100 S.E. 602 | N.C. | 1919
This was an action by the plaintiff, 33 years old, the mother of two children, and living with her husband, who (349) is not made a party plaintiff. The defendant was living near by and cultivating a crop on lands of the Southern Power Company, which he had leased for one year, and one William Boswell had also rented a portion of this land and was in possession of it. Said Boswell gave permission to the plaintiff to tie her cows there in a place where there was shrubbery and trees, but no crops planted. The defendant came to where the cows were tied, armed with a long whip, and in a rule, angry, and insulting manner, as plaintiff contends, and demanded to know why the cows were tied there. The evidence of the plaintiff was that the defendant knew her husband was not at home; that the defendant became enraged and swore that Boswell had no authority to give her permission, and proceeded to untie a cow when the plaintiff forbade him to do so. But he persisted, and while the plaintiff had hold of one end of the chain the defendant violently snatched it, jerking her down and dragged her upon the ground, inflicting many wounds and bruises upon her; that he then proceeded to untie the other cow, and again, in a violent, angry, and malicious manner jerked the chain from the plaintiff's hands, dragging her 75 feet or more, and in the course of this assault he jerked her through a barbed-wire fence into the public road, tearing her clothes almost off her and terribly wounding her limbs and body. This evidence was corroborated by one Frank Baldwin, and the testimony of the four physicians was that the plaintiff was at that time in a delicate condition and on account of the injuries inflicted upon her she had a miscarriage and was permanently injured and made a nervous wreck for life. The defendant gave a different version.
The jury found, upon the issues submitted, that the defendant wrongfully assaulted and wounded the plaintiff, as alleged in the *374 complaint, and assessed her actual damages at $4,000, and defendant appealed.
Judgment thereon for plaintiff. The first four exceptions in the defendant's brief are directed principally to the right of the plaintiff to recover. He contends that the cows were in his lawful possession, being tied on land which he had rented, and that the plaintiff had no right to undertake to prevent his carrying them off, but that she should have resorted to the law to reclaim them. The court charged the jury that the defendant had no right to go there and forcibly take personal property that had been placed there by the defendant, and which were tied and not damage feasant. The jury found the controverted (350) facts with the plaintiff. And, indeed, the court might have instructed the jury that if they believed the testimony of the plaintiff, the defendant, in any event, had used excessive force.
The court properly permitted the plaintiff to testify, as was alleged in the complaint, that she had tied her cows there on permission from William Boswell, who claimed to be in lawful possession, in which she was corroborated by Boswell. Being charged with trespass, she had the right to explain her claim of right and to show her good faith. Everett v. Smith,
The court, also, properly charged the jury that the defendant had no right to impound the cows. Revisal 1679, authorizes only the taking up of livestock running at large. S. v. Hunter,
The court, also, properly charged the jury that if the land was in the possession of Boswell, and he had given permission to plaintiff to tie the cows there, the defendant had no right to go there and attempt to remove them forcibly. S. v. Davenport,
The court further charged that if the defendant had the right to go there and remove the cattle, he had no right to do so in a forcible manner or commit an assault on plaintiff in doing so. May v. Telegraph Co.,
The court properly charged the jury: "If you find for a fact that the plaintiff had gotten hold of the chain of the cow; that the defendant jerked her down and dragged her and caused the injury and bruises she has suffered, then he would be liable, and it would be the duty of the jury to answer the first issue `Yes.'" This was correct. Revisal 3620, amended by Laws 1911, ch. 193; S. v. Smith,
The evidence tended to show that the force used by the defendant was excessive. S. v. Taylor,
The defendant's assignments of error 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 are to the charge of the court on the question of damages, but in them we find no error. Exception 7 was that the court allowed as an element of damage a consideration of the plaintiff's capacity to earn money. This Court has repeatedly held that "damages for personal injury include actual expenses for nursing, medical services; also loss of time and of earning capacity
and mental and physical suffering." Wallace v. R. R.,
The eighth assignment of error is because the judge charged the jury that the burden was upon the plaintiff to satisfy the jury, by the evidence, that her injuries were caused by the wrongful acts of the defendant. It was not reversible error not to add "by the greater weight of evidence." The ninth assignment was to the instruction that the jury "had the right to consider her reduced capacity to make a living." This, taken in connection with the whole charge, was correct. The tenth assignment of error was to the instruction that the jury had "the right to consider her expectancy of life." Where injuries are permanent, as testified to in this case, the charge is unexceptionable. Ruffin v. R. R.,
The eleventh assignment of error is because the judge instructed the jury: "She is entitled to recover the present net value of the difference between what she would have earned and what she has *376
been able to earn in her present conditions." In Johnson v. R. R.,
The twelfth assignment of error is because the court charged the jury that, "The evidence of good character of the plaintiff and defendant and the other witnesses is not substantive evidence, but is corroborative evidence for the purpose of better enabling the jury to pass upon the truthfulness of the witness whose character is proven to be good." This is elementary law in civil actions.
The error most strenuously urged in the defendant's brief is that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover for her injury, but that it was for her husband to bring such action, and defendant's counsel contends that "it is the law in North Carolina that the husband is entitled to the society and to the services of his wife, and, consequently, to the fruits of her industry. She cannot contract or render those services to another without his consent. Those rights were given to the husband because of the obligation imposed by (352) law upon him to provide for her support, and that of her offspring, and the right continues unimpaired so long as the duty continues," citing Syme v. Riddle,
The contention made for the defendant in this case was earnestly presented to the Court in Price v. Electric Co.,
It was felt to be unjust and illogical that the husband should recover for labor which the wife had performed outside (353) the household duties, and under a contract she had a legal right to make "as if single," and that when the wife had borne the physical and mental suffering of the amputation of her foot, and a broken arm and other injuries, compensation therefor should go to her and not to her husband, who had suffered nothing. The discharge of household duties, unending and tiresome and without limitation of hours, the rearing of children, the loving companionship and attentions of a wife are full compensation for her right to support by the husband. Accordingly, at the ensuing term of the Legislature, one of the first statutes passed was chapter 13, Laws 1913, above set out, which has settled the law in this State, in no uncertain terms.
Upon review of all the exceptions and construing the charge of the court as a whole, we find
No error.
ALLEN, J., concurring in result.
Cited: Croom v. Lumber Co.,