177 F. 885 | 7th Cir. | 1910
Lead Opinion
(after stating the facts as above). If the District Court and this court were at liberty to inquire de novo into the question whether relatrix inflicted a willful and malicious injury upon the person of her 11 year old pupil, a fair answer could not be given from this record. Relatrix and her witnesses gave their present version of her side of the story (some of them admitting on cross-examination that they were adding matters not testified to by them in the state court); but the boy and his witnesses did not attend the hearing in the District Court. We could not properly pass upon the truth of the original charge de novo, without considering the testimony in support of the charge.
Relatrix’s direct adversary in the District Court was not the boy, but the sheriff; and he evidently thought that he was doing his full duty as a disinterested officer of the law when in response to the demand that he show cause why he detained relatrix in custody he produced the writ he held and the record of the proceedings and Judgment on which the writ was issued. And so he was; for a writ of habeas corpus cannot lawfully be used as a means of bringing the original parties into court to relitigate their original controversy — it cannot even be used lawfully to review and revise alleged errors of law or fact in the original litigation. “No court may properly release a prisoner under conviction and sentence of another court, unless for want of jurisdiction of the cause or person, or for some other matter rendering its proceedings void. Where a court had jurisdiction, mere errors which have been committed in the course of the proceedings cannot be corrected upon a writ of habeas corpus, which may not in this manner usurp tlie functions of a writ of error.” Kaizo v. Henry, 211 U. S. 146, 29 Sup. Ct. 41, 53 L. Ed. 125, and cases there cited. Also Ex parte Watkins, 3 Pet. 193, 7 L. Ed. 650, and In re Lennon, 166 U. S. 548, 17 Sup. Ct. 658, 41 L. Ed. 1110.
The character of the “liability,” as that word is used in amended section 17 (2) of the bankruptcy act, is not changed by the fact that the liability was reduced to judgment. Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U. S. 473, 24 Sup. Ct. 505, 48 L. Ed. 754; Boynton v. Ball, 121 U. S. 457, 466, 7 Sup. Ct. 981, 30 L. Ed. 985; Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co., 127 U. S. 265, 292, 8 Sup. Ct. 1370, 32 L. Ed. 239. The question, therefore, is whether the judgment of the state court is conclusive evidence of a liability of relatrix for a willful and malicious injury to the person of the judgment plaintiff.
“Willful and malicious injury,” in the bankruptcy act and everywhere in the law, does not necessarily involve hatred or ill will as a state of mind, but arises from “a wrongful act, done intentionally, without just cause or excuse.” “In order to come within that meaning as a judgment for a willful and malicious injury to person or property, it is not necessary that the cause of action be based upon
In the second and third counts of the declaration the charge was explicitly .made that relatrix inflicted the injury willfully and maliciously; that she intentionally overstepped her authority as teacher, and administered an excessive punishment without just cause or excuse. By her pleas of denial, of authority as teacher, and of self-defense, she accepted the gage; and the jury found her guilty. What the evidence was, what the instructions were, we do not know; nor, if the second and third were the only counts, could we inquire, for unquestionably a judgment thereon would be conclusive that in fact and in law the relatrix had inflicted a willful and malicious injury rtpon .the.person of the judgment plaintiff.
Relatrix contends that under the first count, for trespass vi et annis, a recovery could be had without proof of a willful and malicious injury, and thereupon insists that it was not erroneous for the District Court to inquire de novo into the real nature of the alleged assault. If tire assumption as to the character of the first count were warranted, the predicated result would not follow. The most that would be authorized (if anything) would be to show that at the trial in the state court no evidence was introduced in support of the second and third counts, and that the evidence which was introduced under the first count did not tend to prove a willful and malicious injury. This, not •on the theory of., disputing the record or questioning the adjudication, but on the theory' that the record was ambiguous, and that therefore evidence dehors the record was proper and necessary to disclose what in truth had been adjudicated. The assumption,’ however, is unwarranted, for by the law of Illinois (as generally elsewhere) a judgment for damages • under a count for trespass vi et armis cannot lawfully be rendered except upon proof of a willful and malicious injury. Jernberg v. Mix, 199 Ill. 254, 65 N. E. 242; Gilmore v. Fuller, 198 Ill. 143, 65 N. E. 84, 60 L. R. A. 286; Forsyth v. Vehmeyer, 176 Ill. 365, 52 N. E. 55; In re Mullen, 118 Ill. 551, 9 N. E. 208; In re Murphy, 109 Ill. 31; Paxton v. Boyer, 67 Ill. 133, 16 Am. Rep. 615; Razor v. Kinsey, 55 Ill. App. 605; Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U. S. 473, 24 Sup. Ct. 505, 48 L. Ed. 754; McChristal v. Clisbee, 190 Mass. 120, 76 N. E. 511, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 702. And the full faith and credit to which the judgment of the state court is entitled would not be rendered if a doubt were entertained that the jury under proper instructions based -their verdict on sufficient evidence.
The order appealed from is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the District Court with the direction to dismiss the petition.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). The bankruptcy act in plain terms (section Í7) excludes from the benefit of a discharge liabilities Jfqr. willful and malicious injuries to the person or property of an,'qthpr”; so, .if the judgment introduced against the bankrupt awards recovery upon an issue of liability thus defined, the constitutional re
The judgment referred to is that of a circuit court of Jhe state of Illinois, and the authorities in Illinois, cited in the prevailing opinion, clearly prescribe the issues, as tendered under each and every count of the declaration upon which the judgment rests, to require proof of willful and malicious injury to the person of the plaintiff therein. It is my understanding, not only that the rule thus stated is in accord with the general rule of pleading at common law, but that such decisions are controlling in this forum, and leave no inquiry open in the. present proceeding, either upon the merits of the controversy thus determined, or as to the evidence introduced at the trial. The foregoing view does not rest in any sense on the rule upheld in Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U. S. 473, 480, 24 Sup. Ct. 505, 48 L. Ed. 754, although well supported by the opinion in that case. The single question there1 involved was quite different, namely, whether a judgment in favor of a husband for damages arising out of criminal conversation with his wife was within the above-mentioned provision as implying willful and malicious injury to person or property of the husband. I concur for reversal.
GROSSCUP, Circuit Judge (dissenting). The policy of the Bankruptcy Raw is to discharge all honest debtors who have fallen into insolvency, that they may have another opportunity in the race, of life. The debtors excepted from this general policy are those who have become such through “fraud,” or through the obtaining of property “by false pretenses or false representations,” or through the committing of “willful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another.” Under the old bankruptcy law, the exception founded on fraud could only be made out by the disclosure of “a fraud involving moral turpitude or intentional wrong,” and did not extend to a mere fraud implied by law. Hennequin v. Clews, 111 U. S. 676, 681, 4 Sup. Ct. 576, 28 L. Ed. 565; Forsyth v. Vehmeyer, 177 U. S. 177, 20 Sup. Ct. 623, 44 L. Ed. 723 (quotation from Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U. S. 488, 24 Sup. Ct. 509, 48 L. Ed. 754). The Supreme Court does not hold that “fraud,” as the’word is employed in the present bankruptcy act, is met bv anything less than the foregoing, for it says (Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U. S. 489, 24 Sup. Ct. 509, 48 L. Ed. 754) :
“Assuming that the same holding would be made in regard to the fraud mentioned in the present act, it is clear that the cases are unlike. The implied fraud which the Court in the above-cited cases released was of such a nature that it did not impute either bad faith or immorality to tiie debtor, while in a judgment founded upon a cause of action, such as the one before ns [crim. con.] the malice which is implied is of that very kind which does involve moral turpitude.” ;
And, of course, a debtor who has become such through the obtaining of property by false pretenses or false representations (the second
Is the third exception, “willful and malicious injuries to the person or property of another,” to receive a like interpretation? I am deeply impressed with the belief that such will be the interpretation put upon it by the Supreme Court when the question is squarely presented to that Court. This impression is founded, first, upon the care that the Court has taken in Tinker v. Colwell to exclude any contrary impression ; for in every sentence of the Court’s opinion, stress is laid upon the element of actual bad faith and moral turpitude involved in the particular debt before the Court.
“The judgment here mentioned comes, as we think,” says the Court, “within the language of the statute reasonably construed. The injury for which it was recovered is one of the grossest which can be inflicted upon the husband, and the person who perpetrates it knows it is an offense of the most aggravated character; that it is a wrong for which no adequate compensation can be made, and hence personal and particular malice towards the husband as an individual need not be shown, for the law implies that there must be malice iu the very act itself, and we think Congress did not intend to permit such >an injury to'be released by a discharge in bankruptcy.” (The italics are my own.)
I am also impressed that it is the interpretation that, to carry out the intention of Congress, ought to be put upon the phrase as used in the bankruptcy act. The exception is in the nature of a denial — the denial of something that all others obtain. And it seems to me that Congress meant that this denial should be interposed, not upon any mere fiction of the law, or any mere empty implication of the law, but only upon the disclosure of something, in the transaction out of which the debt arose, that gives to it the color of bad faith or conscious wrong doing.
The case before us is that of a school teacher, who, in the lawful exercise of her power to inflict punishment, has inflicted excessive punishment. I say this is the case before us, because unless such be a “willful and malicious injury” within the meaning of the bankruptcy act, the judgment in the trespass suit is not conclusive upon the bankruptcy Court; for, by the law of Illinois and most common law jurisdictions, under the issue raised by the first count (trespass vi et armis for simple assault and battery), the pleas of moderate castigavit and son assault demesne, and the replication de injuria, a recovery could be had for an excess of force employed by the relatrix beyond reasonable chastisement, assuming, of course, that the evidence submitted warranted such recovery. Ayres v. Kelley, 11 Ill. 17; Fortune v. Jones, 30 Ill. App. 116; Hannen v. Edes, 15 Mass. 347; Bennett v. Appleton, 25 Wend. 371; Devine v. Rand, 38 Vt. 621. And, for the purposes of this appeal, the scope of that judgment, where doubt or ambiguity exists, must be construed most strongly against him who invokes it as res judicata; from which it follows, that the verdict returned, being a general verdict (and being as applicable to the first
No one pretends that a school teacher chastising a pupil, or a master of a vessel punishing some member of his crew, or an individual resisting an assault, may not, without actual malice, go beyond the force actually needed and therefore make themselves liable to a civil action for trespass vi et annis. In each of these cases, the malice imputed niaj be the mere '‘fiction of malice”- — a fiction created to give the complaining part}' a standing for a civil suit in the form of action selected. There is in such conduct, unless of course actual malice is shown, no bad faith or conscious wrong — nothing indeed that distinguishes the moral quality of the act from, the moral quality of the owner of a factor}- wlio allows liis employees to come into contact with defective machinery, or the owner of a carriage who takes in a passenger with knowledge that he has a defective vehicle, or, as put by Justice Peck-ham in Tinker v. Colwell, supra, “one who negligently drives through a crowded thoroughfare and negligently runs over an individual, would not, as I suppose, be within the exception.”
True, in In re Murphy, 109 111. 31, it was said that malice was the gist of an action of trespass for assault and battery; hut it was not ruled that mere malice, as a fiction of law, was the same thing as conscious wrong-doing. The facts in In re Murphy are not given. The case relied on as a precedent was First National Bank of Flora v. Burkett, 101 Ill. 392, 10 Am. Rep. 209, in which it was said:
“It (miilice) in some cases implies a wrong inflicted on anoflier, witli an evil intent or purpose, and this is lite sense in which it is employed in the statute.”
And for anything appearing in In re Murphy, it was that kind of malice that was there shown. Indeed, the Court says, speaking of the facts before it (as already said, the facts are not reported):
■‘Here there, was an intent to do harm, and an unlawful execution of that intent, resulting in the infliction of a wrong and injury upon another. Under such circumstances was malice the gist of the action?”
And that this, in its application to the State insolvent law, is as far as the Supreme Court of Illinois meant to go (considering the case as one of actual malice and not mere malice by fiction of law) is shown by that Court in the subsequent case of Jernberg v. Mix, 199 Ill. 254, 256, 65 N. E. 242, where it is said:
“Tilt1 term ‘malice,' as used in the act in question (file insolvent act) applies to that class of wrongs which are inflicted with an evil intent, design or purpose. It implies that Hie guilty party was actuated by improper or dishonest motives, and requires the intentional perpetration of an injury or a wrong on ¡mot tier.’’
Ret me not he misunderstood. As I understand the Supreme Court of the United States in Tinker v. Colwell, and the Supreme Court of Illinois in the cases just spoken of, a distinction is observed, where the bankruptcy and insolvent laws are involved, between malice as a fiction of law and malice arising from had faith or conscious wrong
I am giving expression to this dissent because, in my judgment the majority opinion misinterprets Tinker v. Colwell (and in that decision there were four dissenting justices); and because this misinterpretation, unless this clause of the bankruptcy act is construed by the Supreme Court, is liable to be followed by what seems to me an unjust, if not unauthorized, application of the law.
One other phase of this question has thus far wholly gone unnoticed. The phrase, in the bankruptcy act, is “willful and malicious injuries.” If this means that willfulness and malice, even though the malice be merely a. fictitious malice, must concur, then the case of a school teacher, master of a vessel, or party assaulted, who uses more force than what is needed, but does it without consciousness of such excess, cannot be said to be willful, for “willful” means conscious intention. And to put such an interpretation upon the phrase — joining the two yvords as characterizing the act — brings this- third exception into line with the first and second exceptions, to-wit, “fraud” and the obtaining of property by “false pretenses or false representations.”
I am not sure that the order appealed from in this case should be affirmed. That might preclude the holder of the judgment from showing, in some appropriate way, that the injury was actually malicious. But the judgment from which this is a dissent, on the other hand, accepts the judgment in the trespass suit as res judicata, and thereby forestalls any appropriate inquiry as to whether the injury was without actual malice, bad faith, or conscious wrong-doing.