127 Iowa 437 | Iowa | 1905
Complaint is made of the instructions, but, without extending this opinion by unnecessarily setting them out at length, it is sufficient to say that the instruction which, as it is complained, required plaintiff to prove that the acts of defendants were malicious and willful, had reference only to exemplary damages, and plaintiff has no ground to complain, inasmuch as he did not recover a verdict for even actual damages.
As to another instruction, it is contended that it was
Another instruction is complained of because, as it is claimed, it authorizes the use of necessary and reasonable force, and the infliction of reasonable injury upon a prisoner, to prevent continuance in the úse of violent and abusive language. We think it is not a debatable proposition that when a prisoner is under arrest the officer may use reasonable force for the purpose, of preventing him from keeping up an uproar and disturbing people in the vicinity by the use of violent and abusive language, and we are satisfied that the instruction was correct.
No other errors are claimed by counsel for appellant, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.