12 Wash. 15 | Wash. | 1895
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action upon an attachment bond given by the appellants to Lewis Levy, respondent herein. The plaintiff alleges the actual damage in the attachment proceedings to be $25, but claims $5,650 as exemplary damages. Upon the trial of the cause the jury found for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,010. As the verdict under the pleadings could have been for but $25 for actual damages, on deducting the $400 allowed by the court as attorney's fees in the present action it will be seen that the ver
This case, in any event, will have to be reversed on the instructions given by the court. Instruction 3 asked for by the plaintiff and given by the court was as follows :
“ Under our attachment law, with reference to these attachment suits there are two branches of damages; one is known as Actual damages and the other as exemplary damages. By actual damages the court instructs you that if you find from the evidence that said attachment was wrongfully sued out, and that there was no reasonable cause to believe the ground upon which the same was issued to be true; then you should find, first, for nominal damages in favor of the plaintiff. By nominal damages the. court means any insignificant sum. If you find further from the evidence that the goods described in the complaint were actually detained and withheld from the plaintiff for any length of time, and if you find from the evidence that the use of the same during said time was worth any sum, then you may allow plaintiff for the use of said goods the actual value of such use during such time not exceeding $25 ; and if you find from the evidence that the said attachment was maliciously sued out, then you can go' further and find exemplary damages. By exemplary damages the court means damages by way of punishment to said defendants, Fleischner, Mayer & Co., for acting maliciously. You are the judges of the amount of such damages, if you find from the evidence that plaintiff is entitled to recover such damages.”
The court in the latter part of this instruction has undertaken to define the statutory meaning of the term “ exemplary damages.” Sec. 295 of the Code of Procedure provides that “ in action on such bond [referring to an attachment bond] the plaintiff therein may recover if he shows that the attachment was
The court has instructed the jury that “ exemplary damages,” as used by the statute, means damages by way of punishment to the defendants. This court in the case of Spokane Truck & Dray Co. v. Hoefer, 2 Wash. 45 (25 Pac. 1072, 26 Am. St. Rep. 842), entered at some length into the discussion of the principles involved in exemplary damages, and held there that, in the absence of statutory provisions, exemplary damages in this state would not be.allowed; and we are not inclined, in view of the reasons given for the decision in that case, to extend, by implication or by loose reasoning, the power of a jury to assess damages by way of punishment under the permission of the statute to assess exemplary damages.
This question of exemplary damages is one that has called forth a great deal of discussion by the courts, but we are inclined to think that it was the intention of the legislature, in granting the jury the right to assess this peculiar and not very well defined character of damages, to grant them only the right to assess actual damages, which could not be assessed in the absence of this provision under the' general laws governing attachments. We do not mean by the term, “actual damages,” the actual damages expressed by the statute, of course, such actual damages as could be definitely determined as the.actual loss which the debtor would incur by reason of the attachment, and which loss could be determined or computed; but an undetermined loss and damage which is no less
One of the .most comprehensive and exhaustive opinions which has been handed down on this subject was that of Judge Greene of the Supreme Court of West Virginia, in Pegram v. Stortz, 31 W. Va., 220 (6 S. E. 485). There, under a statute which is fully as broad if not broader than ours, the court held, after a searching investigation and review of all the authorities, that the term “ exemplary damages ” did not comprehend damages by way of- punishment. In summing up the opinion- the court, in this case, says :
“ But, in my judgment, the decided weight of reason as deduced from these decisions, is opposed to the allowance to the plaintiff in any case, of any but compensatory damages, and that in no case should any damages be awarded the plaintiff, not as compensation to him, but as punishment of the defendant. In most of the cases above cited the courts have not reasoned at all on the subject, but they have simply announced views of the law ; and the language used by them has very generally been so indefinite as really to furnish no safe conclusion as to what was thought by the court of the question we are discussing.”
With this view of the law, which we are satisfied is the correct one, the instruction above cited was manifestly erroneous.
The motion of the defendants for a non-Suit in this case should have been granted also on other grounds.
In Burton v. St. Paul, etc., Ry. Co., 33 Minn. 189 (22 N. W. 300), the court says :
“ What facts, and whether particular facts, constitute probable cause is a question exclusively for the court. What facts exist in a particular case, where there is a dispute in reference to them, is a question exclusively for the jury. When the facts are in controversy, the subject of probable cause should be submitted to the jury, either for specific findings of the facts, or with instructions from the court as to what facts will constitute probable cause. ‘ These rules,’ says the court, ‘ involve an apparent anomaly, and yet few, if any, rules of the common law rest upon a greater unanimity or strength of authority; ’ citing many authorities.”
In this case there was no controversy as to the ques
Many other questions have been raised in this case, some of which at least we think are fatal to the respondent’s case ; but, for the errors here commented upon, the judgment will be reversed with instructions to the lower court to grant the non-suit asked for by the defendants.
Anders, J., concurs in the result.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result, but express no opinion upon the proposition first above discussed.