Edwards v. Wessinger
Edwards v. Wessinger
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action for damages, in which the plaintiff alleges that: “On or about the 2d day of September, 1900, at plaintiff’s home in the County of Lexington, in the State aforesaid, the defendants, coming together and aiding and abetting each other, wrongfully and unlawfully entered upon the premises aforesaid and upon the back piazza of the residence thereon, and then and there did beat and bruise, wound and ill treat this plaintiff, and did, in a brutal manner, deliberately and repeatedly strike this plaintiff over the head with a heavy stick or club, and did seize and pull her hair, and drag and pull her about and over said piazza and premises, and did repeatedly strike her with clenched fists in and upon the head, while two boys accompanying said defendants upon their preconceived and prearranged design to commit said trespass and assault and battery, did stand at the side of said defendants with open knives in hand, and while she was being abused and villified and denounced by said defendants; whereby the plaintiff was humiliated and degraded and imposed upon, and whereby she suffered great nervous shock, and whereby she was injured in her person and rights to her damage $10,000.”
The defendants answered, denying generally the allegations of the complaint and interposing as a defense in mitigation of damages: “That on or about the 4th day of September, 1900, the plaintiff swore out a warrant before El. A. Meetze, a magistrate of said county, charging the defendants and their son, Chalmers Wessinger, with an *164 assault and battery and riot, on the 2d day of September, 1900, as alleged in the said complaint, and undertook to bind over the above named defendants; but said case having been' transferred to Magistrate Corley,, and a preliminary examination being had on the 22d day of September, 1900, the said magistrate, after taking the testimony of the witnesses for the prosecution in said case, did adjudge that said case was triable by a magistrate; and thereafter, on the 13th day of October, 1900, upon the trial of said case, the said magistrate did discharge and acquit the defendants of the said charge.” They also alleged that at the time of the alleged assault and battery, the defendant, Elizabeth Wessinger, was, and still is, the wife of the defendant, Vastine Wessinger. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,500.
The second exception is as follows: “2. That the presiding Judge erred in his charge to the jury: (a) In that his Honor, by instructing the jury, ‘If you think she is entitled to damages, you can find from one cent to $10,000, that is a matter exclusively for you;’ the error being that the jury was not instructed as to whether they should give actual or vindictive damages, or both, and in failing to define these different kinds of damages, (b) That his Honor erred in instructing the jury as follows: ‘The law presumes in a case of this sort, that if the wife committed an offense of this kind in the presence of her husband, that she is coerced to it, forced by him to do it; that’s the presumption, but it can be rebutted by testimony, and where in the trial of a cause like *166 this, if the testimony satisfies the jury that if the husband were present and the wife were the better man of the two, as it were, acting independently, acted on her own free will, according to her own volition, that presumption is dissipated, and a verdict could be found against her the same as against her husband. But if the wife commits an offense in the presence of her husband and he instigates her to do it, and she is acting under his direction, the law presumes her to be coerced, and in a case of that sort she is not responsible for the .commission of a misdemeanor in the presence of her husband. But if a man and a wife go to a place together, or meet a party on the street, and they commit an assault, and. the wife acts independently of her husband, acts on her own volition, and the husband does not coerce her, does not instigate her, but she acts freely and voluntarily, then she would be as much liable for the commission of the misdemeanor as if her husband was not present. I.f you are satisfied in this case that both the defendants committed an assault and battery upon the person of the plaintiff, and they did it without legal justification .or excuse, and that the wife was not coerced by her husband, not commanded or instigated by him to do it, but that she acted of her own free will, according to her own volition, acted independent of him, was not ordered by him and was not afraid of him, but acted just the same as if he were not there, then she would be as much liable as he; if both committed the assault, without legal justification or excuse upon the person of the plaintiff, you will give such damage proportionate to the injury sustained as in your opinion you think the plaintiff is entitled. If you think the defendant did not commit an assault and battery, or if you think thej' acted in self-defense, then your verdict would necessarily be for the defendants; or if you think Mrs. Wessinger committed an assault, and that she was coerced by her husband to do it, and her husband took a hand in it, your verdict would be against the husband only. If you think they acted together, and she acted independent of him, on her own accord, her own volition, your verdict would be against *167 both. * * * The defendants have requested me to charge you the following proposition of law: “The jury is charged, if they find the defendant, Elizabeth Wessinger, committed a tort by assaulting and striking the plaintiff in the presence of her husband, I. V. Wessinger, or at his instigation, then the defendant, I. V. Wessinger, alone would be responsible for it; and the jury under such circumstances could not hold her responsible for the tort.” I charge you that a little differently from what is laid down here. I charge you this: “The jury is charged that, if they find the defendant, Elizabeth Wessinger, committed a tort by assaulting and striking the plaintiff, in the presence of her husband, I. V. Wessinger, at'his instigation, then the defendant, I. V. Wessinger, alone would be responsible for it, and the jury under such circumstances could not hold her responsible for the tort.” Strike out the word “or,” and I charge you that.’ The error being that his Honor first laid down the doctrine correctly thqt the mere presence of the husband with the wife during the commitment of an assault and battery raised the presumption of coercion on the part of the husband, and then modified the doctrine by instructing the jury that the husband alone is responsible only in those cases where he instigated and commanded the commission of the offense by the wife; thereby instructing the jury that they could not find against the husband only and for the wife in those instances where the husband .was simply present and coercion would be presumed ; and this idea he impressed upon the jury more clearly by the modification of the defendants’ request as above set forth.”
The assignment of error marked “(a),” seems to have been taken under misapprehension, as the record shows that the presiding Judge charged the jury as follows: “By vindictive damages we mean wherever there has been a wilful invasion of the rights of another party, does it wilfully and reck-, lessly, runs over them in a high-handed, outrageous manner, juries in a case of that sort can charge not only such dam *168 ages as the person actually sustained, but such damages in the way of punishing.”
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Edwards v. Wessinger.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Damages — Assajjet and Battery. — That there has been a prosecution in criminal Court cannot be given in mitigation of damages in action for damages for assault and battery. 2. Charge — Request.—Circuit Judge is not required to charge request in exact words, nor if it be covered in general charge. 3. Tort — Husband and Wipe — Coercion—Presumption.—If a wife commit a tort in the presence of her husband, it will be presumed that she was coerced by him to do it, and he alone is liable, but if she is not coerced by him, and acts independently of him, she is liable. Doctrine fully stated. 4. Rehearing refused.