43 Iowa 580 | Iowa | 1876
I. It is claimed tliat the verdict is contrary to law; that the fact of the marriage of plaintiff to Michael Kearney was in issue; that it is incumbent upon her to prove such marriage; that she failed to make such proof, and hence, under the law, cannot recover. The plaintiff testified positively that she was married to Michael Kearney by an army chaplain in 1861. Testimony was introduced that she had before been married to one Woods, who was still living, and that he procured a divorce from her in 1866. Whether in view of the cohabitation subsequently to the divorce, a marriage should be presumed after that event, we need not now determine. The point now under consideration is that the verdict is contrary to law. This must mean the law as given by the court, for, so far as the jury is concerned, that is the law of the case.
The court instructed the jury as follows: “If her marriage to Kearney was void, because of her then having another husband living, she cannot claim the benefit which the law is intended to confer on the wife. This, however, would only affect her right to recover for injury in her means of support, and injury to household goods bought by and belonging to the said Michael. If she sustained injury to her person, or to property belonging to her, at the hands of the said Michael while intoxicated, and such intoxication was caused or was contributed to by defendant,' she would still have a right of action against him for such injuries.”
There was proof tending to show that plaintiff" sustained injuries both to her person and property. Hence, under the above instruction, plaintiff might recover, although not the wife of Michael Kearney. If it should, then, even be conceded that plaintiff failed to prove her marriage, still it cannot be admitted that the verdict was, for that reason, contrary to law, to-wit: the law given the jury by the court.
III. It is claimed that the verdict is not warranted by the evidence. There was testimony that plaintiff was injured both in her person and property, in consequence of the sale of intoxicating liquors to Michael Kearney, by defendant. The case is clearly not one for our interference upon this ground.
' TY. 'One Mrs. Earl was produced as a witness on behalf of defendant, and testified that she procured a quart of whisky at Fitzgerald’s; that they drank it in Mrs. Adam’s room, and that plaintiff got drunk and had to be put to bed.
On motion of plaintiff this testimony was stricken out, because it related to what occurred subsequently to thebringing of the suit.
It is claimed that the testimony related to a time prior to the commencement of the action. As we understand the abstract, whilst the witness testifies that this occurred before the commencement of the suit, yet she testifies that she does not know when the suit was brought; that the occurrence took place in the spring, and she heard of the suit from Fitzgerald in the summer. But the abstract shows that the action was commenced in November. The transaction must have occurred after the suit was commenced, and the court did not err upon the ground claimed by appellant. • ■
This is in harmony with Woolheather v. Risley, 38 Iowa, 489, and is not in conflict with La France v. Krayer, 41 Iowa, 143; nor with Jewett v. Wanshura, ante, 574. Of course the principle here announced is limited to cases where the several parties contribute to a specific intoxication which occasions an injury.
YI. The court instructed the jury: “If a man addicted to drinking goes to a saloon where intoxicating liquors are sold, apparently sober, and having remained there a sufficient time, is found intoxicated, the fair presumption would be that his intoxication was due in part, at least, to intoxicating liquor obtained at such saloon.”
The correctness of this instruction in the abstract is not assailed, but it is claimed to be inapplicable to the testimony, for that, whilst there is proof that. Michael Kearney was- drunk at defendant’s saloon, there is no testimony that he went there sober. Whilst, as a mere abstract proposition, the instruction should not have been given, yet, if not inherently erroneous, wc are unable to see how it could have worked any prejudice. Had the court instructed the jury “that if they should find from the evidence that Michael Kearney went to defendant’s saloon sober,” etc., this, under repeated decisions of this court, would be erroneous, if there was no evidence upon which to base it. But an abstraction of the kind iu question worked no more real prejudice than would an instruction that it might be inferred a man was drunk if he should be seen lying in a gutter.
Complaint is made of the use of the word voluntarily in this instruction. It is urged that there is and can be no such thing as buying and drinking liquors involuntarily. The objection amounts merely to a verbal criticism. The plaintiff testified that she bought and drank liquors only for medical purposes. It is plain from the whole instruction, taken together, that the court intended to draw the distinction between buying and using intoxicating liquors for the purpose of removing physical ailments and alleviating physical suffering, and buying and using them merely for a beverage.
The record discloses no error.
Affirmed.