199 Ky. 365 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
— Affirming.
Appellee and plaintiff below, Susan M. Pettitt, recovered a judgment in tlie Nelson circuit court against appellant and defendant below, A. R. Murpby, for the sum of $700.00 as damages for injuries inflicted upon plaintiff by defendant unlawfully assaulting, beating and bruising her from the effects of which, according to the averments her petition, she suffered mental and physical pain and in addition brought about her miscarriage and caused her to abort a fetus about two months old. The answer admitted the commission of the assault and battery on plaintiff, but denied its extent as alleged in the petition, as well as the damaging effects of it and pleaded the affirmative defense of son assault demesne. That plea
A new trial was refused defendant and he has appealed and Ms counsel urge as reversible errors (1), incompetent evidence introduced by plaintiff over his objection; (2), error of the court in authorizing the jury by its instructions to return punitive damages, and (3), that the verdict did not follow the instructions of the court by separately fixing the compensatory and punitive damages if the jury returned any of the latter. The motion for a new trial also complained of the refusal of the court to give instructions offered by defendant and of the instructions which the court gave on its own motion, but that ground is not argued in brief and presumably it is abandoned. However, we have carefully examined the given and refused instructions and fail to discover any support for this contention, since the given instructions cover all the points contained in the offered ones and to our minds they were exceptionally clear and accurate.
It will be necessary in disposing of the grounds relied on in brief of appellant’s counsel to make a statement of the substance of the testimony. Plaintiff was the wife of a tenant on defendant’s farm in Nelson county. The tenancy was for a year, expiring in March, 1921, and the assault complained of occurred at the bam on the leased premises about nine o ’clock a. m. on February 28 of that year. Defendant had driven his wagon to the home of a neighbor who lived some distance beyond the premises occupied by plaintiff, her husband and family, for the purpose of getting some article he had purchased at a public sale given by his neighbor. It appears that he carried along in his wagon a box in which he intended to place a pig that was in the tenant’s barn and which defendant had delivered to the tenant some two months before. Just prior to the delivery of the pig to plaintiff’s husband defendant had purchased three pigs from a neighbor, one of which was blind in one eye, had no ears and was deaf. According to his testimony, he delivered that pig to plaintiff’s husband under an arrangement whereby it was to become the property of the latter on certain conditions, but if those conditions did not occur defendant would be entitled to the pig by allowing a credit on any sum due to him from the tenant on final settlement at an agreed valuation for the tenant’s attention to the pig. Conceiving that under the terms of the arrangement, testified to by him, defendant concluded that
Coming-now to the argued grounds for reversal, it is contended under ground (1), that the court erred in permitting plaintiff to testify that her husband was in bad health. Perhaps, technically, the testimony was irrelevant. It was no doubt elicited for the double purpose of showing (a) that plaintiff, because of the physical condition of her husband, was compelled to do a portion of his work and to perform more than her ordinary household duties, which under the proof .she did, and (b), to explain away the intimation by plaintiff that she was the directing and controlling boss in her husband’s household, including the affairs more properly appertaining to his duties as the head of the family. It might have some remote bearing on those two points, but whether so or not, we fail to see how it could in the least materially affect the substantial rights of the defendant, and in the absence of such effect we are not authorized to grant a new trial under the express provisions of section 340 of the Civil Code, and an unbroken line of decisions based thereon. Neither do we find any material error in admitting the evidence complained of as to who was entitled to the possession of the barn. Defendant, himself, introduced the written contract of tenancy and the testimony of plaintiff complained of followed that testimony and did not contradict the substance of the writing; but if he had we are by no means certain that it was incompetent, since we are of the opinion that plaintiff had the right to show that she was not only lawfully in possession of the pig, about which the controversy arose, but likewise lawfully in possession of the barn in which it was kept and which plaintiff was breaking at the time of the difficulty for the purpose of possessing himself of the pig. It at least showed that plaintiff was at the barn where she had a right to be, and so far as the proof shows she had the right to protect its contents, which were either the property of her husband, or of herself and husband. Even according to the testimony of defendant the husband of plaintiff was some sort of bailee of the pig and defendant as bailor could not repossess himself of it by force of arms.
Instruction 4 given by the court said: ‘ ‘If the jury find for the plaintiff, and find both compensatory and punitive damages for her, they will say in their verdict how much they find for compensatory damages and how much they find for punitive damages; ’ ’ and instruction 5 authorized the jury to mitigate any punitive damages found by “any matter of provocation which preceded the assault and battery, ’ ’ if the jury believe there was any such preceding provocation on the part of plaintiff. Under ground (3), it is contended that the jury returned a general verdict for $700.00 and did not follow the instructions given in number 4. It will be observed that the instruction only authorized a separation of damages in the event that the jury awarded punitive damages in favor of plaintiff, and in the absence of any such separation it will be presumed that the entire verdict was for only compensatory damages, although they were authorized if they believed the testimony of plaintiff (which they evidently did) to supplement the compensatory with punitive damages. If we should conclude that any part of the verdict represented punitive damages, we would not feel authorized to reverse the judgment solely because of the failure of the jury to carry out the direction of the instruction, since it evidently could not be considered in the light of all the facts of the case as materially affecting defendant’s substantial rights. Independently, however, of that consideration, we think the evidence amply sufficient to sustain the verdict as representing compensatory damages alone. Accepting the facts as necessarily found by the jury, defendant, who was a man about 42 years of age and weighed 200 pounds, without provocation or legal excuse, assaulted the plaintiff, a woman and the mother of several children, and knocked her with his fist to her knees and then kicked her in the side. She necessarily suffered some physical pain and some mental anguish growing out of the humiliation of such treatment, to say nothing of the subsequent miscarriage, which under the testimony the jury had the right to infer resulted
Finding no error authorizing a reversal of the judgment, it is accordingly affirmed.