Ellsworth v. Massacar

184 N.W. 408, 215 Mich. 511, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 787
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1921
DocketDocket No. 93
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 184 N.W. 408 (Ellsworth v. Massacar) 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
Ellsworth v. Massacar, 184 N.W. 408, 215 Mich. 511, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 787 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Steere, C. J.

Plaintiff is a farmer 62 years old residing with his wife on a 40-acre farm in the township of Fremont, Sanilac county. As a prelude, it may be noted that events out of which this action arose were contemporaneous with war activities in a Liberty loan drive in the spring of 1918, touching which plaintiff relates that a neighbor named Doane, described by him as “the worst enemy I have in the world,” called upon him accompanied by another neighbor about a week before May 5th, and solicited him to subscribe for a Liberty bond which he refused to do, telling Doane he would take none from him. On May 5, 1918, shortly after midnight, while plaintiff and his wife were at home and retired for the night, he was aroused by some one who came to his bedroom window and called him, asking for help to get an automobile out of the ditch near by and for poles to pry it up, or a team. He responded, gave the parties some directions where to find poles and blocks, put on his clothing and overshoes, took his lantern and went out at his back door, where he met one of them who had a pole and they went down the road some 12 or 14 rods to where the automobile was claimed to be in the ditch, but was not. • Another automobile just then came down the road with people in and he was suddenly seized by several men who pulled a bag over his head, put him into the bottom of an automobile where he felt a rope under him and drove to a piece of woods about a mile from his home, where [513]*513he was received by a gathering of considerable size, some of them being masked, and subjected to a course of treatment with harrowing details as he relates them.

It appears from his testimony, in the main undisputed, that he was there provided with an escort equipped with a rope and firmly led in the direction of a convenient tree, with accompanying intimations of the fate he was about to meet if he did not manifest a change of heart and recant on certain manifestations of disloyalty imputed to him and, as he states, charging him with being pro-German, having found fault with the bread people were obliged to eat during these war times, failure to contribute his share for Red Cross, Liberty bonds, etc. He denied disloyalty, stated he had bought a Liberty bond and made other protests resulting in a proposition by some one that he be allowed to take the oath of allegiance and promise loyalty thereafter. He was then in a frame of mind to accept the proposition promptly, and an attorney from the near-by town of Croswell, who happened to be there in the interest of good order, as suggested, was called upon to conduct the ceremony. He testified that “angle of the situation suited” him as it appeared to be “a very favorable way of settling up the question,” and he proceeded to administer the oath of allegiance with full ceremony, plaintiff being required to kneel and repeat it after him. He took pains to elaborate the oath of allegiance beyond mere fidelity to the Constitution of the United States and went down the line through varying governmental and other public activities, “right on down to the school board” and the “war board in particular,” as he testified. At conclusion of the oath, to which plaintiff readily responded, he was required to and did kiss an American flag which was ready and put before him. The function being thus happily ended, plaintiff [514]*514was returned in one of the automobiles to his own fireside.

As to the details of plaintiff’s treatment by those who had him in charge, the testimony is in grave dispute. He claims serious injury resulted to him from the manner of his treatment, both mentally and physically — that he was cursed, kicked and struck, violently thrown into the automobile, blinded by the bag over his head, and was roughly man-hauled generally, sustaining various physical injuries, one being a severe and lasting wrench of his spine; that defendant, who was admittedly at the gathering, was in the car which kidnapped him, acted as a leader, cursed him, struck him with a piece of board, and at one time called to the others to “Get the ropes.” This action in tort is planted against him to recover damages for the injuries so claimed to have been inflicted.

The evidence of the defense, both by citizens who were present, but not shown to have taken an active part, as well as defendant and others accused of overt acts, is that plaintiff was not struck, roughly handled or physically injured; that only sufficient force was used to safely but firmly convey him to the place of meeting and escort him through the ceremonies; that, contemporaneous with the theatrical display in which no actual violence was resorted to, plaintiff proclaimed his loyalty and promptly consented to manifest it in the manner proposed, after which he was considerately returned to his home, and he in fact suffered no injuries, unless to his feelings. Those issues were left to the jury. Plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment against the defendant in the sum of $2,000.

Numerous errors are assigned, the principal ones being that the court erred in excluding offered' testimony of defendant to show plaintiff’s disloyalty, refusal to contribute to the Red Cross and other war [515]*515funds, etc.; in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant; in permitting plaintiff’s counsel to use a newspaper and read from it an article on the subject of mob law; in permitting testimony as to the loss by plaintiff of the services of his wife resulting from the shock she sustained by reason of the event and in stating the measure of damages to the jury.

Not only was conspiracy charged in the declaration but assault and battery. The conflicting testimony clearly made a case for the jury under the charges contained in plaintiff’s declaration.

The question of loyalty or disloyalty, citizenship or non-citizenship were in no sense proper issues in the case. The court consistently so ruled during the trial and very clearly instructed the jury upon the subject. It unavoidably crept into the case as res gestse through the testimony as to what was done and said at the time of the alleged tortious acts, largely that of defendant. Aside from that all offered evidence of either side on the subject was excluded by the court. Of this the court said to the jury in part:

“Now at the outset there crept into this -case from the opening statement of plaintiff’s counsel and subsequently by efforts to combat that and the testimony of the plaintiff, question of loyalty or disloyalty. I say to you at the outset that that question cuts no figure in the law or in the disposition of this case so far as the law is concerned and so far as the court is concerned. The wrong claimed here is a trespass to the person of the plaintiff — an assault, the claim being that he was forcibly taken from his premises, *! * * Now I say to you as a matter of law that whatever words may have been used or whatever language may have been used by Mr. Ellsworth previous to that time would not be an excuse for that act of these persons toward him, it can offer no excuse for personal violence. And on that same question there has been run into the case the question of Mr. Ellsworth’s citizenship and.the defendant’s non-citizenship. That does not cut any figure. Nothing should [516]*516be charged against either or given in favor of either because he is a citizen or non-citizen.”

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 408, 215 Mich. 511, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellsworth-v-massacar-mich-1921.