Hendricks v. Fowler

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209
CourtLicking Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209 (Hendricks v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Licking Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendricks v. Fowler, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Douglass, J.

This was an action in the court below for damages, by Mary C. Fowler v. Charles W. Hendricks, for an assault and battery. The case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict of $225, in favor of plaintiff; and error is prosecuted in this court. The principal errors assigned are : Errors in the admission and exclusion of evidence by the court; that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and error in the charge of the court. Especial reference is made to pages 115 and 116 of the charge. The errors claimed in the admission and exclusion of evidence are embraced under the propositions: Evidence admitted respecting the charge and the plea of guilty before the justice of the peace; evidence as to the wealth of the detendant below, Charles Hendricks, as it might show his ability to respond to damages; and evidence permitted in reply or rebuttal, having called Mrs. Fowler to rebut certain evidence of a conversation alleged to have occurred between herself and one Steward, which was made a part of the defense; that is, the evidence of Stew ird.

On pages 7, 8 and 9 we have the action of the court on the question as the charge and the plea of guilty before the justice of the peace. First. On page 7 :

“ Was the affidavit read to him? A. I don’t know whether I read the affidavit to him, or stated its contents. Q. Well, you may state what he said to it.
“ Counsel for defendant objected for the reason that if anything is to be claimed from the record made in the docket, that the court, as such, only speaks through the entry that he makes, and that he cannot explain orally anything that he entered as a matter of judgment at that time.”

[210]*210The court states his position, and says :

“The record, of course, can not be varied, but if Hendricks told him about it, or made declarations, that is perfectly competent. You have shown what the witness says • about the reading of the affidavit; then, so far as the plea is concerned, the docket is the evidence.”
“Q. Did he have any attorney there? A. No, he had no attorney at the office. Q. Did he have any attorney there aiterwards? A. No, sir.”
“Counsel for plaintiff here offered in evidence a portion of the above docket. Counsel for defendant objected. The court overruled the objection, to which ruling, counsel for defendant then and there excepted.”

The charge was read, and the plea of guilty.

In order to discover the effect of this, it is necessary to make reference to the charge of the court respecting this very same subject-matter, which is as well objected to. This is very lengthy. I will read a portion of it:

“Now, Gentlemen of the jury, in considering the matter of his guilt • — that is, of whether he did strike this blow, I want to say a word or two about the introduction here of the docket of Justice Pigg, where it is set forth that Mr. Hendricks plead guilty to a charge made in that docket, — a charge substantially of assault and battery. Now, Gentlemen, that does not prove that it is true — that is, that the facts alleged in the affidavit, that was read in your presence, are true; they are only to be considered by you as evidence. Now, if Mr. Hendricks, although he thought the charge was not true, merely pleaded guilty because it was the cheapest way of getting out of it, it ought to have no’ effect here at all. Or, if he thought he was guilty of a technical assault and battery— some little assault and battery that he was bound, upon a trial, to be convicted of anyhow, it is not evidence that it goes on any further than what would be merely such a battery as would justify the’giving of nominal damages. That is the weakest kind of assault and battery.”

That is about all that the court says that is important here. What the court said respecting this, and the fact that all was excluded excepting the charge that was made against him and his plea, we think was perfectly competent under this issue; and, as restricted by the court, that the court went as far as he could without giving the other side a right to complain in reference to what was said about that admission which was then in evidence. We think it was perfectly proper, and that the court guarded it to the very limit in the charge; that is, pared away the effect of it.

I will not refer to all of these exceptions, because they are comprehended under the divisions that I have made here. '

As to the evidence regarding the amount of property and wealth of the defendant as it bears upon his ability to respond in damages : In a case of this kind, there certainly can be no question about the right to introduce evidence of that character. Attorney fees are allowed even as a part of compensatory damages, without any reference to punitive damages, in a case of this kind. As a matter of course, it is proper to charge as to punitive damages in this kind of a case, being one-of assault and battery; and we have the authority of the Stevenson v. Morris, 37 O. S., 10; Hayner v. Cowden, 27 O. S., 292; Alpin v. Morton, 21 O. S., 536-545; Roberts v. Mason, 10 O. S., 278; Hayner v. Cowden, supra, respecting the very question as to the amount of property, or wealth, of the party, as it bears upon the question of his ability to respond in damages. [211]*211Alpin v. Morton, supra, is an action for slander. The question was somewhat mooted there as to whether or not it was a case in which punitive damages did figure, or simply compensatory damages, and whether or not the amount of defendant’s property could be gone into. But it is clearly settled in Ohio that in a case of this kind, it is a proper subject-matter of inquiry' — that is, of the ability of the party to respond in damages. Roberts v. Mason and Stevenson v. Morris, supra, are authority for allowing attorney fees as part of compensatory damages.

Mr. Steward took the stand and testified as to certain conversations that he had had with the plaintiff Mary C. Fowler; and, in rebuttal, she was called and gave her version of those conversations. We can see no reason why any question ought to be made. It is what occurs every day in trials. It is perfectly proper.

I have referred to this portion of the charge here simply to show how the matter of the plea of guilty and the charge was presented to the jury ; and we think, in that there was no error at all, but it was limited by the court so that the defendant could not certainly complain.

I will say in passing, that the verdict is not against the weight of the evidence, as this court must regard it, in any sense.

There are numerous special exceptions to the charge. I read from the charge: “It is not necessary for me, Gentlemen of the jury, to give you a definition of assault and battery in this case.” This was a civil action, and we see no error in the court saying that it is not necessary for him to do so, because if, the law were properly charged in a case of this kind, it was not necessary to enter into a technical definition of assault and battery.

The further statement is made:

“Now, the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show you that Mr. Hendricks, the defendant, committed this act of assault and battery. The burden of proof is upon her to show that he did commit that act. The burden of proof requires her to produce a preponderance of the evidence that what she asserts is true.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-fowler-ohcirctlicking-1898.