CORWIN MCLAUGHLIN, by Nеxt Friend, SEYMORE MCLAUGHLIN, v. ANNA E. MARLATT and FRANK MARLATT, Administrators of Estate of LEWIS MARLATT, Appellants.
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
December 30, 1922
296 Mo. 656
Division One
ASSAULT AND BATTERY: Trespass or Negligence: Intentional or Negligent Shooting Another: Pleading and Proof. Allegations of facts constituting a cause of action for the recovery of damages for personal injuries wilfully inflicted are not sustained by proof of injuries negligently inflicted. A charge of an assault and battery is not sustained by proof that the personal injury was merely negligently inflicted. [Overruling Conway v. Reed, 66 Mo. 346.] - ——: ——: ——: ——: Measure of Damages. The statute requires that the petition shall contain “a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action,” and where one person is injured by the discharge of a fire-arm in the hands of anothеr, he may have an action for assault and battery, if the shooting was intentional; or he may have an action for negligent injury, if the shooting was unintentional and the result of negligence. But the cause of action in the one case is different from that in the other, and both cannot arise on the same state of facts. Different elements of proof are required in the two actions, and the measure of recoverable damages is different.
- ——: Intentional Shooting: Contributory Negligence. A petition charging that defendant “unlawfully and wrongfully shot the plaintiff with a shotgun loaded with gun powder and leaden balls, which shotgun the defendant then and there held in his hands” can be construed only as charging an intentional shooting, and a plea of contributory negligence to such a charge is a queer anomaly.
- NEGLIGENCE: Shooting Implied Invitee: Trespasser: Ordinary Care: Sufficient Evidence: Contributory. In the afternoon of August 23rd defendant had been fishing near his premises. Foxes had been catching his chickens, and he took with him a shotgun, and as he returned he went through his bottom farm to a place where two young men were cutting brush. The three sat down on the ground and engaged in conversation. Just east of them was his corn field, bounded by a fence, along which were bushes three or four feet high, and beyond it was grass twelve to eighteen inches
high, and next to the grass was growing corn. Plaintiff was sixteen years оld, knew where the young men were cutting brush and started to the place to pay them a visit, going through the corn field. He had on new blue overalls, a blue-and-white striped jacket and a hickory hat. When he was two or three rows from the edge of the corn field and seventy-five to one hundred feet from where the three men were sitting, he could not see them, but did see the hat of one of the young men and recognized his voice, and stooping over he got a clod and threw it in their direction to attract their attention. He threw a second clod, and still failing to attract their notice, he stooped over to pick up another clod, and just as he was straightening up defendаnt shot him. Defendant testified that one of the young men got up, moved towards the fence and said it was a fox, and that without stopping to investigate, except to observe that the grass was shaking, he shot into the corn field. Held, that plaintiff was not technically a trespasser, but an implied invitee, coming under an implied invitation to visit his friends and consequently defendant cannot escape liability on the theory that he owed plaintiff no duty except not to wantonly or wilfully injure him; but, on the other hand, defendant had the right to fire his gun on his own premises as often as he pleased provided he exercised ordinary care not to endanger the lives of others, and ordinary care in the use of firearms is a very high degree of care. Held, also, that, notwithstanding defendant had no particular reason to anticipate plaintiff‘s presence on his premises or within the direction and range of his gun, it cannot be declared as a matter of law that he was not negligent, if he closed his eyes and fired blindly without taking the slightest precaution to ascertain who or what might be within the range of his gun. Held, also, that the evidence was sufficient to take the case to the jury on the question of defendant‘s negligence, and it was for them to say, under proper instructions, whether under the circumstances he exercised ordinary care before shooting. Held, also, that the evidence was sufficient to submit to the jury the question of plaintiff‘s contributory negligence, for although he did not know defendant was present or had a gun or was hunting foxes, if after throwing the clods to attract their attention he laid down in the tall grass so as to conceal himself and made the grass wave or wriggle in such a manner as to induce the belief that a fox was hiding therein, he should have anticipated that, even if neither of the young men had a gun, a rock or other missile might be thrown at him. - ——: Contributory: Mixed Question of Law and Fact: Instructions. The instructions should not declare plaintiff‘s acts and con-
duct to have been negligence where the question is one of mixed law and fact. It is for the jury to say, not only whether he did the acts dеfendant testifies he did, but whether a boy of plaintiff‘s age, in the exercise of ordinary care, would have anticipated that danger would likely flow from such acts, and therefore to say whether his acts, if established, constituted contributory negligence. - ——: Accident: Intentional Shooting: Instruction. To give an instruction for plaintiff which necessarily means that, if defendant intentionally shot at an object which he thought was a fox but which was plaintiff, he could not escape liability on the ground that the shooting was the result of his negligence, or misconduct, was error. The test of defendant‘s liability, under the facts of this case, was not defendant‘s intention to shoot, but his care or lack of care.
- ——: No Knowledge of Plaintiff‘s Presence: Excuse for Shooting: Instruction. It is misleading to instruct the jury that the fact that plaintiff was on defendant‘s farm without the knowledge or consent of defendant was not “in itself” an excuse for shooting him; it should be further qualified by a direction that defendant‘s lack of knowledge of plaintiff‘s presence is a circumstance to be taken into consideration, with all the other facts and circumstances in the case, in determining whether defendant in shooting plaintiff was in the exercise of ordinary care.
- ——: ——: Telling Defendant to Shoot: That Plaintiff Was a Fox: Instruction. While it is true “that the fact that some one with defendant told him to shoot, that plaintiff was a fox, would not of itself relieve defendant from liability” for shooting plaintiff, the fact that some one told him to shoot, and that the object concealed in the corn and grass and causing it to wiggle was a fox, is a circumstance that the jury may well take into consideration, with all the other facts in proof, in passing on defendant‘s negligence, and an instruction which minimizes its evidentiary value is erroneous.
Appeal from Livingston Circuit Court—Hon. Arch B. Davis, Judge.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Lewis W. Reed, Thos. H. Hicklin and Scott J. Miller for appellant.
(1) When plaintiff proved his injury, caused by being shot with a gun in the hands of defendant, he made his case; and defendant must show that he was not chargeable with negligence as an exoneration; or that it was accidental and not intentional, although negligent, by way of mitigation. Morgan v. Mulhall, 214 Mo. 460; Conway v. Reed, 66 Mo. 355; Morgan v. Cox, 22 Mo. 373. (a) Proof of a negligent or careless shooting will sustain an allegation of an unlawful and wrongful shooting. Conway v. Reed, 66 Mo. 346; O‘Brien v. Loomis, 43 Mo. App. 35; Gibeline v. Smith, 106 Mo. App. 550; Orschein v. Scott, 90 Mo. App. 366. (2) A person is negligent as a matter of law in firing at an object concealed or partially concealed without taking time to discover what it is, which results in his hitting another person. Rudd v. Byrnes, 156 Cal. 636. (3) As firearms are extraordinarily dangerоus, a person who handles such a weapon is bound to use extraordinary care to prevent injury to others, and is held to a strict accountability for a want of such care. 12 Am & Eng. Enc. Law (2 Ed.) 518; Bahel v. Manning, 112 Mich. 24, 67 Am. St. 381; Judd v. Ballard, 66 Vt. 668; Moebus v. Becker, 46 N. J. L. 41; Amear v. Swartz, 46 Okla. 98; Haines v. Kreeger, 25 Pa. Dist. 62; Hawksley v. Peace, 38 R. I. 544; Harrison v. Allen, 179 Ill. App. 520; Harper v. Holcomb, 146 Wis. 183; Welch v. Durand, 36 Conn. 182; Hawkins v. Watkins, 77 Hun. 360; 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 119, note; Manning v. Jones, 95 Ark. 359; 11 R. C. L. sec. 44, p. 689; Wright v. Clark, 50 Vt. 130. (a) In the care and custody of firearms the utmost or highest degree of care must be used, to the end that harm may not come to others, since the degree of care required of one having possession and control of a dangerous article is commensurate with its dangerous character. Brittingham v. Stadiem, 151 N. C. 229. (4) It is only injuries from
RAGLAND, C.—By this action plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries sustained from the discharge of a fire arm in the hands of one Lewis Marlatt. The suit was instituted against the latter in the Circuit Court for Caldwell County, September 20, 1917. Subsequently, pursuant to written agreement of the parties, the venue was ordered changed and the cause was transferred to the Circuit Court for Livingston County. A trial in that court in January, 1919, resulted in a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $4500. In due course defendant prosecuted an appeal to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. That court in an opinion concurred in by two of the judges held that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed and the cause remanded. The third member of the court was of the opinion that the decision was contrary to “the rule of decision, as to what is necessary to be shown in defense or exoneration from liability for the discharge of fire arms, as announced by the Supreme Court,” in certain cases which were cited. The cause was accordingly certified here. Since the transfer of the case the death of the original defendant has occurred, and the cause has been revived in the name of his administrators.
The events giving rise to this controversy occurred August 23, 1916, on the farm of Lewis Marlatt, the
Plaintiff was a boy sixteen years old who lived with his mother and an older brother on a neighboring farm. Whitehead and Franklin were acquaintances of his; he knew where they were cutting brush on Marlatt‘s farm; and on the afternoon heretoforе referred to he left home to go to where they were at work for the purpose of paying them a visit. He came from the east, and his
When plaintiff got to the edge of the corn field he heard some boys talking in the adjoining pasture; he recognized the voice of Franklin; he could not see the persons who were talking, because they were sitting behind some bushes, but he saw Franklin‘s cap. He stopped and listened, but could not understand what they were saying. He then stooped over, got a clod and threw it in their direction to attract their attention. He threw a second clod, and still failing to attract their notice, as he supposed, stooped over to pick up another clod. Just as he started to rise up he saw Marlatt with a gun, and Marlatt shot before he had time to halloo tо him. On cross-examination plaintiff said that he was two or three rows from the edge of the corn field when he threw the clods; that he was within speaking distance of the parties, but did not say a word to them; that in throwing the clods it was not his purpose to scare them or play a practical joke on them, he just wanted to attract their attention in that way; that he could not see them while they were sitting on the ground behind the bushes, but there was nothing to prevent their seeing him when they got up; that his body was below the tops of the corn when he was stooping over to get the clods; and that he was shot as he started to straighten up after getting the third clod. The main body of the charge of shot struck him on the right side of the head and face. He was severely injured and rendered prac-
Marlatt testified:
“We sat down there and were talking, and pretty soon Whitehead said, ‘What is that?’ and I didn‘t hear anything—I am a little hard of hearing—and he jumped up and said, ‘It is a fox; come here;’ and I went and he said, ‘It is a fox; shoot,’ and I thought it was a fox and I shot Mr. McLaughlin.
“Q. Did you see Mr. McLaughlin at the time? A. No, sir.
“Q. Did you know he was there? A. No, sir.
“Q. Did you know any human being was there? A. No, sir; no one but those two boys and myself.
“Q. Tell the jury when you looked when he suggested this to you, what you saw? A. The grass was about eighteen inches high and it was shaking; the ground was a little damp and I grew a little fox tаil and grass, and the corn was a little thin there, and Whitehead said, ‘It is a fox; shoot.’ and I supposed it was when I saw the grass shaking, and I shot.
“Q. You say this fox tail grass was growing in the corn? A. Yes, sir; it was low down.
“Q. How far was the corn from the fence? A. Three or four or five rows.
“Q. You could see the fox tail in the corn three or four or five rows? A. Yes, sir; the corn was thin.
“Q. You could see the fox tail there? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You could see the fox tail grass in the corn three or four or five rows and it was moving? A. Yes, sir; something like that.
“Q. Did you look in any other direction than this fox tail when you shot; did you look up above the fox tail grass any? A. No, sir; I don‘t think I did.
“Q. If Corwin McLaughlin was standing up or stooped over with his hand to the ground—He was about six feet tall at that time? A. Something like that, I guess.
“Q. Then his body would have been above the fox tail grass? A. He was neither standing up nor hunkered down, he was lying down.
“Q. What makes you say that? A. Because I couldn‘t see him in the grass.
“Q. Are you sure he was lying down; the reason you say that was because you didn‘t see him? A. Well, I know he was not standing up or I could have seen him.
“Q. If he had been standing up you could have seen him? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did Whitehead say? A. He said that he heard something, and got up and walked towards the fence and he said it was a fox.
“Q. He got up before you shot? A. Yes, sir; Whitehead did.
“Q. He then said it was a fox? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Might he have said, ‘It must be a fox?’ A. He might have, I don‘t know about that.
“Q. He might have said, ‘It must be a fox’ instead of ‘It is a fox‘? A. I couldn‘t say which way he said it.
“Q. In any event, without stopping to investigate what it was any more than what this young man said, without stopping to ascertain аt what you were shooting, you deliberately pointed your gun in the corn field and shot? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. That is right, is it? A. Yes, sir. The grass was shaking, and the boy said it was a fox, and by the grass shaking and him saying that, I supposed it was a fox; I saw the grass moving and did not see the boy.”
The testimony of the plaintiff was corroborated in part by that of Whitehead; Franklin‘s testimony tended to support that of Marlatt. One of defendant‘s witnesses testified that plaintiff in describing the occurrence to him, two or three months after it happened, said that “he got up pretty close to them and laid down in the grass, ... and made a little fuss to scare the boys.”
When the gun was discharged plaintiff cried out,
The petition alleged “that on or about the 23rd day of August, 1916, defendant, in the County of Caldwell, and State of Missouri, unlawfully and wrongfully shot the plaintiff with a shotgun loaded with gunpowder and leaden shot, which said shot gun the defendant then and there held in his hands.”
The answer denied that defendant unlawfully and wrongfully shot plaintiff, but averred “that injury to plaintiff, if any, was an accident, without malice, unintentional and without any knowledge of the plaintiff‘s presence.” It also charged that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, “in that the plaintiff, for the purpose of playing a practical joke upon the defendant, had entered the сornfield without the knowledge of this defendant and secreted himself in the tall grass so completely that he could not be seen, and did wave and wiggle the grass for the purpose of making this defendant believe, or those with him believe, that it was a fox in the grass.”
For the plaintiff the jury were instructed that if they found that defendant negligently shot plaintiff with a shot gun loaded with gunpowder and leaden shot, and that plaintiff was injured thereby, they should return a verdict in his favor. They were further instructed “that a person using or shooting firearms is required to exercise the high degree of care which an ordinarily careful and prudent person would have exercised when using or shooting a firearm, under the same or similar сircumstances, and that a failure to do so is negligence.”
At the plaintiff‘s instance the court gave the following additional instructions:
“4. You are instructed that if defendant intentionally and on purpose shot his gun at any object in defendant‘s corn field, which turned out to be the plain-
“6. You are instructed that the fact that plaintiff was on defendant‘s farm without defendant‘s knоwledge or consent at the time the defendant shot at plaintiff, did not give defendant any right to shoot plaintiff, nor is that fact in itself any excuse therein.
“16. You are instructed that the fact that some one with defendant told him to shoot, that plaintiff was a fox, would not of itself relieve defendant from liability for damages to plaintiff; defendant cannot escape liability for damages to plaintiff on information coming to him from another that plaintiff was a fox.”
Defendant asked and the court refused a series of instructions, differently phrased, but all to the effect that the jury must return a verdict in his favor, unless they found that he intentionally shot plaintiff.
I. Appellants contend that it was error to submit the cause to the jury on the theory of negligence for two reasons: first, because the petition charged an intentional shooting; and, second, because the evidence did not show negligence on the part of defendant. They also insist that the giving of each of the instructions “4,” “6” and “16,” was error upon any theory. They further complain of the refusal of the trial court to give certain instructions asked by defendant touching the issue of contributory negligence tendered by the answer.
Respondent insists here, as he did below, that his action is for trespass; that in analogy to common law actions for trespass to the person it was only necessary
“The modern doctrine places the liability of one who injures another through the negligent discharge of a fire-arm on the footing of negligence, and not on the footing of trespass, though it may be doubted whether there is much difference in the grounds of liability.” [1 Thompson on Negligence, sec. 780; 2 Cooley on Torts, 1232; Sutton v. Bonnett, 114 Ind. 243; Glueck v. Scheld, 125 Cal. 288; Winans v. Randolph, 169 Pa. St. 606; Cleghorn v. Thompson, 62 Kan. 727; Magar v. Hammond, 54 App. Div. (N. Y.) 532.] Generally speaking one who unintentionally inflicts personal injury upon another will not be liable as for a trespass, if he exercised the prudent care and diligence demanded by the circumstances. [Brown v. Kendall, 6 Cush. 292; Castle v. Duryee, 4 Abb. App. 327.] Nor is the rule any different with respect to injuries resulting from the handling or use of fire-arms. In the early cases involving actions in trespass for such injuries, it is said that defendant in order to exonerate himself must show that the injury was inevitable, and he utterly without fault. In its final analysis this language means simply that it is incumbent upon defendant in such actions, in order to relieve himself of liability, to show that he neither wilfully nor negligently inflicted the injury.
At common law, “in declarations in trespass, which lies only for wrongs immediate and committed with force, the injury is stated, without any inducement of the defendant‘s motive and intention, or of the circumstances under which the injury is committed.” [1 Chitty‘s Plead. 188.] And it seems that an action for trespass for assault and battery was the proper form of
In the instant case, the petition, while it does not expressly allege an assault, can only be construed as charging an intentional shooting of plaintiff by defendant. And the pleadings as a whole exhibit the queer anomaly of contributory negligence being pleaded as a
Where a plaintiff sues to recover for a personal injury suffered from the discharge of a fire-arm in the hands of another, the burden of proof is of course upon him to establish the cause of action alleged, whether it be for assault and battery, or based on negligence. It is no doubt true that the accidental discharge of a gun in the hands of one person, whereby damage is inflicted upon another would under some circumstances be presumptive evidence of negligence, sufficient to take the question to the jury. Under other circumstances no such presumption would arise, as when, for example, the person using or handling the gun would have no reason to anticipate the presence of the person injured or that of any other human being within the radius of its discharge. Thе facts of each particular case must therefore determine the character and quantum of evidence necessary to make a prima-facie case for plaintiff when his action is bottomed on negligence.
II. It is next contended that the evidence was insufficient to take the question of Marlatt‘s negligence to the jury. It is claimed that plaintiff was a trespasser, that consequently Marlatt owed him no duty except not to wantonly or wilfully injure him, and that he could not have done because he was wholly unaware of plaintiff‘s presence. But plaintiff was not
When he fired he did not know that plaintiff was any where on his farm, and he had no particular reason for anticipating his presence or that of аny other human being within the direction and range of his gun. Notwithstanding, it cannot be declared as a matter of law that he was not negligent, if he closed his eyes and fired blindly without taking the slightest precaution with respect to who or what might be within range of his gun. According to plaintiff‘s evidence, when Marlatt shot, the plaintiff was not to exceed ninety feet away, just in the edge of the corn where it was thin and still green; he was dressed in a blue and white jacket and was in the act of straightening up after bending over to pick up a clod. He was plainly visible from where Marlatt stood, and, had the latter looked attentively but for an instant in the direction in which he was shooting before he fired, he could not have helped seeing plaintiff. He himself said, that, without stopping to investigate or ascertain at what he was shooting, he pointed his gun toward the corn field and fired. It was clearly for the jury to say whether under all the circumstances he exercised ordinary care in so doing.
III. There was evidence which entitled defendant to have the question of plaintiff‘s contributory negligence submitted to the jury under proper instructions. It may be that plaintiff did not know that Marlatt was present,
IV. The term “accident” is not defined in plaintiff‘s Instruction 4, but the jury must have understood from the instruction that if defendant intentionally shot at an object which he thought was a fox but which was plaintiff, then he could not escape liability on the ground that the injury inflicted was not the result of any negligence or misconduct on his part. In other words, it made the defendant‘s intention to shoot the test of liability, and not his care or lack of care in the premises. The giving of the instruction was error.
Instruction 6 was misleading and prejudicial. Neither defendant nor any one for him was claiming that defendant had a right to shoot plaintiff simply bеcause the former was on the latter‘s farm without his knowledge or consent. The instruction was also misleading in telling the jury that the fact that plaintiff was on defendant‘s farm without the latter‘s knowledge or con-
While it is true “that the fact that some one with defendant told him to shoot, that plaintiff was a fox, would not of itself relieve defendant from liability,” the fact that some one told defendant to shoot, that the object concealed in the grass and causing it to wiggle was a fox, was a circumstance that the jury might well take into consideration with all the other facts in proof in passing on the question of defendant‘s negligence. But its evidentiary value was minimized if not entirely destroyed by the phrasing of Instruction 16. The instruction also contains the unwarranted assumption that defendant was trying to escape liability on “the mere fact that he may have relied on information coming to him from another that plaintiff was a fox.”
Before another trial the plaintiff should be given leave to amend his petition, if so desired.
For the errors noted the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. Brown C., not sitting; Small, C., absent.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by RAGLAND, C., is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
