99 Me. 43 | Me. | 1904
These two cases were tried together before a jury. One is an action of personal trespass for an alleged assault and battery, the other is an action upon the case for malicious prosecution.
At the time of the alleged assault by the defendant upon the plaintiff, the latter was in the service of the former as a coachman at his summer residence at Kennebunkport. While the plaintiff was sitting upon the coachman’s seat of a carriage standing in front of the door of defendant’s house, a controversy arose between, the parties, during which, it is claimed by each, that the other made an assault upon him. The plaintiff’s contention is, that, after some words between them, he was discharged by the defendant from his employment; that after he stepped down from the carriage, and as
The defendant says, upon the other hand, that the plaintiff made the first attack upon him; that he jumped down from the carriage and rushed towards him in a violent, angry and threatening manner, and that whatever he did, at least in the immediate vicinity of the house, was necessarily and properly done in his own protection and defense.
After the affair was over the defendant sent for an officer, had the plaintiff arrested, lodged in a lock-up, and later prosecuted criminal proceedings against him for an assault and battery. Upon the hearing before the magistrate, the respondent, the plaintiff in this action, was adjudged not guilty and was discharged. For this alleged malicious prosecution, the second of these two actions was brought. The trial of the two cases,'upon the same evidence, and before the same jury, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the action for assault and battery, damages being assessed for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,487.50, aud in a verdict for the defendant in the action for malicious prosecution.
It is obvious that these two verdicts, returned by one jury in the trial of the two cases together, are inconsistent and cannot be reconciled. If the plaintiff’s story of the whole affair is the true one, he was entitled to a verdict in his favor in both cases. If his story is true, the institution and prosecution of the criminal proceedings by the defendant was without probable cause and was malicious. If, upon the other hand, the plaintiff was the aggressor, having made the first assault, and the defendant was only subsequently in fault-in following the plaintiff to and along the road, and in making an assault upon him there, after he had been struck and knocked down by the plaintiff, as claimed, although the plaintiff would be entitled to a verdict for this subsequent assault, the damages awarded, under such circumstances, were grossly excessive, because the actual physi
It follows, as we have already said, that these two verdicts are entirely inconsistent with each other, the plaintiff should either have had a verdict in both cases, or the damages in the personal trespass case should have been much smaller.
In the opinion of the court, there was sufficient evidence to justify either verdict, standing by itself, but standing together, each contradicts the other, and this contradiction deprives both of the weight that a verdict is ordinarily entitled to. Of course, if one of these verdicts had. been unmistakably right, and the other manifestly wrong, one might have been sustained and the other set aside, notwithstanding this inconsistency; but where the testimony is so evenly balanced, and the contradictions are so great, that the court would be disinclined to disturb either, standing alone, in such case, each has been deprived of its entire weight and value by the other, and we are of the opinion that both should be set aside.
Motion for a new trial in each case granted.