Boyle v. Case

18 F. 880, 9 Sawy. 386, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2477
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 F. 880 (Boyle v. Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Case, 18 F. 880, 9 Sawy. 386, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2477 (uscirct 1883).

Opinion

Deady, J.,

(charging jury orally.) You have heard the allegations of the parties, the evidence offered in support of them, and the argument of the respective counsel. It now remains for you to determine the issue between them, under the instructions of the court. The plaintiff claims that the defendants in this action, in connection with others, unlawfully arrested him at Astoria on the sixth of July-last and confined him in jail; that they pretended to try him, and sentenced him to receive 25 lashes on his hare hack, and, in pursuance of said sentence, caused him to be blindfolded, gagged and taken from the jail during the following night, onto the hill back of the town, where he was first tantalized or tortured by the information that he was to be hung, and then to receive 200 lashes,'and finally was whipped on the bare back with a cat-o’-nine-tails, — five men giving him five lashes each, —when he was sworn upon his knees never to reveal what took place on that occasion, nor to harm any one engaged in the transaction; that he was then taken back to the jail, where he was left until morning, when he was taken in irons to the Portland steam-boat and sent away on her, for which he brings'this action to recover $25,000 damages. These facts are substantially admitted by the defendants; and, of course, there is no absolute defense to this action, and none is attempted to be made.

The burden of the defense is that the acts of which the plaintiff complains were done under circumstances that will not warrant or justify you in giving him what are called punitive or exemplary damages; and that he ought not to recover more than nominal damages. It is admitted that he is entitled to what are called compensatory damages, and therefore you must find a verdict for the plaintiff in some amount. In this respect you have no discretion. You must [881]*881find a verdict for such damages as will, in your judgment, compensate the plaintiff for the wrong and injury he has sustained, at the hands of the defendants. What constitutes or may enter into the estimate of compensatory damages is well stated in section 615, Mold, Law of Damages, from which I read to you, as follows:

“ As a summary o£ the element of damages in such cases, it may be remarked that all cases of simple trespass, when no element of outrage or malice enters into the commission of the offense, only compensatory damages should be allowed, or such as will compensate the party for actual injuries, including loss of time, medical, and other expenses, physical pain, and mental anguish; as these are fairly and reasonably the plain consequences of the injury.”

The value of one’s time depends on circumstances. Where a person is in the receipt of a large salary, or has important matters committed to his charge, his time is correspondingly valuable. But when he is not engaged in any business, or has no lawful vocation, or is incapable of earning more than a mere living, or less, his time is less valuable. You must judge from the circumstances what loss the plaintiff has sustained on this account. He testifies that'he suffered from the effects of the beating about two months. But how long he was thereby incapacitated from doing anything that he could or would do under ordinary circumstances you must judge. There is no evidence of medical expense, or medical treatment, except the cursory examination of his back at Dr. Chapman’s office, for which no charge appears to have been made. The three important heads under which you will be called upon to consider the subject of compensatory damages are the physical pain, the mental anguish, and the personal indignity caused by and attendant upon the transaction. The physical pain and mental anguish which the plaintiff must have suffered under the circumstances cannot be exactly measured by dollars and cents, but the law cannot give any other compensation, and leaves it to your judgment, founded upon your experience and knowledge of men and things, to fix the amount which he ought to have. You are also to consider the personal indignity involved in the matter. A formal whipping is calculated to disgrace a man — to dishonor him in the eyes of the community or his fellows. But in this respect you ■will consider who the plaintiff is. All men are considered equal before the law, but they are seldom so in fact. In their condition and circumstances men are unequal. A man whose life is low, coarse, and brutal, who is accustomed to brawls, to knock-down and drag-out, may not feel the same degree of suffering and shame at being beaten or whipped as one who lives a higher and purer life, and who deserves and is accustomed to receive from his associates and the community personal esteem and favorable consideration. As I have said, what, may be a great indignity to one person may not be felt to be such by another. Apply these suggestions to the circumstances of this case, [882]*882as they appear to you from the evidence, and allow the plaintiff what yon think right on this account.

In estimating compensatory damages in this ease, you will endeavor to reach a fair and just conclusion; and, in this respect, your conclusion ought not to he unfavorably affected towards the plaintiff by the number and respectability of the defendants, or the character of the motives or causes which induced them to act. Nor should these damages be diminished, so far as the physical pain and mental anguish are concerned, by the fact that the plaintiff is an obscure man in the lower walks of life — that he is a bar-tender, a professional gambler, or even a vagrant. The physical pain and mental anguish, which you find from the evidence the plaintiff suffered from the whipping and the attendant circumstances, you ought, by your verdict, to compensate him for, irrespective of his calling or condition in life. But the damages to be allowed for the indignity and disgrace involved in his treatment by the defendants, depend largely, as I have said, upon such circumstances.

You will next consider whether the plaintiff is entitled to punitive damages, and if so, how much. Punitive damages are such as are allowed, by way of punishment of the defendant, to discourage the commission of the wrong, as well as for compensation to the plaintiff. On this subject the author from whom I have just read (Field, Dam. § 615,) says:

“That when the elements of outrage, oppression, or malice enter into the commission of the offense, exemplary or punitive damages may be allowed, and the jury are not limited to actual compensation, but, blending together the rights of the injured party and the interests of the community, they may give such a verdict as will compensate for the injury received, and at the same time inflict sorhe punishment upon the defendant for his wrongful act.”

It was with a view of enabling you to judge fairly and justly in this matter that the court allowed the defendants to give evidence, showing how this committee that caused the plaintiff to be arrested and punished, originated — its purpose and .general conduct, and particularly as respects the plaintiff. It appears from the evidence that this organization had its origin in this wise: On July 2, 1883, a large and destructive fire occurred in Astoria. At the time the place was full of people, more or less transient and doubtful in their character, connected with the fisheries, and the riot and dissipation which seems to be incident to that season. The community was excited by the fire — by the destruction of property — and the loss of a large amount of personal property which appears to have been carried away from the burning buildings and vicinity.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. 880, 9 Sawy. 386, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-case-uscirct-1883.