79 Mo. App. 534 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is an action which was brought to recover damages for an assault. There was a trial resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed.
The defendant assigns as a ground for the reversal of the judgment the action of the court in overruling his motion to
The special panel, not having been selected and summoned by an officer of the law, should, as we think, have been quashed on defendant’s motion. The defendant had the right to a special panel of jurors selected and summoned by the officer upon whom that duty was devolved by law, and that this right was denied him we think is clear. "We can not say that he was not in no way harmed thereby.
The petition in substance alleged that the defendant with a knife willfully, maliciously andwantonlyassaultedtheplaintiff and cut an eye out. There was a denial of this allegation in the answer, coupled with the defense of son assault demesn There was no admission by the answer of the assault alleged in the petition. Whether the defendant did assault the plaintiff, as alleged in his petition, was the distinct issue in the case. This issue was submitted to the consideration of the jury by the plaintiff’s second and third instructions, as well as by the first given for the defendant.
But the plaintiff’s first instruction left nothing for the jury to determine except as to the amount of the actual damage that should be awarded. It assumed that the actionable assault alleged in the petition had been committed and that it only remained for the jury to determine the quantum of compensatory damages that should be allowed. It eliminated from the case the vital and decisive issue therein. It practically-told the jury to wholly disregard the defenses pleaded by defendant, as well as the evidence adduced by him tending to support such defenses. It is always error for an instruction to assume as true a controverted material fact in a case. Wright v. Fonda, 44 Mo. App. loc. cit. 643; Fullerton v. Fordyce, 121 Mo. loc. cit. 13.
The defendant further objects that this instruction was a comment on the evidence. It seems to us that it is fairly subject to this criticism. It gave the jury to understand that in the opinion of the court defendant was the assailant and that
The plaintiff’s third instruction is not subject to the objection the defendant has lodged against it. It does not assume that an assault was made by defendant on him. It told the jury that if they found the issues for plaintiff, then to allow him such actual damages as was “occasioned by the assault.” This was but telling the jury that if they found the issue in respect to the assault in favor of the plaintiff, then they should allow him such actual damages as was occasioned by the assault. We can not think this instruction faulty in expression.
It results from the foregoing considerations that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.