SIMS v. SOWLE
Supreme Court of Oregon
September 10, 1964
238 Or. 329 | 395 P.2d 133
Argued May 1, affirmed September 10, 1964
Douglas E. Kaufman, Tillamook, argued the cause for respondent. On the brief were McMinimee & Kauf-man.
Before MCALLISTER, Chief Justice, and O‘CONNELL, GOODWIN, DENECKE and LUSK, Justices.
LUSK, J.
In this action for assault and battery the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for $6,000 and defendant has appealed.
The alleged assault took place after one o‘clock of a Sunday morning in the restaurant and bar of the Tourist Hotel in Hebo, Oregon. The defendant ad-mitted in his answer that he struck the plaintiff and alleged that he did so in self-defense.
Defendant assigns as error the denial by the court of his motion for a continuance based on the ground
A counter-affidavit of Douglas E. Kaufman, one of plaintiff‘s attorneys, states that depositions of the parties to the cause were taken on December 13, 1962; that at that time defendant‘s counsel told plaintiff‘s counsel that he wanted to take the deposition of the witness James D. Hurliman; that counsel for plaintiff stated that he would cooperate in taking such deposi-tion; that nothing further was done about the matter by counsel for the defendant until March 20, 1963, at which time counsel for plaintiff was engaged in the trial of a case which lasted four days. It further appears from Mr. Kaufman‘s affidavit that on De-cember 6, 1962, the court gave notice that the case would be tried on April 2, 1963. There was no denial of the facts stated in Mr. Kaufman‘s affidavit.
The defendant sought a continuance to a convenient date in December of 1963, because Hurliman would not be available as a witness until that time.
It is familiar law that a motion of this kind is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and its action thereon will not be reviewed, except for a clear abuse of discretion. State v. Otten, 234 Or 219,
Appropriate objections to this testimony, which was given by the plaintiff and his wife, were made by the defendant. The objections were overruled and the rulings are assigned as error.
In Briggs v. John Yeon Co., 168 Or 239, 254, 122 P2d 444, we approved the rule that in a personal in-jury action evidence of a voluntary offer by the de-fendant to pay the plaintiff‘s medical, hospital and similar expenses was not admissible as evidence of liability on the part of the one making the offer, at least in the absence of other circumstances indicating consciousness of fault. This rule was followed in Dunning v. Northwestern Electric Co., 186 Or 379, 441, 199 P2d 648, 206 P2d 1177, and Phillips, Gdn. v. Creighton, Adm., 211 Or 645, 650, 316 P2d 302. The
“The tender of medical care to the injured per-son by one whose conduct or property caused the injury, or on whose premises the injury occurred, is susceptible of a construction as an admission of legal liability or as an act of benevolence. As a matter of public policy the courts have tended to construe such conduct as an act of benevolence, particularly where such construction is reinforced by the circumstances, and hence not admissible in evidence as an admission of liability.”
No reason occurs to us why the same rule should not apply in an action for assault and battery as in a negli-gence case.
We think, however, that there is evidence in the present case which would permit a jury to find that the offer of the defendant to pay the plantiff‘s hos-pital and other expenses carried with it an admission of fault. Darlene Thompson, barmaid at the Tourist Hotel, was a witness to the alleged assault and battery. She testified that two days later the defendant re-turned to the bar “and he had came back to apologize to me for the trouble he caused, and he had asked for Mr. Brown, to apologize to him, and he apologized to him and he apologized to Mrs. Brown for causing whatever trouble it was, and he told me then that he wanted to get ahold of Mr. Sims to apologize to him.” This testimony was uncontradicted. The Mr. and Mrs. Brown referred to were the owners of the Tourist Hotel.
A dictionary definition of “apology” is “an admis-sion to another of a wrong or discourtesy done him, accompanied by an expression of regret.” Webster‘s New International Dictionary (2d ed). The defendant
The evidence under consideration was not inad-missible as showing an offer of compromise. As the court said of a similar situation in Arnold v. Owens, 78 F2d 495, 497 (4th Cir. 1935):
“It is of course settled that an offer of com-promise is privileged and may not be received in evidence; but it is not clear to us from the record in this case that an offer of this kind was being made, for the parties were not discussing a claim for damages or a proposition for settlement.”
Over objection of the defendant the court per-mitted testimony to be given by a witness, called on be-half of the plaintiff, that the plaintiff had a good repu-tation in the community in which he lived for peace and quietude and orderly conduct. The ruling is assigned as error.
Pursuant to
In Linkhart v. Savely, 190 Or 484, 494, 227 P2d 187, we held that where, in an action for assault and battery, the defendant pleads and introduces evidence of self-defense, evidence of the turbulent character of the plaintiff is admissible, whether such character be known to the defendant or not. In Rich v. Cooper, 234 Or 300, 380 P2d 613, the court, while recognizing this rule in assault and battery cases as an exception to the general rule that evidence of a person‘s character is not admissible to prove his conduct on a particular occasion, refused to apply the exception to an action against a police officer for assault and battery com-mitted while making an arrest in which the defendant contended that the arrest was resisted. The presump-tion that a police officer acts in good faith in deter-mining the amount of force necessary to make an ar-rest was said to be “sufficient to serve the policy” applied in cases of assault and battery.
What we were concerned with in these cases was not, as here, an initial attempt by a party to prove his good reputation for peace and quietude before that reputation had been called in question in any way, but an attack on the adverse party‘s reputation in that regard. In the latter instance, of course, the party attacked may introduce evidence to meet and over-come the attack; but by the weight of authority “evi-dence of good character or reputation is not relevant in the first instance in a civil action or where the repu-
Admission of the testimony in question was error. It remains to consider whether it is ground for re-versal.
The evidence of disinterested witnesses, Mr. Brown and the barmaid, tended to show an unprovoked as-sault upon the plaintiff by the defendant. While there is some evidence that the plaintiff struck the defend-ant‘s arm before the defendant struck the plaintiff, yet, evidence introduced on behalf of the defendant, including that of the defendant himself, indicated that he struggled with bystanders, some of them his friends, who were attempting to keep him away from the plain-tiff, and succeeded in throwing them off and striking
The judgment is affirmed.
O‘CONNELL, J., specially concurring.
The principal opinion expresses the view that a party to an action for assault and battery may not prove his reputation for peace and quietude before that reputation is called in question by the other party. I cannot accept this view. Where there is an issue as to who committed the first act of aggression, evidence of the good or bad reputation of both parties is rele-vant. The effect of the majority opinion is to recog-nize that the plaintiff may show that the defendant has a reputation for being quarrelsome but plaintiff may not, prior to an attack upon his character, show that he himself has a reputation for being peaceable. The latter evidence is no less relevant than the former on the issue of who was the first aggressor. I do not mean to suggest that a party may always attempt to prove his good reputation in the trial of a cause. The issue may be such that plaintiff‘s reputation is not relevant. However, plaintiff‘s reputation is relevant to the issue of first aggression and evidence of that reputation should be admitted. Brown v. Simpson, 293 Ky 755, 170 SW2d 345 (1943) (reaffirmed in Brown v. Crawford, 296 Ky 249, 177 SW2d 1 (1944)); J. C. Penney Co. v. Gravelle, 62 Nev 434, 155 P2d 477
DENECKE, J., joins in this opinion.
