Davis v. Collins
Davis v. Collins
Opinion of the Court
The first opinion was delivered by
This is an action for damages arising out of an assault and battery upon the plaintiff by the defendant.
The alleged wrong is thus set forth in paragraph 2 of the complaint: “That on Sunday, the second day of March, 1902, in the city of Spartanburg, at the depot of the Southern Railway Company in said city, while the plaintiff was quietly and peaceably standing at or near said depot, the defendant being there for an unlawful purpose, to wit: for the purpose of committing an assault and battery of at least a high and aggravated nature upon the person of one Clifford Gholdstein, with others aiding and abetting him in said unlawful purpose, did wilfully, wantonly, maliciously and unlawfully, while he and those who were with him were engaged in assaulting and beating, or attempting to assault and beat, the said Clifford Gholdstein, and without any cause or provocation, whatsoever, he and those who were with him aiding and abetting him in the unlawful purpose aforesaid, did strike, beat and bruise the plaintiff, Mabel H. Davis, striking her upon the head and other portions of her body, felling her to the earth, causing her to faint and become unconscious, thereby rendering her sick and shocking her nervous system, and causing- her to suffer great mental and bodily pain and anguish, and preventing her from attending to1 her household affairs and daily duties, to her damage in the sum of $6,000.”
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,000.
*463
The second exception is substantially the same as the first, and is disposed of by what was said in considering that exception.
*464 , , This exception cannot be sustained, as the introduction of the testimony at that stage of the trial was within the discretion of the Circuit Judge, and the appellant has failed to satisfy this Court that there was an abuse of such discretion.
The charge is not in accord with the rule announced in Dean v. Horton, 2 McM., 147, in which the Court says: *465 “The testimony was offered in mitigation; inquiry was to be made into the motive of the defendant. The inducement to the transaction and all such particulars in the conduct of either party leading to the final act or forming part of it, as seemed to show in what degree blame attached to them, severally, were calculated to aid the jury in determining the just measure of retribution and punishment. A provocation seemingly slight may have exasperated patience, if it were a repetition of an offense before often given and endured; and resentment otherwise rash or preparation otherwise ferocious, may be explained by the previous relation of the parties in former occurrences between them.”
Malice is not necessarily a constituent element of an assault and battery. The plaintiff, however, may rely upon it for the purpose of enhancing his damages,' in which case it is necessary to' allege and prove it. The simple fact that an assailant had malice against his intended victim, when the action is brought by another upon whom he accidentally committed an assault and battery, is not sufficient to1 show malice against the plaintiff. There must be evidence of facts from which, malice may be implied against the party suffering the injury; as, for instance, where there was wantonness or negligence. In other words, there must be evidence connecting the malice intended by the assailant with the act committed; and, as. we have said, this is. usually done by showing wantonness or negligence. * * * It seems to- m:e that it is an invasion of the province of the jury for the Court to assume that there was such wantonness or negligence in this case as constituted malice.
The judgment of the Circuit Court should be reversed, and the case remanded to that Court for a new trial.
Mr. Justice Jones. Some months previous to March 2, 1902, Clifford Gholdstein had a controversy with J. D. Collins, a merchant at Spartanburg, S. C., in which he inflicted a serious gunshot wound upon Collins. On March 2d, 1902, Goldstein, accompanied by his father, arrived on train at Spartanburg for the purpose of attending his trial on an indictment for the offense above stated. Collins, expecting the arrival of Gholdstein, armed himself with brass knucks, and accompanied by two1 of his clerks, went to. the depot for the purpose of whipping Gholdstein. The day was Sunday, and there was a crowd of people about the station, and among them was plaintiff, who was there to. see a friend take the train. When young Gholdstein alighted from the train, and had just spoken to the plaintiff and her friend, Collins suddenly rushed upon Gholdstein and struck at him, *467 one of the -clerks who accompanied Collins about the same time seizing hold of Gholdstein’s father. There was conflict in the testimony, but there was testimony which the jury doubtless believed, that Collins struck the plaintiff in the effort to- strike Gholdstein, and thereby inflicted the injuries complained of in this action. Young Gholdstein had made no effort whatever to assault Co-l'lins, had not spoken to him, and fled through the crowd, pursued by Collins.
The law makes so much concession to human infirmity in succumbing to- the passion engendered by immediate provo^-catio-n, but it would be dangerous to the peace of society to go further and open the door to the consideration of every provocation, real or fancied, however remote, as a mitigating circumstance. A contrary rule would -encourage men to take vengeance into their own hands and manufacture evidence of provocation in order to mitigate the penalty. It would declare that to brood over an old grudge or wrong and *468 ■thereby swell the passion for revenge, palliates a criminal assault, whereas, tire good of society demands that men shall curb their passions and submit their grievances to law.
The case of Dean v. Horton, 2 McM., 147, is cited as an authority against the charge of the Court, but an examination of the point decided rather than some of the broad language used, will show that there is no conflict. The point decided in Dean v. Horton was that it is competent in 'an action for assault and battery to offer in evidence in mitigation of damages, provoking- imputations made at times previous to' the assault of the same kind as those made which immediately lead to the assault. This is not a departure from the general rule stated, but, at most, merely modifies it so as to allow for the immediate provocation as aggravated by its being a repetition of like provocation continued up to the time of the assault. The Court distinguished Dean v. Horton from Avery v. Ray, 1 Mass., 12, a leading case in support of the general rule stated, by pointing out that in Avery v. Ray, no provocation at all was offered on the day of the injury. In the case at bar, no provocation was offered on the day of the assault. In 3 Cyc., 1098, note 6, a modification of the general rule is allowed, “when the acts done or words spoken some time previous to' the assault are parts of a series of provocations repeated and continued up to the time of the assault” — citing Stetlaw v. Nellis, 60 Barb., N. Y., 524, 42 How. Pr., 163; Fairbanks v. Witter, 18 Wis., 287, 86 Am. Dec., 765.
So' as in Rhodes v. Bunch, 3 McC., 65, by wajr of mitigation, the motive of the trespass may be shown by evidence of facts indicating that it was done to remove a nuisance continuing up to the trespass. In that case a vagabond had obtruded himself into one of the defendant’s cabins for the purpose of preying upon the neighborhood, trading with their slaves and engaging in such conduct as to become a grievous nuisance, to remove which, in the absence of the intruder, the defendant tore down the house. The inducement to the transaction in that case was immediate and the *469 motive one upon which the law could look with some toleration. A very different case is presented here. The Court only excluded the consideration of the previous difficulty in mitigation when there had been sufficient time to> cool and the assault was made in a spirit of revenge.
Considered with reference to the undisputed facts in this case, we see no reversible error in this charge. Net it be remembered that the defendant, without any immediate provocation, unlawfully and in a spirit of revenge assaulted Gholdstein with brass knucks, procured for the purpose, while he was quietly talking to friends at a depot station crowded with people. With respect to Gholdstein, the assault was made with specific malice and with respect to the bystanders so apparently close as to be endangered by the assault, his acts were so reckless and wanton as to imply general malice *470 towards the one injured, just as if one would cast a brick from a housetop into a crowded street, or fire a loaded gun into a crowded thoroughfare. The law, under such circumstances, would imply general malice, even though the offender did not have specific malice against any particular individual injured thereby. There being nothing in the case to warrant any other inference than that the act of defendant in striking plaintiff was reckless and wanton under the circumstances, from which the law would imply malice, so as to justify examplary damages, in a civil action, we see no ground for reversal.
We concur in overruling the exceptions as to the admissibility of testimony for the reasons stated by Mr. Justice Gary.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
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- 1. Evidence. — A question seeking to make a witness pass on the credibility of other witnesses, is incompetent. 2. Appeal. — A ruling seemingly acquiesced in cannot be made the ground of an exception. 3. Evidence — Discretion..—Admission of de bene evidence after proper time is discretionary with trial Judge, and under facts here there is no abuse thereof. 4. Charge. — It is not prej udicial error to state in a charge a fact about which there can be no reasonable difference of opinion. 5. Mitigation oe Damages — Malice..—If a person has time to cool ■ after a previous difficulty and renew it from a spirit of revenge, a malicious spirit, the fact that there had been a previous difficulty cannot be considered in mitigation of damages. Mr. Justice Gary dissents. 6. Ibid. — Ibid.—Under the facts here the instruction that, if a party attempt to strike one party in malice, but by accident strikes another, the blow as to the latter is malicious, is not erroneous. Mr. Justice Gary dissents.