Schroder v. Morehouse
Schroder v. Morehouse
Opinion of the Court
This is an action on the case for assault and battery committed upon the plaintiff’s wife by defendant Fairfield. On the trial plaintiff had verdict, and judgment against the defendants for $200. Defendant Morehouse alone brings error.
It appears that Morehouse sued out a writ of attachment before a justice of the peace against the plaintiff. The writ was issued October 1 i, 1889, and put into the-hands of Fairfield, who was a constable, for service, with-instructions to levy upon the plaintiff’s hogs, hay, straw, wheat, and oats. Morehouse directed him to serve the-
The errors complained of arise under the charge of the court, and the refusal of the court to give certain requests of the defendants in the charge to the jury. The court charged the jury:
“The assault being admitted, if an injury resulted to the plaintiff by reason thereof, he is entitled to recover actual damages, viz., damages resulting from such injury, if you so find, and for this both the defendants are liable; as I have said, Fairfield acted under the direction of Morehouse.”
It is this part of the charge of which defendant More-house complains. His counsel had asked the court to charge the jury in his second request as follows:
*604 “If you find from the evidence in the case that the officer, Fairfield, made an assault on the 21st day of October, 1889, in attempting to get the pigs mentioned in plaintiffs declaration, without the instruction of More-house so to do, but that he went after said pigs on his own motion, because he had learned that the plaintiff had moved them off from the Morehouse farm, then your verdict must be not guilty as to the defendant More-house.”
The court was in error in refusing this request, and also in its direction to the jury in that portion ’ of the charge above quoted. Counsel for plaintiff contend that there was proof in the case showing that the defendant Morehouse directed the officer to go there on that day (October 21) and get the pigs, and that having so directed the officer, knowing that the property was exempt and that the writ was defective, Morehouse was therefore liable for all of the acts of Fairfield, and for the assault made upon plaintiff’s wife. The testimony upon this question is a claimed admission upon the part of Morehouse that he so directed. Mr. S. F. Smith, an attorney, gave the testimony referred to. He testified that he had a conversation with Morehouse on October 22, 1889, in which he asked Morehouse:
“Q. Do you think it was right for you to go up there and take this man’s pigs, — the last ones he had?
“A. He owed me.
“Q. You knew they were exempt; that they were all the pigs he had, didn’t you?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Did you instruct Fairfield to go up there and take those two last pigs this man has got?
“A. Yes, I did; I told him to take the pigs, and I will have the Dutchman before I get through with it.”
There is no other testimony in the case showing, or tending to show, that Morehouse saw the officer, except on the day the writ issued; and the contention is whether
Judgment is reversed, with costs, and new trial ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Schroder v. Daniel W. Morehouse and Throdore Fairfield
- Status
- Published