Moore v. Camden & Trenton Railway Co.
Moore v. Camden & Trenton Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action of tort brought by a husband and wife for certain assaults and batteries alleged to
The assaults in question grew out of Mrs. Moore’s effort to prevent the workmen of the defendant company from excavating and setting up the pole upon her land at a point in the sidewalk just inside of the curb. The workmen had formed a circle about the spot to prevent plaintiff’s interference, and in her efforts to get through the line and to hold on to the pole while it was being raised, she received at the hands of the Avorkmen the cuts and bruises complained of.
The alleged errors are assigned upon the charge to the jury. The particular portions of the charge to which exception was taken and allowed are the following: “The placing of a pole in front of Mrs. Moore’s house was illegal.” After alluding to the two courses open to plaintiff to bring suit or to resist when such act Avas threatened, the learned judge proceeded, “She did what she had a right to do — try to use sufficient physical force to prevent the trespass to her property by the placing of the pole and the pulling up of her pavement,” and further, “The mere placing of hands upon her gives her the right to a verdict, but it will be for merely nominal damages, if no injuries resulted.”
It was conceded in the argument that the maintenance of the exception to that part of the charge declaring that the erection of the pole at the place in question was an illegal act depended upon the determination of this court in the ejectment suit of Moore v. Camden and Trenton Eailway Comr pany, which had not then been announced. The decision in
But it is further contended that there was error in thus withdrawing the case from the jury, because it did not conclusively appear that the physical injuries suffered by the plaintiff were committed by the defendant company’s employes while acting within the scope of their employment and not committed by such employes willfully or of their own malice. But we think such an assumption is unauthorized. It was testified by Mr. Kelson, the engineer in charge of the work for the defendant company, that he received authority from the company to place the pole in front of plaintiff’s house, and that the work was done in his presence and under his direction as such engineer of the company; that the men formed a compact circle and that the digging then proceeded inside of the circle; that the plaintiff then struggled to break through the circle thus formed, and that her efforts were resisted by the men in line so that she was unable to reach the inside until later, when some arrests had been made. The circumstances thus proven show unmistakably that the employes of the defendant company, at the time of the trespass complained of, were acting within the scope of their employment. Brokaw v. New Jersey Railway and Traction Co. et al., 3 Vroom 328; 20 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (2d ed.) 170.
The evidence further shows without serious contradiction that the hurts and bruises complained of occurred to plaintiff at the hands of the defendant’s employes while engaged in this unlawful trespass upon the plaintiff’s close and the forcible exclusion of the plaintiff from that part of her pavement where she had a right to be. The trial judge carefully excluded from the jury any consideration of malice as entering into the tort complained of and confined the jury to compensation alone as the basis of damages.
It was further contended for the defendant that there was a jury question, because Hammell, one of the employes who took hold of plaintiff and removed her from the pole, which
Binding no error in the rulings excepted to, the result is that the judgment below is affirmed.
For affirmance — Ti-ie Chancellor, Chief Justice, Garrison, Bort, Hendrickson, Swayze, Trenchard, Bogert, Vredenburgi-i, Vroom, Green, Gray, Dill, J.J. 13.
For reversal — None.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.