Glahn v. Mastin

224 P. 68, 115 Kan. 557, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 8, 1924
DocketNo. 24,760
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 P. 68 (Glahn v. Mastin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glahn v. Mastin, 224 P. 68, 115 Kan. 557, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 297 (kan 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action for damages for assault and battery.

The plaintiff and defendant were adjacent landowners. Defendant’s land was occupied by a tenant. It appears that plaintiff had repeatedly cut a telephone line which gave service to the tenant, and threatened to do it again. Plaintiff also took out some fencing between the farms erected by defendant to prevent plaintiff’s stock from trespassing on defendant’s farm.

On February 2, 1921, the defendant followed the plaintiff into a hardware store in Gypsum City and knocked him down and administered some blows to him after he had fallen. Hence this action for damages.

Plaintiff pleaded the facts of the assault and battery and alleged certain injuries thereby sustained by him.

Defendant answered setting up the plaintiff’s meddling with the telephone wires and fencing, and that plaintiff for twenty years had borne the reputation of being quarrelsome, troublesome, a fighter and a user of deadly weapons, of which facts defendant had knowledge ; that on the occasion alleged by plaintiff, the defendant spoke to plaintiff about meddling with his telephone line, whereupon the plaintiff became very angry and boisterous and threatening in his manner, and from the motion of his hands he appeared to defendant to be about to strike the defendant and to draw a knife upon him with deadly intent. Defendant alleged that he used no more force than appeared to him to be necessary to protect himself. He also alleged that plaintiff was a malingerer and denied that plaintiff suffered the injuries alleged in his petition.

Jury trial; special findings; general verdict and judgment for defendant. Four of the special findings read;

“2. Did plaintiff attempt to assault the defendant before being struck by him? A. Yes.
“3. If you answer the last question ‘yes’ state what such attempt consisted, stating the acts constituting the same?
[559]*559“A. Raising arms, opening coat, reaching toward pocket.
“4. When plaintiff fell to the floor was he rendered unconscious? A. Yes.
“5. Did defendant after knocking the plaintiff down unjustifiably strike' or beat him while he lay on the floor?
“A. No.”

Plaintiff appeals, complaining of the extent to which the trial court permitted testimony to be introduced to show the violent and dangerous character of the plaintiff and to prove his reputation in that respect over a period of many years. He also complains of the instructions.

Touching the first of these, plaintiff concedes that defendant could show he had heard of various previous encounters in which plaintiff had been engaged, but that the details of these encounters could not be proved so as to show that the plaintiff had been the aggressor and the one to blame. But the testimony as to these previous encounters was introduced because of plaintiff’s insistence that they be given rather than the proffered testimony as to plaintiff’s reputation for violence and use of knives and other deadly weapons. The record reads:

“Q. Had you heard of different occasions where he had had fights and had used knives or other deadly weapons? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. About how many of those matters had you heard of at that time?
“[Counsel for plaintiff] Just a moment, we ask if that testimony is competent that he give specific instances.
“The Court: Yes, objection sustained, that is, to give specific instances instead of lumping them.
“[Counsel for defendant] Well, I was getting the number first and then I was going to get it, one after the other.
“The Court: All right.”

Defendant then testified as to three specific instances of plaintiff’s violence — plaintiff’s fight with Hanson, in which he used a wrench; his fight with Kunish, in which he drew a knife; and his fight with McBride, in which he “got his knife and they made him put that up and he tried to get a single-tree off of the wagon and they stopped him there.”

There was not only no objection to this testimony but it was developed in response to plaintiff’s insistence that specific instances be given of plaintiff’s violence which defendant had heard of before his own encounter with plaintiff. These instances of threatened violence were admitted by plaintiff. He testified:

“Q. You have had a good deal of trouble down around Carlton, haven’t you? A. Been several people forced trouble onto me.
[560]*560“Q. Well, you drew a knife on several of them on different occasions, didn’t you? A. Well, I had to act in self-defense.
“Q. Well, there was a boy down near Carlton by the name of Kunish, you had trouble with him? A. Yes. . . .
“Q. Bid you get your knife out? A. Yes, I got my knife out because I couldn’t get him off, and then he thought he would leave me alone. . . .
“Q. Did you have any trouble with Mason? A. Yes, sir, Mason tried to make me trouble.
“Q. Did you have a fight with Hanson? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. You had your knife out, didn’t you? A. Well, he pulled out a pair of knucks and I had to defend myself and I hit him with a little wrench. .' . .
“Q. Well, you had a fight with McBride, didn’t you, working the road? A. Yes, he hit me in the face,, too. . . .
“Q. And then what did you do? A. Well, he is a big stout fellow and I couldn’t handle him bare handed so I reached in my pocket, but I never—
“Q. You got your .knife, didn’t you? A. Yes, that is what I did.”

Of course these damaging admissions greatly weakened plaintiff’s case but the facts thus developed were competent to discredit his testimony and to show that he was quarrelsome and prone to resort to weapons in his quarrels and fights.

The court cannot discern reversible error in the extent to which the details of plaintiff's acts of threatened violence were introduced in evidence.

Complaint is also made because defendant was also permitted to introduce evidence of numerous quarrels and encounters in which plaintiff had been involved over a period of fifteen years, without any showing that defendant had ever heard of them. But it was shown that aside from the specific instances of threatened violence of which defendant had heard, he knew the general reputation of the plaintiff for violence and for drawing weapons in his quarrels and fights, and evidence to that effect was competent. In The State v. Burton, 63 Kan. 602, 66 Pac. 633, where the defense to a charge of homicide was self-defense, the exclusion of such evidence was held erroneous. The court said:

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Bluebook (online)
224 P. 68, 115 Kan. 557, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glahn-v-mastin-kan-1924.