Cornell v. Fidler

160 N.W. 840, 194 Mich. 509, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 543
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1916
DocketDocket No. 54
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 N.W. 840 (Cornell v. Fidler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornell v. Fidler, 160 N.W. 840, 194 Mich. 509, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 543 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Person, J.

This is a civil action to recover damages for an assault and battery alleged to have been committed on the 19th day of October, 1914. Plaintiff recovered a verdict for $500, upon which judgment was duly entered, and defendant brings the case to this court by writ of error.

It is conceded that plaintiff struck the defendant a blow in the face, in the first instance, but it is claimed by plaintiff that the controversy in which that blow was struck had practically terminated, and that, as he was turning to leave the place, defendant hit him in [511]*511the back of the head with a stone, inflicting severe injuries.

It appears that the parties had not been on speaking terms for some time prior to the day of the assault. On that day they met on the street in the village of Ithaca where both resided. Plaintiff, who was riding a bicycle, got off his wheel, turned back, and spoke to defendant. Angry words followed, and plaintiff struck defendant. The parties themselves were witnesses upon the trial, and their respective claims as to what occurred can best be stated in their own language. Plaintiff’s testimony as to the affray, abbre-. viating it as much as possible, was as follows:

“I struck him in the face with my left hand. I did not knock him down. I had a pair of tinners’ shears in my right hand. He turned and run pretty near across the road. I followed him a few steps and then stopped. He picked up a stone and came back. His father, Lyme Fidler, came across the road and right around behind me and says, ‘Boys you better get out of this and square it up.’ I says, ‘All right, Lyme; I am willing to do anything that is fair and square.’ _ Defendant spoke up and says, ‘Not by a God damn sight,’ and I thought that was all that could be done, and I started for my wheel. Just as I started there was something went over my head, and in an instant there was something struck me in the back of the head, and that is the last I remember.”

Defendant, upon the same subject, gave the following testimony:

“He struck me with his left hand. I should judge he had his hand around the middle of the shears below the handle. I turned around to get away from him. I went across the road; across the wagon track and picked up some stones. I picked up one on the south side, and one on the north side of the wagon track as I was going back to the walk. In returning to the walk I was going northeast. My father, L. W. Fidler, and my sister, also came out and father came up to where we two men were; came up between us. I [512]*512stopped. Mr. Cornell was then perhaps ten feet west of me. Father said, ‘Cad, you are too good fellows to be quarreling.’ My father said, ‘Cad, what is the matter?’ Cad says, ‘He is cutting me out of my driveway.’ Father said, ‘He is not; he told me just the other day that he would not cut you out of any driveway.’ Plaintiff said, ‘Yes, he is; he is cutting me out of my driveway.’ And there was something said about we had better cut it out and make up, and Cad says, ‘If you are a mind to drop it right where it is, I will shake hands and try to be a neighbor.’ I says, ‘You cannot strike me in the face and call me a son of a bitch and turn around the next minute and make up.’ I says, ‘You just go on about your business and let me alone.’ He walked back probably eight or ten feet, and I says, ‘It is your wife that is causing a lot of this trouble.’ He says, ‘You cannot find one person .in this town that will say a word against my wife.’ And I says, T can; I can find one; I can find two.’ And he raised those shears and made for me. And I threw the first stone, and he dodged that and made for me just like a sheep, you might say. After I threw the first stone, when he got in three or four feet of me— understand he was running as fast as he could come and watching to dodge the other stone — and as he dodged when he got his head down like this, I took him. He had his hat on. I was running backwards when the second stone I threw hit him in the head.”

There was further testimony about the sequence of events, both from the parties and others, but the foregoing represents their respective theories. In stating the law applicable to these conflicting claims, the trial judge instructed the jury as follows:

“Now, gentlemen, the vital point in this case for you to take up first is whose story is true as to what happened immediately before the stones were thrown. I charge you as a matter of law that while the striking of the defendant by the plaintiff would be an assault, and the plaintiff had no right to strike him, even though the defendant had used some words that he ought not to have used possibly, yet that is not a matter that need be determined by you. You have [513]*513a right to take into consideration all that took place. I didn’t mean to say you shall not consider everything that took place there from the time they met, but 1 mean that the question that is submitted to you, that you are trying here is not the assault made by the plaintiif upon the defendant when he struck him in the first instance there, but the question for you to determine is whether or not an assault was made by the defendant upon the plaintiif at a time when the stones were thrown. So the first and vital question in this case for you to determine is what the parties were doing just before the stones were thrown, after they got to talking there, after the plaintiif had struck the defendant and the father of the defendant had come out and they had their conversation there, and at a time when they were not fighting at all according to the story of all of them, take it up at that point and determine who then became the aggressor in the next move that was made. And I charge you as a matter of law that if the plaintiif was retreating, if he had turned around, as he claims he had and was going back towards his wheel and was not renewing the attack or quarrel or fight they were having there but was going away from the defendant at the time the defendant threw the stone and struck him, then the defendant committed an assault and battery upon him, and the plaintiff would be entitled to recover damages in this case. On the other hand, I charge you as a matter of law that if you find, as claimed by the defendant, that the plaintiif came at the defendant, perhaps that is the best expression I can use, advanced towards him, you heard the testimony, having the shears in his hands, if he renewed the attack or quarrel or fight they were having there, then he cannot recover in this case, though he was struck upon the head by the stone and even though the injuries came from that, providing you find that the defendant did no more than he had the right to do in self-defense of himself under the rules that I shall presently lay down.”

Counsel for defendant assign error upon this portion of the charge, and insist that it was not applicable [514]*514to the facts for the following reasons, stated in their brief:

“The affray in which plaintiff was struck lasted but a few minutes and was one continuous affray.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.W. 840, 194 Mich. 509, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornell-v-fidler-mich-1916.