Haas v. Metz

78 Ill. App. 46, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 896
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 26, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 78 Ill. App. 46 (Haas v. Metz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haas v. Metz, 78 Ill. App. 46, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 896 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action on the case brought by Mrs. Lizzie Metz against Mrs. Mary Haas. The declaration contained three counts. The first was for slander, and the third for assault, and no evidence was introduced to support either. The case was tried on the second count as twice amended. It charges that plaintiff was sick and weak and confined to her bed, and that defendant willfully talked in a loud voice and in an angry manner with divers persons in her hearing, and thereby disturbed her • peace and rest and caused her sickness to be greatly aggravated, - without plaintiff’s fault, and caused plaintiff to be in such a condition of body and mind that she suffered great pain and distress and was unable to control any muscle in her body for the space of thirty minutes, arid became reduced iri her nervous system", and about once each month since that time has lost control of the muscles of her body for thirty minutes each time, during which time her muscles remained inmovable and she suffered great pain and agony of mind and body, and was hindered in her housework, and became liable to pay thirty dollars in trying to be cured; and that said maladies became permanent and incurable without her fault, whereby she sustained damages. There was a plea of not guilty, a jury trial and a verdict for one hundred dollars damages. Defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and plaintiff-had judgment on the verdict. From that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff’s husband was a tenant, occupying a farm of defendant. Defendant owned the fruit on the .'farm, and at the time of the injury complained of there were seventy peach trees on the farm, heavily laden with fruit. On the third day after the.birth of plaintiff’s third child defendant came to plaintiff’s house and canned peaches for" plaintiff. On the second day thereafter defendant came again in the-morning and stayed all day, with other women, some of whom were relatives of one or the other party and some'were not. During that day they gathered from defendant’s orchard, and peeled and put up fifty-five cans of peaches, and left them for plaintiff. About ten o’clock in'the forenoon some question arose whether green or ripe peaches'should be canned, and whether they should be'picked' from the trees or the trees shaken and the peaches taken from the ground. A deaf man, ■ a brother of plaintiff’s husband, was in the orchard picking up peaches not far frotn" the house. The discussion began "between defendant and the deaf man, and it was necessary to talk somewhat loudly to make him hear. Then defendant went into the house and said she "was going to ask plaintiff. According to the • testimony for plaintiff, defendant seemed angry and talked. in a very loud voice, as loud as she could, ánd almost screamed. Plaintiff1 testified : V She was talking about the peaches- being good enough, and Mrs. Miller- said no, they wasn’t, and then she says, ‘I am going in. to see Lizzie,’ and my sister says, ‘ Don’t you go in there, don’t you go in there,’ but-she came right into my room. She just came up to my bed and scared me so bad, and asked me if them .peaches- weren’t good enough for us, and I told her they were all right, because they were peaches from the trees, and then she says, ‘ Didn’t I tell yon they were all right 1 the peaches are just what they wanted;’ and then she started to holier and went out of the room and then I began to ery. I commenced to cry, and I got cold and pains come over me and in about ten minutes these spells come over me. I just got to shaking and my heart pained me, and .affected my nerves in breathing so that I got shaky and pains come around my heart.” Plaintiff’s sister testified : “ She come to the summer kitchen and she show me the peaches and says, ‘ They are good enough for you. Them peaches are good enough for you when you are getting them for nothing;’- and she say, £ They are good enough for you;’ and then she say, ‘ I am going to show them to Lizzie;’ and I say to her, ‘ Mrs. Haas, stay out of Lizzie’s' room!, stay out of Lizzie’s room ! ’ But she went right into Lizzie’s room, and I went into the room after her - and she saying, ‘ These peaches are good enough for you,’ and my sister was crying and going on., And she told me we cancan other peaches and them now on the ground and that' you better let go to-day. And my sister was crying all the time; and I says, ‘ Mrs. Haas, you better go out.’ Then she go out and I hear her in the summer kitchen going on, and soon she go out to the- peach trees, and my sister was crying.” -

In the spell which- followed, plaintiff was tended and. helped chiefly by the defendant, who, in the absence of any water then hot, administered brandy and water, and helped to raise her ,up, etc. Plaintiff’s witnesses testify she had six of these spells that day,, and that since then she has one about every thirty days. She had one in the presence of the jury at the trial., The only physician called upon the. stand, a man who had formerly treated plaintiff for this disorder; testified that this was “ a spell of hysteria;” that these spells were largely in the control of the will and were often resorted to bjr peoplé of certain temperaments to obtain sympathy and get their own way. He testified it was a mental disturbance, a nervous disease, a form of insanity. Before plaintiff was married she had' had these spells and had been treated for them by several physicians. She testified she had not had them for several years prior to the day in question. At that time she was weak, she had not slept well for several nights, had been kept awake by children in the house, and had been frightened a few days before by her oldest boy being run over, After the day above referred to she did not have another of these spells till the baby fell out of bed, and the plaintiff was frightened thereby, and one of these spells followed. There was no evidence that .defendant knew plaintiff had ever had such spells.

The evidence introduced by defendant tended to show ■ she was not angry and did not speak in a loud or angry tone. Defendant was there to do a kindness to plaintiff. While plaintiff’s evidence tended to show defendant wished to have inferior fruit put up for plaintiff, defendant’s evidence was to the contrary and tended to show that the controversy arose from the man picking up fruit defendant thought too green for canning. She stayed about the place all day and none of plaintiff’s relatives and friends said anything implying they thought she was the cause of plaintiff’s hysteria. About six months later, and after plaintiff and her husband had left that farm, defendant sued plaintiff’s husband for rent, and while that case was on trial this suit was brought, thus getting service in Woodford county upon defendant, who lives in Tazewell county.

Defendapt filed a plea in abatement, on the ground she was served in a county other than that of her residence while attending the trial of a case against her there, and that she was privileged from service of summons in that county while so attending that trial. A demurrer was sustained to the plea, and this is assigned for error. The plea and the demurrer are not abstracted, and we therefore do not consider the alleged error further than to say the action of the court seems to have been in harmony with Cassem v. Galvin, 58 Ill. App. 419, and 158 Ill. 30.

It is very questionable whether the preponderance of the evidence is not with the defendant upon the material facts.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ill. App. 46, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-metz-illappct-1898.