165 A. 684 | Conn. | 1933
The plaintiff brought this action to recover for injuries suffered by reason of an assault committed upon him by the defendants pursuant to a conspiracy to that end, and from a judgment in his favor the defendants have appealed. No corrections in or additions to the finding which would be material to the issues in the case can be made, and that finding sustains the judgment rendered. The defendants' principal claims of error present a number of rulings upon evidence. The claimed errors in admitting certain questions over the defendants' objections need not be considered because the finding does not show the answers made to them, if any. Donoghue v. Smith,
The defendants claimed that the plaintiff had been unduly familiar with the wife of the defendant Greenberg, who was the sister of the other defendants, and they assign as error the exclusion by the court of certain questions asked in connection with this contention. These facts, if true, would not, of course, have justified the assault. We allow proof of provocation in certain circumstances in mitigation of damages, but this mitigation goes only to exemplary damages and not to those which are compensatory; the circumstances to be considered are such as tend to show that the assault was the result of sudden impulse or passion and to rebut any claim that the defendant was actuated by premeditated malice; and the provocation must be so recent, or at least have come to the knowledge of the defendant so recently, that the passions and impulses created by it have not had time to cool.Matthews v. Terry,
The defendant Greenberg was asked upon his direct examination what information his wife imparted to him prior to his going to Meriden, where the assault occurred, and the court excluded the question. Words or actions admissible in evidence to support a claim of provocation in mitigation of damages are restricted to those immediately connected with the assault, to which the defendant was a party or for which he was responsible. Everts v. Everts,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.