22 Mo. 344 | Mo. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of assault and battery, alleged to have been committed by the defendant, on the female plaintiff, Alvira B. West, wife of Francis A. West. The defendant denied having assaulted the said Alvira E. West, but stated that he was whipping a negro woman, whom he had hired of Francis A. West, and who had left his house and gone back to her master’s house; that' he went after her and found her, and ordered her to go back to his house; but, instead of obeying him,
The evidence clearly shows a very severe beating of the negro woman; and that she ran to her mistress up the steps leading to the door .of the room occupied by Mrs. West. The negro woman laid hold of-her mistress on the steps, and the evidence leaves little doubt that the defendant did not stop his blows when the negro woman caught her mistress, but he continued to inflict them. One witness says, he saw his arm in motion up to the door as though he were striking. Is it strange that Mrs. West, the owner of the negro woman, should have been (even in her situation, some seven or eight days after childbirth) drawn to the steps of her door by the severe whipping and hallooing of her own servant? — the blows' inflicted by the defendant, and the screams of the negro woman, raising the
The plaintiff’s case was clearly made out before the jury, and by their verdict of four hundred dollars damages they exhibited their sense of such a wrong, and properly vindicated the injuries and wounded feelings of the plaintiff. There is nothing i» the instructions given, nor in those refused to be given, calling for the interference of this court.
The ease was fairly put to the jury, and this court does not feel itself authorized to interfere. Let the judgment below be affirmed;