Conway v. Reed

66 Mo. 346
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 66 Mo. 346 (Conway v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conway v. Reed, 66 Mo. 346 (Mo. 1877).

Opinion

Henry, J.

— An infant is liable for a tort in the same manner as an adult. Bullock v. Babcock, 3 Wendell 391; [351]*351Campbell v. Stakes, 2 Wend. 138; Vasse v. Smith, 6 Cranch. 230 ; Morgan v. Cox, 22 Mo. 374.

It is contended by appellant that, because the petition alleged that defendant unlawfully and wrongfully assaulted the plaintiff and shot him with a gun, evidence of a negligent or careless shooting would not sustain the averment in the petition ; in other words, that the petition alleged one cause of action, and the evidence established another, if any. Bullock v. Babcock, supra, was an action of trespass for assault and battery. The defendant was a boy about 12 years of-age, and the evidence showed a-negligent shooting of plaintiff by defendant with an arrow from a bow, and it was held sufficient to entitle plaintiff to a judgment.

In Morgan v. Cox, defendant was an infant. The petition in that case alleged a negligent killing of plaintiff’s slave by defendant, but there is no intimation in the opinion of the court that, if the-petition had alleged, as in this case, that defendant unlawfully and wrongfully shot the slave, the evidence that it was the result of carelessness, would not have established the cause of action stated in the petition. Leonard, <L, said: “ The facts of the present case would, under the former system of procedure, have supported an action of trespass, and cannot, we think, be distinguished from the cases cited. In one of them, the party, in uncocking his gun, accidentally discharged it and wounded a bystander. Here, the defendant accidentally struck the hammer of his gun against his saddle, and the same result eusued. In both cases it was upon the defendant to show that it happened, as the books say, by inevitable accident, and without the least fault, and the change that has been introduced by the new code in the remedy, has not change.d the rules of law as to the liability of the parties.” The change introduced by the ne'w code in the remedy did not go to the extent of requiring less or more material allegations in a petition than were necessary to constitute a cause of action at common law, but only ob[352]*352yiated the necessity of using those formal and technical averments which, it had been held, were necessary, and for which no other mode of stating the same thing could be substituted. The change introduced, to which the very able judge, who delivered that' opinion, alluded, was that made by the first section of the act of December, 1865, Revised Statutes of 1855, page 1216, which provided that there should be but one form of action for the enforcement' or protection of private rights, and the redress or prevention of private wrongs, to be denominated a civil action; and in the third section of article 6, page 1229, requiring in a petition “ a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting a cause of action, without any unnecessary repetition.”

These sections have been retained in the subsequent revisions. Is it true, that proof of a negligent shooting does not sustain an averment of a wrongful and unlawful shooting ? With regard to the liability of the defendant, the law holds an injury inflicted through carelessness, as wrongful and unlawful; if accidental and inevitable, no blame attaches to the person inflicting the injury. He is then, in .no sense, culpable. If the act was lawful and right, which is the converse of the proposition, the party inflicting tire injury through negligence could not be held liable, and is only responsible because it was unlawful and wrongful.

. At common law the plaintiff was held to prove the cause of action alleged in his declaration, with as much strictness as under the code, and yet an action of trespass for assault and battery, as we have seen, was the proper fox-m of action for direct injuries negligently and carelessly inflicted, as well as for those that were intentional' and malicious.

The celebrated case of Scott v. Sheppard, reported in 2 Wm. Black. 892, and cited and commented upon as often, perhaps, as any case in the books, was an action of tres[353]*353pass for assault and battery. Weaver v. Wood, Hobart 134, cited by Judge Leonard, was in tbe same form of action. There the defendant, a soldier, had accidently shot his comrade while exercising. In all these cases, the plaintiffs maintained their actions, although the injuries received by them were proved to have been the result of accidents? and not intentionally committed. In none of them was it alleged in the declaration that the injury was occasioned by the negligence of the defendant. “ In declarations in trespass, which lies only for wrongs immediate and committed with force, the injury is stated, without any inducement of the defendant’s motive and intention, or of the circumstai;ces under which the injury was committed.” 1 Chitty’s Pleading 387, 127. The court properly overruled defendant’s demurrer to the evidence.

The appellant complains of the first instruction given by the court at the instance of plaintiff, which declared that if defendant shot the plaintiff then, prima facie, plaintiff was entitled to a verdict. “ A battery is the actual infliction of violence on the person,” and, in an action for assault and battery, Mr. Greenleaf says: “ The plaintiff must come prepared with evidence to show either that the intention was unlawful, or that the defendant was in fault, for if the injury was unavoidable, and the conduct of defendant was free from blame, he will not be liable.” Green-leaf 2d Yol. on Evidence, page 81.

We do not understand by this that plaintiff must, in the first place by direct evidence, show either an intention to commit the injury, or that' defendant was in fault. If the act was intentional, of course defendant would be liable, and proof of the shooting would make out a prima facie case of intentional shooting; and, when proof of the fact that defendant inflicted the injury, is made, it devolves upon him to show that it occurred without fault upon his part, to exonerate himself, or that it was accidental, although occasioned by carelessness, to mitigate.-

[354]*354The case of Wakeman v. Robinson, 1 Bing. 213, cited by Prof. Greenleaf, as supporting the text, certainly does not sustain the proposition of the learned author, if by it is meant that the mere fact of the injury inflicted by defendant does not make out a prima facie case, but that plaintiff must, in addition, prove in the first place that it was the result of carelessness on the part of defendant. The defense in that case was that defendant’s horse being frightened by the near., noisy and rapid approach of a butcher’s cart, became ungovernable, that the injury being thus occasioned by unavoidable accident, without any negligence or default on the part of defendant, he was not i esponsible for the consequences. The judge who presided at the trial held that this being an action of trespass, if the injury was occasioned by an immediate act of defendant, it was immaterial whether that act was willful or accidental. In the Common Pleas it was held that this was error, and that was the only question discussed by Dallas, C. J., in. his opinion. The learned author also cites 1st Comyn’s Dig., 129, intending to cite 2nd Comyn; we have found nothing there to sustain the doctrine announced by Prof. Greenleaf, if it is to be understood otherwise than as we have construed the language.

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66 Mo. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conway-v-reed-mo-1877.