168 Iowa 162 | Iowa | 1914
The petition alleged that the defendant did maliciously both bite and strike the plaintiff. The defendant by his answer admitted that he did both bite and strike the plaintiff but he averred that he did the same to repel assaults on the part of the plaintiff upon the defendant and in reasonable self-defense. Fourteen grounds of reversal are laid in appellant’s brief. These grounds, however, all revolve about one or two points and are so treated in appellant’s argument and we shall follow the argument in our consideration of them.
“An alley runs between my house and his and I was out in the alley on the 8th of June of last (1911). There were with me Roy and James Mill, my brothers, and James Pester. Yes, there is a building there, an ice cream house, where they make ice cream. This ice cream building is north of the street running east and west about a half a block south of my house and it is on the same side of the alley as is my father’s house. There is a vacant lot between the corner and my father’s place and this vacant lot runs down to the south end of the street which runs east and west on the north side of the park. I was up at the ice cream house with the boys. I quit work about five or ten minutes after six, and I had heard that this man (defendant) had been talking about me, saying I was a deadbeat and didn’t aim to pay anything, didn’t amount to anything and that I could not get anything around town and I just then happened to see him. When I saw him coming home, I says, ‘ Skinny, what did I ever do to
CROSS-EXAMINATION.
“On this particular afternoon, June 8, 1911, I was close up to the alley and near my house when I saw Roulliard coming home from work. There were some young men with me. My brothers and a man named Pester, four of us. Yes, I came down the alley expecting to have an understanding with Mr. Roulliard as to why he made those remarks about me not. paying my debts. No, I didn’t hear this from the young men that were with me. I heard it a couple of weeks' before, from more than one person, and the last time more than a week previous to this evening. I did not see Roulliard in the meantime. He was working somewhere in the country, and he would not be home in the daytime. He came home at night and went to work the next morning. When I first saw him
“'This was the first time I had seen him since I heard it, and that is why I spoke to him. He was on the sidewalk and I was not far from the sidewalk when I first spoke to him. No, I didn’t reach the sidewalk before he came to me. I came so as to meet him. I was walking south, he was walking east when we' met. I left my brothers and Pester making ice cream when I saw Mr. Eoulliard coming. The ice cream house is not quite a half a block, just on the edge of the alley, I could not tell you how many feet from where I met the defendant. It runs about a half a block. These boys didn’t come down to interfere. They stayed up there. We were not exactly in full view of the boys, but they had plenty of chance to see, nothing to. stop them from seeing. He and I were not there over two minutes when he struck me and ran away. I did not entirely fall when he struck me, but I staggered back a couple of feet. I didn’t expect him to strike me. Then I saw him run away. He left the sidewalk and went south while running. He tried to get away from the locality as soon as he hit me. His house was east of this place and he ran south. He didn’t run very slow, he went right along. He had nothing in his hands. He left his dinner pail on the sidewalk. He put it down when he hit me first and left it sitting there behind when he ran away. When I started out for Eoulliard I saw this stuff that he had left there on the sidewalk. I do not know what you would call ‘a man going after a man that hit him.’ I don’t think I would stand there and let him hit me. There was nothing said about licking him. I didn’t run to shake hands with him. I had no thought of that kind in my mind. Yes, I was mad after he hit me. There wasn’t a word spoken by any of the boys that were there. I ran straight south after him.”
The defendant testified in part as follows:
“. . . Yes, sir, I remember the occurrence on the 8th
From the foregoing it is apparent that the jury could have found that the first blow struck by the defendant was not justified in self-defense and that the biting by defendant of plaintiff’s arm in the later encounter was justified. No in
Looking at the ease on its larger merits, the fight was one of plaintiff’s own choosing. If he did not actually strike the first blow he intended to do so. After two weeks of meditation and watchful waiting he chose the time and place. These were chosen with a view to his complete protection. His two brothers protected each flank and Pester was in reserve 150 feet away. . In the final encounter the brother James was a participant and according to his own testimony took hold of one of the defendant’s arms “and put my knee on his neck and pulled him off.” The defendant was a man forty-seven years of age; the plaintiff and his brother were twenty-nine and thirty-one. The plaintiff weighed one hundred forty pounds; the defendant one hundred eighty. So one had the advantage of weight and the other of wind. The defendant