[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 327
Although the trial judge was of opinion that a smaller verdict would have done better justice between the parties, he felt its adjustment, under the rules laid down by him, was within the province of the jury, and the General Term refrained from interference, because it did not appear they were actuated in rendering it by prejudice, passion or other improper motive. On the other hand, the respondent contends that the verdict would have been much larger if the court had not decided as a matter of law, that in the transaction submitted to the jury the plaintiff was a trespasser. Before this court both decisions are final. We cannot interfere, because of the amount of damages (Oldfield v.N.Y. H.R.R. Co.,
It was held against him that, at the time of the affray, he was upon the defendant's premises for the purpose of doing an act without license or right; that the defendant was justified in removing him therefrom by force; and that the only question was, whether the defendant "exercised more force and violence upon the person of the plaintiff than was necessary to prevent him from completing his trespass." If he did, the court said, the plaintiff would be entitled to a verdict for such sum of money as would fully compensate him for all the injury he had sustained, including detention from his customary duties, and injury or damage in his business, and for all the pain and suffering he had undergone, adding, "and in a case where the jury find the defendant's acts were wanton and malicious, they may, in addition to the compensatory damages, return a sum by way of punitive or exemplary damages — a sum beyond the actual damages, for the purpose of teaching the defendant, and all persons so inclined, to respect the rights of others." The *Page 328 latter clause of these instructions does not appear to be a legitimate result from the assumed facts. They are, first, an assault and battery committed by the defendant; second, circumstances palliating, if they did not wholly justify, the offense; third, those circumstances originating with, and constituting a fault or trespass on the part of the plaintiff; and in view of the finding of the jury, we may now add a fourth, that in repelling the trespasser more than necessary force was used. It will simplify the discussion to bear in mind that no question is made, but that these facts entitled the plaintiff to compensation for actual damages. The exception relates to that part of the charge permitting addition thereto by way of punishment to the defendant and admonition to others.
Whether the doctrine which permits vindictive, or, as they are termed here, punitive or exemplary, damages, can in any action of this character be justified upon principle, it is not necessary to inquire. For, assuming that it is so firmly established as to make any save legislative investigation useless (Hunt v.Bennett,
The defendant was upon his own premises. The plaintiff entered for the purpose, deliberately formed, of doing an act which, if persisted in, would impose a burden upon the land and impair the defendant's enjoyment of his own property. The natural event of such a trespass was to incite resistance, and so lead to a disturbance of the public peace. (Filkins v. The People,
Let us take another view of the charge. Assume that it relates simply to the excess of force, and that the jury were called upon to determine whether it was applied wantonly or maliciously. Still the intention of removal was lawful, and *Page 330
the injury was done in executing it. The willful and deliberate act of the plaintiff, which constituted him a trespasser, was its proximate cause. (Filkins v. The People, supra.) Yet it must be conceded that the defendant was nevertheless bound to confine the force used by him to reasonable limits, defined by the necessity of the case. If he used more he became responsible for all consequences of the excess (Filkins v. The People, supra;Ilott v. Wilkes, 3 Barn. Ald. 304); or to present the point more distinctly, let us concede for that purpose that inasmuch as the law gave authority to the defendant to repel with only necessary force the intruder, he, by excess abusing that authority, became a trespasser ab initio. It still remains that the plaintiff provoked the trespass, was himself guilty of the act which led to the disturbance of the public peace. Although this provocation fails to justify the defendant (2 Greenl. Ev., § 98), it may be relied upon by him in mitigation even of compensatory damages. This doctrine is as old as the action of trespass (Avery v. Ray,
The judgment appealed from should therefore be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
RAPALLO, ANDREWS and MILLER, JJ., concur; FOLGER, Ch. J., and FINCH, J., did not concur in opinion; EARL, J., absent at argument.
Judgment reversed.