262 Mo. 651 | Mo. | 1914
Suit for damages from assault and battery committed July 22, 1907. Tbe defense pleaded was son assault demesne. The evidence showed that the plaintiff and defendant were both farmers and neighbors living in Nodaway county. In addition to the farm on which he was living the plaintiff had another near by, upon which a woman named Mrs. Jocelyn had been living that summer and had planted a vegetable garden, which contained- some potatoes which had attained the esculent age. Mrs. Jocelyn, being about to leave this particular field of her activities, Mrs. Surplus, the wife of defendant, negotiated with her for the potatoes, and the week before the trouble, which occurred on Monday, she saw Mr. Thummel, who told her it would be all right for her to buy them, which she did, completing the transaction and paying for them on Saturday. Monday morning she took the notion that she wanted some new potatoes for dinner. Taking a hoe and a sack she got on her horse and rode over to the Thummel farm, a mile away, hitched her horse at the gate, and, with hoe and sack, went into the yard, where Mr. Thummel met her. She told him that she had bought the potatoes on Saturday and had come over to dig some. He told her that he had traded some chickens for them on Friday. The delicate courtesy that may have attended the giving and receiving of all this information does not appear, as Mr. Thummel in his testimony confines himself to an unembellished statement of what he seems to consider the important facts, while Mrs. Surplus did not testify. Mr. Thummel, however, grows more interesting and circumstantial in Ms relation of the subsequent proceedings. He says Mrs. Surplus went home and that soon afterward Mr. Surplus rode up. He met him at the garden gate and said, “Good morning, Mr. Surplus.” The latter did not condescend to answer, but without saying a word got down from his horse, took something from his pocket that he thought was steel or iron,
Mr. Surplus’s tale of the same occurrence was that his wife came home crying and he got on his horse and went over to get the potatoes. Mr. Thummel met him at the gate. They spoke to each other and Mr. Surplus said he came to get some of the potatoes and asked him why he wouldn’t let the woman dig them. Mr. Thummel said that “the old lady owed him and didn’t pay him — went off and never paid him the money.” Mr. Surplus said he came up after the potatoes and was going to have them — was going to dig them, and got off and took the sack with him. Mr. Thummel stepped right up and said, “No you wouldn’t dig them.” He then drew back and Mr. Surplus did likewise. They both struck, Mr. Surplus getting in his blow with such force that it knocked Mr. Thummel down. He rose to a sitting posture and Mr. Surplus struck him two or three times more. He declined to swear that he did not kick him, but said he did not think he did. He said he would not have hit Mr. Thummel if the latter had not attempted to strike him first, and that he had nothing in his hands, but used his naked fists.
Mr. Thummel’s statement as to the character of his injuries was very much modified by his doctor, while his own character was considerably modified by evidence introduced for that purpose. Mr. Surplus ad
As to the details of the difficulty the jury had the testimony of both parties before it. To aid them in its consideration the plaintiff asked the court to give them the following instructions:
“2. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the defendant, on or about the 22nd day of July, 1907, did willfully and wrongfully make an assault upon and beat, strike and bruise the plaintiff, not in a necessary defense of his person, as defined in other instructions, then the jury will find for the plaintiff.
“3. The court instructs the jury that if they shall believe from the evidence that the defendant Surplus provoked and brought on the difficulty with the plaintiff Thummel, then defendant Surplus cannot avail himself of the right of self-defense in order to shield himself from the consequences of beating and assaulting his adversary, no matter how imminent any danger in which he may have found himself during the progress of the fight, and if in this case the jury shall believe from the evidence that the defendant Surplus prepared himself previous to his assault on the plaintiff and brought on the fight in order to wreak his malice, or satisfy any private vengeance upon the plaintiff, then there was no self-defense in this case.”
The court gave number two as asked, and modified number three by inserting, after the word Thummel, the words “with intent to do him some bodily harm,” giving it as modified. The other instructions asked and given were not pertinent to this inquiry-
The petition asked for $3000 actual and $5000 punitive damages' The verdict was for the defendant, and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal is taken by the plaintiff.
The testimony was that the plaintiff “stepped right up and he said, ‘No, you won’t dig them.’ ” He drew back and struck at plaintiff, who says, in his cross-examination, that the blow hit him,- although that fact is immaterial in this connection. The jury had both parties before it, heard them relate the circumstances, and might take into consideration their personal appearance as well as their manner in relating so exciting an episode, to aid them in determining the impression its enactment was calculated to produce on the defendant. In judging whether the language was “violent and threatening” they were not confined to the tone or voice in which the words were uttered but could take into consideration the acts and gestures accompanying it, and even its culmination in immediate violence. The real question was whether it gave the defendant reasonable ground to believe, and he did believe, that in striking him the plaintiff intended to do him bodily harm, or simply to give exuberant expression to his good will toward a neighbor.
We see no error in the record which has not been fully concurred in by the plaintiff and accordingly affirm the judgment.
The foregoing opinion of Brown, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.