Fischer v. Howard

271 P.2d 1059, 201 Or. 426, 49 A.L.R. 2d 1301, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 306
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 271 P.2d 1059 (Fischer v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fischer v. Howard, 271 P.2d 1059, 201 Or. 426, 49 A.L.R. 2d 1301, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 306 (Or. 1954).

Opinions

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from an order of the circuit court which sustained a motion made by the plaintiff for a new trial. The action in which the challenged order was made was based upon two charges of assault and battery. The complaint (amended) averred- that the defendant, on June 23, 1950, and again on July 29, 1950, assaulted and beat the plaintiff. For the purported assault of June 23 the plaintiff sought $100 special, $1,000 general, and $2,500 punitive damages. For that of July 29 he demanded $500 special, $7,500 general, and $5,000 punitive damages. The answer (amended), in addition to denying the assaults and the alleged injuries, pleaded self-defense.

Following is a copy of the verdict which the jury returned:

“We, the Jury duly empanelled in the above entitled cause find for the plaintiff on his first cause of action and fix his damages as follows:
Compensatory Damages................ $ None
Punitive Damages.......................... $None
and also find for the plaintiff on his second cause of action and fix his damages on the second cause of action as follows:
Compensatory Damages.................. $ 1.00
Punitive Damages............................ $ 1.00
Special Damages.............................. $35.00”

[430]*430The verdict bore the signatures of all twelve jurors. When the verdict was returned, counsel for both parties were present. Neither made any objection to the verdict nor asked that the jury be sent out again to express its verdict in a different form.

Based upon the verdict, the court entered a judgment which, after reciting the verdict, proceeded as follows:

“It is ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff, Bobert Fischer, do have and recover of and from the said defendant, Max Howard, the sum of $37.00; * * #

Two days after the discharge of the jury and the filing of its verdict the plaintiff presented his motion for a new trial; it reads:

“ (1) Misconduct of the jury in failing to award Plaintiff substantial general damages.
“(2) That after finding that the Plaintiff was entitled to special, compensatory and punitive damages, the verdict of the jury in fixing Plaintiff’s compensatory damages at the sum of $1.00, was arbitrary, and capricious, against the uncontradieted evidence and contrary to the instructions of the Court.
“(3) That after finding that Plaintiff was entitled to special, compensatory and punitive damages, the jury arbitrarily and capriciously refused to allow Plaintiff any adequate compensation for pain, suffering, humiliation and loss of time, contrary to the uncontradicted evidence, and contrary to the instructions of the Court.
“ (4) That action of the jury in allowing Plaintiff special damages of $35.00 for medical expenses, and refusing to allow adequate compensatory damages for pain, suffering, humiliation and loss of time for the injuries, which made the medical service necessary, is inconsistent, and the result of prejudice [431]*431and caprice, and is contrary to the uncontradieted evidence and instructions of the Court.”

The plaintiff and the defendant lived upon adjacent tracts of land in Malheur County. Their two affrays, which they termed grapplings, stemmed from a dispute over water rights. They occurred upon, or near to, a road which separated the properties. Near at hand was an irrigating ditch—the source of their misunderstandings and personal animosities. In the course of the first grappling, the plaintiff suffered a twisted neck, so he swore, which necessitated the services of a chiropractic physician. He paid the latter $25 and lost several days from his employment. Before the second affray was over, the rolling struggle had taken the participants into the irrigation ditch. The cooling effect of the water quickly ended the matter. According to the plaintiff, he suffered a fractured rib in-the second encounter and lost one month from his employment. He paid the physician who treated the fracture $35. The wages which he lost due to the injuries of the second encounter amounted to $300 or slightly more.

The two grapplings were substantially alike. In each instance, the defendant came upon the scene empty-handed, but the plaintiff possessed a shovel with which he was removing a dam from the irrigation ditch. In each instance, after some preliminary maneuvers had taken place, the defendant grabbed the shovel, threw it away and then the struggle ran its course. The parties were evenly matched; each was a lightweight.

The testimony, as transcribed, covers 325 pages. In addition, there are several exhibits. Much of the time of the trial was consumed in the efforts of each [432]*432of the parties to prove that he, not the other, was entitled to the water in the ditch.

The plaintiff claims that the verdict upon the first cause of action is for him and follows that claim with an argument that, although the jury found for him, it failed to assess his damages. Beliance is had upon §5-405, OCLA (OKS 17.425), which says:

“When a verdict is found for the plaintiff in an action for recovery of money, * * * the jury shall also assess the amount of recovery; * *

Based upon that line of reasoning, it is claimed that the trial judge erred when he entered judgment upon the verdict which was returned upon the first cause of action.

The verdict upon the second cause of action is attacked by a different process of reasoning. Snyder v. Amermann, Jr., 194 Or 675, 243 P2d 1082, and Hall v. Cornett, 193 Or 634, 240 P2d 231, ruled that if a jury awards a plaintiff in a personal injury action the amount of his special damages, it must also award him general damages. It is claimed that the award in the second cause of action of $1.00 as compensatory damages is nominal only, and therefore inadequate in view of the fact that the jury sustained the plaintiff’s claim for special damages.

In defense of the verdict and the resulting judgment, the defendant argues that the verdict was, in effect, for him and cites Snyder v. Portland Railway, Light & Power Co., 107 Or 673, 215 P 887. Proceeding with that proposition [that the verdict was virtually for him], he claims that the jury was under no duty to assess the plaintiff’s damages. Further, he submits that the plaintiff waived his right to objeet to any informality or irregularity in the verdict when he [433]*433permitted the trial judge to discharge the jury without making any objection whatever to the manner in which the jury had expressed itself. The defendant calls attention to the fact that before the jury was discharged the plaintiff was fully apprised of the form of the verdict and that he had no more information concerning the verdict when he moved for a new trial than when the jury was discharged.

It will be noticed that the action under review arose out of an episode—a physical encounter between two neighbors—that any juror could readily understand. The case called for the application of no principles of law concerning physical encounters that were alien to the man in the street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P.2d 1059, 201 Or. 426, 49 A.L.R. 2d 1301, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-v-howard-or-1954.