99 Neb. 49 | Neb. | 1915
From a judgment of the district court for Platte county, awarding plaintiff damages in the sum of $3,000, for assault, defendant appeals.
The evidence shows that plaintiff had been working for defendant as a farm hand. Early in the morning of the day of the assault, plaintiff notified defendant that he was going to “quit.” After breakfast plaintiff attended church, an'd later in the forenoon he and two companions drove in a buggy to defendant’s farm. The purpose of the visit was to obtain settlement of plaintiff’s account for wages. On arrival they found defendant in the field cultivating corn. A disagreement arose over the sum of $2. Plaintiff insisted that he must have the $2, and defendant told him he would not get it. Thereupon plaintiff called defendant a vile name. After being told not to do so, •plaintiff repeated the offense, whereupon defendant rushed at him and administered a severe kick in his private parts. While it is not certain that defendant intended to kick him in that part of his person, it is fairly deducible from the evidence that at least the heel of his shoe, as he kicked upward, reached such part. Plaintiff then seized a whip and defendant a wrench. Each assumed a threatening attitude, but actual hostilities proceeded no further. After each had dropped his weapon, defendant drew a check for the amount due, less the $2 in dispute, and gave
By defendant’s second assignment of error it is urged that this was an attempt to introduce a self-serving-declaration which was no part of the res gestee. We do not deem it necessary to decide whether or not the statement was so intimately connected with the assault as to make it a part of the res gestae, for 'the reason that, even if it were too remote, it could not have prejudiced the defendant. Defendant’s own testimony is that he kicked at him. The young man standing nearby testified that he saw him administer the kick, but wavered somewhat as to where the blow landed, stating at one time that the foot struck plaintiff in the breast too high up for even the heel to reach the parts indicated, and in another place admitting that the blow might have been low enough for the heel to have done so. Plaintiff testified that the kick was upon the part of his person indicated. This testimony, supported as it is by the uncontradicted -evidence as to plaintiff’s condition for weeks and months thereafter, is of such a character that, if the testimony of the driver of the buggy had not been admitted, the jury could not have found otherwise than that the plaintiff’s injury resulted from the kick administered by defendant.
About seven or eight days after plaintiff’s injury, his mother arrived at Humphrey, where plaintiff was being-treated by Doctor Lemar. She was interrogated at some length as to the condition in which she found plaintiff,
Defendant’s third assignment of error is that the court erred in refusing to give his requested instruction No. 3, as follows: “You are instructed that while the court has' admitted certain statements and declarations made by the plaintiff to other persons some time after the injury is claimed by the plaintiff to have been received, as to the manner in which his alleged injury was received, you should consider such statements and declarations with caution, and should subject them to a close scrutiny before giving them weight in your deliberations.” This instruction could not properly be applied to the testimony of Mrs. Morfeld, or to the statements and declarations made by plaintiff to her. The statements made to her were not as to who had administered the blow, but simply statements as to his then physical condition — statements made at a time when he was either in bed, or confined to the house, or incapacitated for doing any work — and, while the jury might have been told that they would have a right to take into consideration the circumstances under which such statements and allegations were made, we do not think the court would have been justified in telling them that they should consider such statements and declarations “with caution” and should “subject them to a close scrutiny” before “giving them weight” in their deliberations. If the evidence was proper, and we think it was, the court would not have been warranted in so discrediting it. As applied to the testimony of the witness .Rupert, the young man who was driving the buggy, it
The fourth assignment is that .the court erred in permitting Mrs. Morfeld to testify as to statements made by plaintiff at various times, about a year after the alleged injury, at which times he complained abom- his left side, and stated that standing on his’ feet while he was clerking had hurt him; that, if he wanted to stoop-, it was all right, but as soon as he straightened up it hurt him. None of these statements related to the cause of the injury or to who made the assault. They related simply to plaintiff’s then condition. Plaintiff had himself testified to this condition, and the testimony of his mother that he had, at the time designated, made statements to her in reference thereto was improper; but-, when taken together with all of the other evidence in the case, we cannot say that it was probably prejudicial. We think it would be extending the rule too far to hold that its admission was error for which the judgment should be reversed.
By the fifth assignment it is urged that the verdict was the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury. After a careful reading of all the evidence in the case, we do not think this charge is well founded.
We will now consider the first assignment of error, which is really the important question in the case. This assignment assails instruction No. 7, given by the court on its own motion, and the refusal of the court to give instructon No. 1, requested by defendant. Instruction No. 7 is as follows: “If yon find the injury to be permanent, then, in fixing the amount of damages, you should take into consideration the nature and extent of the injury in all its fair and reasonable consequences, including the impairment of his faculties of generation, if any you shall find, and include future as well as past and present disability, physical pain and suffering.” The part of the instruction assailed is the clause, “including the impairment of his faculties of generation, if any you shall find.” It is argued in the brief that “there was not a syllable of
It is further argued: “There is still another reason why the jury should not have been instructed that they should include in the damages 'the impairment of Ms faculties of generation’, and why the defendant’s requested instruc
The sixth and last assignment” is the general one that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for a newr trial. Finding no error in the record of the trial, this assignment must also fail.
Upon a consideration of the whole case, we do not feel at liberty to disturb the judgment entered in the court below. It is therefore
Affirmed.