116 S.E. 273 | S.C. | 1923
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *321 March 12, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by In an action, sounding in damages for an assault and battery alleged to have been committed by the defendants on the person of the plaintiff, the plaintiff recovered a verdict for $3,500 actual damages and $1,000 punitive damages. From judgment thereon defendants appeal.
The point is made (exceptions 1 and 2) that in instructing the jury as to the form of the verdict the trial Judge erred in failing to instruct that a verdict could be found for or against either one of the defendants instead of for or against the defendants generally. The defendants did not interpose separate defenses, and there was nothing in the evidence to indicate conclusively that they relied upon the facts to justify one and not the other. If more specific instructions as to several liability and as to the form of the verdict were desired, it was the duty of the defendants to request them. Latimer v. AndersonCounty,
Prejudicial error is assigned (Exceptions 4 to 7, inclusive) in the admission of certain testimony. Over objection, on cross-examination, the defendant Eugene Richardson was asked and required to answer this question:
"Q. On November 5th, when Lieut. Rohde, now Constable Rohde, for Magistrate Whaley, came to serve the warrant on you, state whether or not you told him this: `Don't serve that warrant on me now, officer, serve it tomorrow, he won't need it then, we will kill the ____.'"
The defendant Eugene Richardson denied making this statement. In reply plaintiff was allowed to put in evidence the testimony of the witness Rohde to the effect that the defendant Eugene Richardson did make the declaration above set out. This declaration, if made at all, was made the day following the alleged assault and battery at the time that Rohde went to serve a warrant of arrest on defendants. Appellants contend that the admission of this testimony was erroneous for the reason that it was not a part of the res gesta and was irrelevant, and that it was prejudicial in that it tended to serve as an aggravation of the alleged assault and battery and to inflame the minds of the jury against the defendants. The plaintiff and a brother of the defendants had engaged in a fight about two hours before the difficulty here involved. As the plaintiff was passing in an automobile, he was halted by one of the defendants for the alleged purpose of talking in a friendly way with the plaintiff about the altercation with defendants' brother and in regard to certain damages to a gasoline launch. The conduct of defendants in thus demanding the interview with plaintiff that led to the altercation here in question was sought to be further explained or excused by the alleged fact that the defendants' brother was a cripple and had been severely beaten up in the fight with *324 plaintiff. The evidentiary facts made a clear-cut issue as to the motive or animus of the defendants on the occasion of the commission of the alleged assault and battery. We think the testimony was clearly admissible.
"Where it is material to show the motive of an assailant, or the existence of malice or ill will on his part, in order to enhance the damages or for any other lawful purpose, both his prior and subsequent declarations, acts and conduct, as well as those which accompany the act, are legitimate evidence for that purpose." 5 C.J., 669, § 106.
"Where an emotion of hostility at a specific time is to be shown, the existence in the same person of the same emotion at another time is in general plainly admissible. * * * Subsequent hostility is equally receivable; that it arose only subsequently is matter for explanation by the opponent." Wigmore on Evidence (1st Ed.), § 396.
The limit of time in such case goes to the relevancy and is largely within the discretion of the trial Court. See State v. McKeller,
The defendants, who at the time of the trial and of the alleged assault were residents of Charleston, had formerly resided in the State of Virginia. Defendants' counsel requested the presiding Judge to charge "that *325 the law does not permit the jury to discriminate against any one who comes from another state." In response to this request, verbally made, Judge McIver said:
"I feel that this jury has too much sense to be told that. A jury that feels that way would not be fit to serve as jurors. I feel that it is almost insulting the jury to tell them that."
It is contended (Exception 8) that defendants were prejudiced by that language in that it conveyed to the jury the impression that they had been insulted by defendants' counsel. If, as appellants argue, the fact that defendants were not natives of the good City of Charleston and not "to the manor born" had been openly commented upon and sought to be used to their detriment in the trial of the cause, the Judge's remarks would seem clearly to cast the odium for any such insult where it belonged — not upon defendants, but upon the counsel for plaintiff who had injected such improper consideration into the case. Certainly, the defendants got what they asked for — a very strong admonition of the jury against permitting the former residence of the defendants to influence their verdict — and in no view do we think that defendants are in position to assign prejudicial error.
In the course of his charge to the jury the Circuit Judge used in one connection the expression. "If, on the other hand, you conclude that the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict and that the act of the defendants was intentionally done," etc., and, in another, the expression, "In estimating damages you are at liberty to consider all of the circumstances under which the injuries were inflicted; if you find it was done with wanton reckless disregard," etc. It is charged that the Judge thereby assumed as a fact that the injuries had been inflicted and that defendants had committed the act complained of in violation of the constitutional prohibition against charging on the facts (Exceptions 10 and 12). We think the construction *326 for which appellants contend is patently hypercritical, and that the hypothetical sense in which the Judge referred to the injuries and to the act of defendants is sufficiently clear. But, if not, the charge as a whole leaves no room for doubt that all issuable facts were so clearly committed to the jury's sole determination that no jury of reasonable intelligence could have been misled.
Neither can the point directed to alleged coercion of the jury (Exceptions 9 and 13) be sustained. After the jury had been out for a time, they returned to the Courtroom and announced that they were unable to agree. Judge McIver thereupon delivered a supplementary charge in the course of which he said:
"(1) If this jury makes a mistrial, we will have to call in some other jury and ask them to do the work the law assigns to you. You have been assigned as citizens to do this duty. It is a public duty you owe your country. Are you going to say we are not capable or competent to do it and you must call on some one else to do it? I don't think so. (2) Now it is a matter of regret, extreme regret to me, to have to keep a jury up in their room where I know they cannot be as comfortable as they ought to be. It hurts me to have to keep a jury locked up. Yet it is the only way known to the law whereby we can get a verdict."
It is argued, as to the first remark above noted, that the Judge's admonition as to the character of the duty imposed on the jury unduly emphasized the obligation to agree by condemning a mistrial as the failure to perform a public duty or service, and that, as to the second remark, in expressing regret for having to keep the jury locked up as the only way to "get a verdict," the Judge impliedly threatened to keep the jury in durance until a verdict was reached. There can be no doubt that in admonishing juries of their duty to decide the case in hand, the trial Judge should not use language that may fairly be construed as tending to encourage the surrender of conscientious *327
convictions merely for the purpose of agreement. But we are clearly of the opinion that there is no such indication of undue pressure in the case at bar as would warrant this Court in setting the verdict aside on that ground. The record fails to disclose how long the jury had been out when they returned to the Courtroom and reported to the Judge their inability to agree. Evidently, they had not had the case in their hands for such a length of time as to convince the presiding Judge that their report was the result of "due and thorough deliberation." "While a * * * Judge may not coerce a jury, he is not precluded from indicating very plainly that he will not be coerced by the jury." State v. Drakeford (S.C.),
The only point remaining for consideration is raised by Exception 11, which is as follows:
"The presiding Judge erred in charging the jury as follows: `If you should reach that point in the case where you would consider whether or not the plaintiff is entitled to punitive damages, you may take into consideration, and properly so, whether one party committing the assault, if you find an assault was committed, was aggrieved or provoked in a legal way by something that had gone on, and if acting under that sudden impulse he then strikes and *328 even does what he should not do, why the law out of consideration for the frailty of our human nature, the desire of any man to redress his wrongs, the law says the jury might take that into consideration and that would be mitigation of damages.' The error being that such a charge restricted and limited only to the cause of action for punitive damages any acts of defendants in mitigation of the offense and deprived defendants of the right to have a jury pass on the whole case, both as to actual as well as punitive damages, to consider any mitigating circumstances proved."
The appellant's contention was forcefully argued, and the position is supported both by high authority and plausible reasoning. We regret that the time at our command does not permit of a more extended discussion than we are now able to give the interesting question presented. There is much of logical force in the proposition that if malice and wantonness in the defendant are to be punished by the imposition of additional damages, or smart money, then malice and provocation on the part of the plaintiff which contributed to his own injuries should be subject to like punishment by giving him less than the measure of compensation.Robison v. Rupert,
"The Courts are not fully in accord as to the right of the defendant to introduce in evidence facts of provocation or malice for the purpose of mitigating the actual or compensatory damages. The better rule and the weight of authority, however, are in favor of the proposition that actual or compensatory damages are not in any case subject to mitigation by proof of mere provocation or malice. To hold otherwise would be to allow provocation to be used *329 as defense, and thus to permit by indirection that which could not be done directly."
Leading cases cited to support the rule thus stated areGoldsmith's Adm'r v. Joy,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY, and MESSRS. JUSTICES WATTS and FRASER concur.
MR. JUSTICE COTHRAN did not participate.