151 Ky. 136 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
C. M. Rowland instituted suit in tbe Nelson Circuit Court against Dr. A. M. Shields, in which he sought to recover damages for assault and battery. The case was transferred to the Spencer Circuit Court, where, upon a trial before a jury, the plaintiff recovered a verdict for $750. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and the motion and grounds for new trial was overruled. Thereafter the defendant died, and his personal representatives perfected and prosecute this appeal, and seek to have the judgment set aside upon several grounds, chief of which are: First, misconduct of counsel for appellee during the trial; second, error of the court in admitting incompetent evidence; and third, error in instructing the jury.
The facts, out of which the litigation grew, are as follows: Appellee, a blacksmith by trade, was doing a general blacksmith business in Chaplan in the east end of Nelson County. Shields, the decedent, was a practicing physician in the same town. Appellee had been doing Shields’ blacksmith work and, upon a day early in January, 1910, was doing some work for Mm on a buggy. Doctor Shields went to the shop
The next ground of complaint is that the court erred in the admission of incompetent evidence. Counsel for appellee, when examining the doctor, asked him if he had not been convicted of a felony, to which question objection was.made. This was a proper question, and the court correctly held it to be such; but, when it was shown by the answer that he had not been convicted of a felony, his further interrogation relative to a charge, upon which he had been indicted, tried, and acquitted, was error, and the evidence upon this point should not have been permitted to go to the jury.
It is next insisted that the court erred in permitting the doctor to be interrogated relative to his financial condition. This objection is based upon the idea that appellee was not entitled to an instruction authorizing an award of punitive clamages. The point would be well taken, if no instruction authorizing punitive damages was, in fact, authorized; but, we are of opinion that the trial court erred in holding, as a matter of law, that appellee was not entitled to- an instruction authorizing punitive damages, if, .as a matter of fact, the doctor made an unprovoked, wilful, and malicious assault upon appellee. Indeed, we know of no case where' an instruction authorizing punitive damages could, with more propriety, be given than in a case of this character. Punitive damages are allowed, not as a compensation for injury, but as a punishment for a wrong, wilfully and maliciously done. If the allegations of the petition are true, appellee was entitled to an instruction authorizing an award of punitive damages. Hence the court -did not err in penhitti-ng the introduction of evi
The only’ remaining question is the complaint that the court did not properly instruct the jury. No serious objection can be raised to instruction number one. It presents the law of the case, both from the standpoint of the claim as asserted by appellee, and the defense as interposed by the doctor. Instruction number two did not fully present the measure of damages. Upon this point, the court should have told the jury:
“If you find for the plaintiff, you will award him such sum as, you believe from the evidence, will compensate him for the mental or physical pain or suffering, one or both, if any, endured by him as the direct and proximate result of his injury; and, in addition to actual damages, if you find from the evidence that the assault was wilful, malicious, and without justification, you may, in your discretion, award him punitive damages, not exceeding in all, however, the sum of $2,000, the amount claimed in the petition.”
Instruction number three was unauthorized. The court seems to have been influenced, in giving this instruction, by the idea that there was, at sometime during this combat, a cessation of hostilities; and that there was evidence tending to show that appellee withdrew from the contest. We do not so view the evidence. From the testimony of all the witnesses, including the principals to the affray, it is apparent that there was but one difficulty. It was a continuous fight from start to finish. When so viewed, the instruction should not have been given. Just what effect this instruction had on the verdict of the jury cannot be determined. The jury may have believed the doctor’s version of the difficulty, that appellee, in fact, assaulted him, and that he acted only in self-defense; and yet, under this instruction, they would have been warranted in finding against the doctor, if they regarded appellee as retreating, after he had knocked the doctor down the third time, a few steps just before he seized the bolt tongs. When viewed in this light, it is apparent that this instruction may have been highly prejudicial. It should not have been given.
There was evidence to the effect that, before the doctor struck appellee, if he did strike the initial blow, appellee had used toward him- abusive and insulting language, such as was calculated to provoke an assault.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to enter an order dismissing the petition, inasmuch as, under section 10, Kentucky Statutes, as construed by this court in Anderson v. Arnold, 79 Ky., 370; Lewis’ Admr. v. Taylor Coal Co., 112 Ky., 845, it is an action which does not survive and cannot be prosecuted against the personal representatives of a deceased wrongdoer.