Fontenelle v. Waguespack

90 So. 662, 150 La. 315, 1922 La. LEXIS 2567
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1922
DocketNo. 23292
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 90 So. 662 (Fontenelle v. Waguespack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fontenelle v. Waguespack, 90 So. 662, 150 La. 315, 1922 La. LEXIS 2567 (La. 1922).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Plaintiff has instituted this suit to recover damages against defendant in the sum of $3,293.23 for an aggravated assault and battery. This case was tried by jury, and a verdict for'the sum of $1,763.25 was returned in favor of plaintiff.

Plaintiff alleges that the defendant was the aggressor; that he struck the first blow; that he knocked plaintiff down and pounded him mercilessly while on his back on the ground; and that, after defendant left him, plaintiff tried to get up, and then defendant returned and kicked him in the mouth, breaking his set of false teeth, and loosening an eyetooth, the main support for the plate of false teeth, and that, he was compelled to have this tooth extracted and the remaining eyetooth and a molar, in order to have a new plate of false teeth fitted in his mouth, and that these three teeth were all of the natural teeth that he had left prior to the assault. Plaintiff alleges that his nose was mashed in the encounter, and continued to bleed for several days, and had to be cauterized with electricity before the flow of blood was stanched; that his mouth was badly bruised; that one eye was wholly closed, and the blood flowing into the other; and that he remained in bed on. account of the injuries inflicted for three or four days. Plaintiff claims damages for physical suffering and pain, for mental anguish and sufferings, humiliation and shame, for loss of, teeth, dentist and doctor’s bills, etc.

[319]*319Defendant in his answer charges that plaintiff provoked the difficulty by calling defendant a liar, and struck two vicious blows at him, scratching defendant’s face; that defendant was assaulted on his own premises by plaintiff, without any cause or justification whatever, and was compelled to defend himself to prevent plaintiff from doing defendant serious bodily harm, and that plaintiff is known as a quarrelsome, quick-tempered, fighting, treacherous, and dangerous man.

Defendant claims in reconvention judgment against plaintiff in the sum of $1,000.00 .as follows; (1) For injury to respondent’s feelings and mental suffering and humiliation for being wantonly and maliciously called and denounced as a liar, without cause or justification, the sum of $300; (2) for violent, wanton, malicious, and unprovoked assault made by plaintiff upon respondent on his own premises, the sum of $300; (3) for punitory and exemplary damages, the sum of $400.

Defendant objected to the following instructions given by the trial judge to the jury in the course of his general charge, to wit:

“Under the answer of defendant, the moment the plaintiff has proven an assault and battery, then it devolves upon defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he acted in self-defense. Any assault and battery, as I have defined, is sufficient to throw the burden of justification upon the defendant, and it is not necessary to prove it as charged in the petition; that is, wantonly and maliciously to have been committed. Self-defense is an affirmative defense, and the burden of proving it is on the defendant. If you find, therefore, from the evidence that the defendant did assault and beat plaintiff, and that he was not justified in doing so in self-defense, then you are to find a verdict for plaintiff for such amount as you may find he has suffered from acts of defendant.”

The defendant’s counsel objected to this portion of the charge as erroneous and prejudicial, as it placed on defendant a greater burden of proof than he was bound by law to carry.

Defendant also objected to the following special charge, made at the request of plaintiff and given'to the jury by the trial judge:

“Where a defendant pleads self-defense in justification of an assault upon plaintiff, he necessarily admits that he committed an assault and battery upon plaintiff, and the jury are bound to find a verdict for some damages against the defendant, the amount of damages depending upon all the evidence submitted to the jury, and defendant can only be relieved from such damage by proving to .the satisfaction of the jury that he used only such force as he reasonably believed necessary to defend himself against the assault of plaintiff.”

[1] The instructions objected to are broader than they should have been. If plaintiff was in fault in making an assault and battery upon defendant, he could not recover for the injuries inflicted on him, although the defendant was not justified in law in his conduct. The same rule applies to defendant as to his reconventional demand. It is not necessary for defendant to prove that he acted in self-defense in order to recover damages in reeonventlon from plaintiff. Unless the defendant provoked the difficulty by insults, abuse, threats, or other conduct, he would be entitled to recover, if plaintiff, without legal excuse, committed an assault and battery upon him. Either plaintiff or defendant, in order to recover, would have to prove that he was without fault in provoking the difficulty. The plea of self-defense may admit that the defendant committed an assault and battery on plaintiff, but it is clear that plaintiff could not recover, by virtue of such admission, if he was in fault in bringing on the difficulty, as alleged by defendant in his answer. Massett v. Keff, 116 La. 1107, 41 South. 330; Miller v. Meche, 111 La. 143, 35 South. 491; Bankston v. Folks, 38 La. Ann. 267; Johns v. Brinker, 30 La. Ann. 241; Vernon v. Bankston, 28 La. Ann. 710; Bon[321]*321neval v. American Coffee Co., 127 La. 57, 53 South. 426.

[2] While these instructions are erroneous, yet in face pf the preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiff that the defendant assaulted and heat him without justification or excuse, and in view of the fact that defendant is the only witness who testified that plaintiff was at fault in bringing on the difficulty, and that plaintiff made the first assault, we do not believe that the jury was misled by these instructions, or that defendant suffered any injury from same, as the jury evidently did not believe defendant’s uncorroborated testimony. The trial judge reached the same conclusion, as shown by the per curiam of the bills of exception reserved in this case.

[3] The jury allowed plaintiff the sum of $1,763.25 for damages. Five hundred dollars of this sum is given for mental anguish and sufferings, humiliation and shame, for the assault and battery committed by defendant on plaintiff. In eases of assaults by private persons where appreciable injury has been shown, this court has not infrequently allowed as much as $500. Turnbow v. Wimberly, 106 La. 259, 30 South. 747; Chauvin v. Caldwell, 122 La. 709, 48 South. 159; Harvey v. Harvey, 124 La. 596, 50 South. 592; Stoehr v. Payne, 132 La. 213, 61 South. 206, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 604.

[4] Damages may be allowed in these cases, not only for physical pain and suffering, but for indignity and humiliation. Carrick v. Joachim, 126 La. 5, 52 South. 173, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 85; Bonneval v. American Coffee Co., 127 La. 57, 53 South. 426.

[5] If one commits an assault and battery without provocation, he is liable for larger damages than if he had been provoked. State v. Brown, 111 La. 170, 35 South. 501.

[6] The jury also gave plaintiff damages in the sum of $900 for the three teeth that he lost as the result of the assault.

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 662, 150 La. 315, 1922 La. LEXIS 2567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenelle-v-waguespack-la-1922.