Hammett v. Cook

182 N.E. 36, 42 Ohio App. 167, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 36, 1932 Ohio App. LEXIS 387
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 36 (Hammett v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammett v. Cook, 182 N.E. 36, 42 Ohio App. 167, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 36, 1932 Ohio App. LEXIS 387 (Ohio Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

VICKERY, J.

Now all this is important because although the plaintiff testified that she did not know *37 any of these people, and she herself had been guilty of no offense for which they should want to hurt her, she seeks to recover $5,000 against the County Commissioners on the ground, as alleged in her amended petition, that “she was attacked by a mob and was lynched at the hands of said mob which was then and there assembled for an unlawful purpose, to-wit for the purpose of exercising correctional power over the plaintiff and her fellows by violence and without authority of law, etc.,” thereby apparently endeavoring to bring her action under §6231 of §§6278 to 6289 inclusive, entitled an act for the suppression of mob violence.

Sec 6281, GC reads:

“Damages in case of lynching. A person assaulted and lynched by a mob may recover from the county in which such assault is made, a sum not to exceed five hundred dollars; or, if the injury received therefrom is serious, a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars; or, if such injury result in permanent disability to earn a livelihood by manual labor, a sum not to exceed five thousand dollars.”

It will be seen, and the Supreme Court has very recently so reiterated in Lexa v Zmunt et, 123 Oh St, 510, that the recovery authorized by §6278 et seq, GC is penal in its nature, and that the statute is also in derogation of the common law, and must therefore be strictly construed. (Syllabus 1).

And syllabus 2 holds:

“The title of the act ‘for the suppression of mob violence’ indicates the purpose which induced the enactment of such law, and must be considered in arriving at a correct interpretation of its terms.”

The writer of this opinion is not unfamiliar with that purpose, having drafted the act which was ultimately passed in 1898 and having been counsel for the successful litigant in the Supreme Court in the case of Caldwell v Board of Commissioners of Cuyahoga County, 62 Oh St 318, decided in 1900 and cited in the Lexa case supra. In the act as originally passed in 1896 the amuunts recoverable were fixed or determined by the statutes; i. e. they were lump sums of five hundred dollars, one thousand dollars and five thousand dollars and were obviously penalties. Consequently if a person were merely scratched under the conditions set forth in the act, he would be entitled to at least five hundred dollars. The writer of this opinion apprehended then that the invariability of the sums authorized might render the act unconstitutional, and so at his suggestion the Legislature passed the present amended act of 1898 changing the wording of the amounts recoverable co a sum not to exceed so many dollars in each instance. However, the Supreme Court later in 62 Oh. St, 318, held the act of 1896, even with the fixed amounts, constitutional. And consequently the present act is not only likewise constitutional, but likewise unquestionably penal and corrective in its nature.

Now in the Caldwell case supra, Caldwell and his fellow workmen were assaulted by strikers who had assembled for the purpose of exercising correctional power over the plaintiff himself and his fellows, in order to punish them for not participating in the strike and to intimidate them; and for that purpose a member of the mob, so assembled without authority of law, threw a heavy glass insulator at the plaintiff striking him, and others fired bullets at him, one of which struck him in the leg. And in that case the Supreme Court held that such a set of facts constituted a cause of action under §6278 et seq GC.

•So that brings us to the question whether this woman who was tumbled over on the public square was lynched by a mob.

The first section of the act, §6278, GC, defines both mob and lynching as follows:

“A collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose and intending to do damage or injury to anyone, or pretending to exercise correctional power over other persons by violence and without authority of law, shall be deemed a ‘mob’ for the purpose of this chapter. An act of violence by a mob upon the body of any person shall constitute a ‘lynching’ within the meaning of this chapter.”

It is argued that the word “or” in the statute permits a recovery when the collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose intends to do damage or injury to someone, even without a purpose to exercise correctional power over any one (although the correctional purpose is alleged in the amended petition in the instant case), and that inasmuch as this group of communists was anti-government generally and had banners with the word “fight” upon them, and inasmuch as in dispersing them there was some rowdyism and one member of the group grabbed the bridle of the horse of an officer, that these facts constitute a ground for recovery of damages from the county.

It might be remarked, however, that plaintiff’s own witness in connection with *38 the answers elicited regarding an attempt by any of the crowd to fight the police, answered, “I wouldn’t say he did it in an effort to dismount the officer. I think he did it more as a protective measure for himself, because the horse was charging towards him.”

However that may be, the Supreme Court in so many words clearly interprets the meaning, scope and purpose of this §6278 GC in the third syllabus of the Lexa case supra, thus:

“To warrant a recovery under such statute, it is not sufficient to show an injury resulting from the acts of a collection of people assembled for an unlawful purpose and intending to do damage or injury to some one, but there must appear also a purpose of exercising correctional power by violence and without authority of law.”

And in its opinion the Supreme Court continues at page 515:

“Of the various meanings of the word ‘or’ it is quite clear that that meaning must have been intended by the Legislature in the enactment of this statute which serves to relate similar ideas and connect them to each other, and that to constitute a mob, the activities of which were sought to be suppressed by this legislation, the unlawful purpose of the collection of persons must comprehend the exercise of correctional or compelling power without authority of law.”

Now nowhere in this record is there any suggestion of proof of the allegation in plaintiff’s amended petition that she was attacked by a mob and was lynched at the hands of said mob, which was assembled for the purpose of exercising correctional power over the plaintiff and her fellows.

She was injured, if at all, when the officers sought to disperse the crowd which had become unruly to the extent of pulling at street car trolleys, and pulling at police captain’s buttons. And the crowd running in all directions knocked this plaintiff over and probably trampled on her. In other words, her injury resulted from an enforcement of law and order- and a suppression of the activities of the group. Now adverting again to the Lexa case supra, there can be no doubt but that the purpose of enactment of the act was not to put a penalty upon the county for enforcement of the law by the police, but rather for a failure to exercise due vigilance and the authority necessary to accomplish its enforcement; quoting from page 513:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 36, 42 Ohio App. 167, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 36, 1932 Ohio App. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammett-v-cook-ohioctapp-1932.