, we should affirm the judgment.
But it must be assumed that the jury did what they were instructed to do; that they took into consideration the plaintiff’s expenses in the prosecution of the suit.
Judgment and order denying new trial reversed, and cause remanded for new trial.
