Caldwell v. Board of County Commissioners

15 Ohio C.C. 167
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. 167 (Caldwell v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. Board of County Commissioners, 15 Ohio C.C. 167 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

The case of J. W. Caldwell v. The Board of County [168]*168Commissioners of Cuyahoga county et al. comes on error into this court,^the demurrer havingj^been^sustained to the-petition, and final judgment entered.

The question arises under the act found in 92 O. L., page 136, an act for the suppression of mob violence.

The plaintiff claims that he was working at the Brown Hoisting Works during the strike that occurred a little over a year ago, and while so engaged in working, while going from the works, a mcb did him personal violence, and he brings his action under this statute, to recover damages for such violence. The first section of this act defines “a mob,” and defines what “lynching” is, as follows:

' “That any collection of individuals, assembled for any unlawful purposes intending to do damage or injury to any one,or pretending to exercise correctional power over persons by violence, and without authority of law, shall for the purposes of this act be regarded as a ‘mob’, and . any act of violence exercised by them upon the body of any person, shall constitute a ‘lynching’ ”.

“Serious injury” is defined in section 2.

“The term ‘serious injury’, for the purposes of this act, shall include any such injury as shall permanently or temporarily disable a person receiving it from earning a livelihood by manual labor. ”

Section 3. — “Any person who shall be taken from the hands of the officers of justice in any township by a mob, and shall be assaulted by the same with bricks, clubs, missils, or in any other manner, shall be entitled to recover from the county in which such assault shall be made, the sum of one thousand dollars as damages, by action as hereinafter provided,”

Section 4 — (and the question here arises largely on this section):

“Any person assaulted by a mob and suffering lynching at their hands, shall be entitled to recover of the county in which such assault is made, the sum of five hundred dollars; or if the injury received is serious,the sum of one thousand dollars; or if it result in permanent disability to earn a livelihood, the sum of five Ihousand dollars.”

[169]*169Section 5 provides how this money is to be disposed of. In certain cases it creates a trust for the family, and specifies how it shall be distributed.

Section 6 — “Actions for the recoveries provided for in this act may be begun in any court having original jurisdiction of an action for damages for malicious assault, within two years of the time of such lynching.” That is the limitation.

Section 7 provides:

“That when the judgment is given by the court, it is to include an order upon the county commissioners or county officers to include that in the next tax levy.”

Section 8 provides:

“Any person entitled to a share in any recovery under-this act who shall consent to a release or compromise of such claim in consideration of the payment of any sum less than the full aftiount of said recovery, shall be liable to indictment for a misdemeanor, and punished, at the discretion of the court, as in other misdemeanors.”

Section 10 provides:

“The county in which any lynching shall occur,shall have a right of action to recover the amount of any judgment rendered against it in favor of the legal representatives of any person killed or seriously injured by a mob, including costs, against any of the parties composing such mob. Any person present at such' lynching.shall be deemed a member of the mob, and shall be liable in such action.”

Section 11 provides for one county recovering from another.

Section 12 says:

“That a recovery under this act-shall not bar a prosecution for homicide or assault for engaging therein.”

The first question is whether section 4 makes a minimum amount that the party can recover.

“Any person assaulted by a mob and suffering lynching at their hands shall be entitled to recover of the county in [170]*170(which such assault is made, the sum of five hundred dollars; or if the'injury received is serious, the sum of one thousand dollars; or if it result in permanent disability to earn a livelihood by mauual labor, the sum of five thousand dollars.”

We think the court below construed that section correctly. And the court below construed that section to mean that if a person is assaulted, he can have five hundred dollars, and this does not depend upon what'injuries he received; that if any person is assaulted by a mob and suffers lynching at their hands, it means simply an act of violence exercised by them upon the body of that person, that is a lynching; then he ‘íshall be entitled to recover of the county in which the assault is made, the sum of five hundred dollars.” That is a prescribed minimum by this statute, we think. ‘‘Or if the injury received is serious, the sum of one thousand dollars;” that is another part of the section, and the party so injured will recover that anyhow, regardless of what his injuries are.

It is contended that the difference between the actual injury and what the injured party is permitted here to recover by this statute, is a mere gift to the party on behalf of the county, and that it is, therefore, levying or taxing the public simply for private interests — not for public good, but simply for private interests.'

There is, perhaps, a moral obligation, at least, upon a county, and it is held constitutional for the legislature to determine whether or not a county shall or shall not respond to a person who loses his property by mob,or who suffers in his person by a mob.

The legislation has been upheld where it has been introduced in any state, as to the losing of property by a mob, making the county respond in damag'es for the amount of property lost. We know of no legislation where the county has been made to respond for any injury to

[171]*171persons such as this act specifies; but the question is not before us as to whether the county may be made* to respond in the actual amount of damages, for we have no such law. But it is contended, that all that the party receives above what he has actually suffered is a gift to the party, and is taxing the people for a private individual to whom the county owe no duty or moral obligation whatever. The county, however, may owe a moral obligation, and if that moral obligation exists, it may be sufficient to' sustain a statute; but the moral obligation of the county can extend no further than to the actual amount of damages suffered. Beyond that there is no moral obligation. Hence, it is contended that beyond that, there can be no legal obligation — there can be no legal obligation created by statute, and the difference between the actual damage and the minimum amount prescribed by statute is a mere gift to the party injured. And that is met on the other side, by saving that in Ohio no legislative act is unconstitutional unless it is prohibited by the constitution, and there is no prohibition on the taxing power of the legislature.

We refer to the case of the Board of Education against The State, 51 Ohio St. page 531.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-board-of-county-commissioners-ohiocirct-1897.