Hess v. Marinari

94 S.E. 968, 81 W. Va. 500, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 6
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 968 (Hess v. Marinari) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hess v. Marinari, 94 S.E. 968, 81 W. Va. 500, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 6 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge:

This suit is prosecuted for the purpose, of recovering damages for an assault alleged to have been committed by the defendants upon the plaintiff. The defendant Patsy Marinari owned and conducted a store, and his co-defendant Consino Constantino was employed by Marinari as a salesman in the store. On the evening that the assault complained of is alleged to have been committed there was quite a number of people congregated in Marinari’s store, most of whom appear to have been Italians, to which race both Marinari and Constantino belonged. The plaintiff, together with three or [502]*502four other Americans, entered the store, and according to his contention he purchased some cider, and after paying for it left the parties with whom he had entered the store and went to playing a slot machine on the opposite side of the room. Shortly after he began to play the slot machine he says he heard a disturbance on the opposite side of the room where he had left his companions, including his brother, and heard somebody present call another a liar. He went across the room to see about the trouble. About that time Marinari, who had theretofore been engaged back of the counter, called Constantino, and after saying something to him which the plaintiff did not understand, inasmuch as it was in the Italian language, picked up the butcher’s cleaver which was lying on the meat block, and Constantino picked up a butcher knife, and Marinari commanded the parties in the store to vacate, announcing that he wanted no disturbance in his store; that immediately upon making this announcement he and Constantino passed through a gate or door in the counter; that before the plaintiff had opportunity to get out of the store Marinari struck him across the shoulder with the sharp end of the meat cleaver, and again when he had about reached the door struck him with the cleaver upon the shoulder, and after he had gotten outside Constantino cut him in the back with the butcher knife, making two severe wounds. It appears that a considerable quarrel or row occurred outside of the store after all of the parties had left it, in which at least one shot was fired and a great many stones were thrown. What else transpired is not clear. Marinari on his part admits that ^ie did pick up the cleaver, but contends that he never struck the defendant with it, and it is contended by the defendants that whatever injuries were received by the plaintiff were received in the row outside of the store. There is evidence to support each contention. The jury found for the plaintiff and fixed his damages at the sum of nine thousand dollars, upon which verdict judgment was rendered. This writ of error challenges the rulings of the court in the rejection of certain evidence offered by the defendant, in the giving of instructions [503]*503to the jury, and in the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict of the jury upon the ground that it is excessive.

Instruction No. 2 given on behalf of the plaintiff, which action of the court is complained of as error, is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if from the evidence they find the defendants or either of them guilty, that then in estimating the plaintiff’s damages, they may take into consideration the physical pain and suffering and mental anguish, mortification, and humiliation and suffering endured by the plaintiff by reason of the assault and battery upon him; and the court further instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the assault and battery upon the plaintiff, if they believe there was such committed, was done maliciously, willfully, wantonly, and in utter disregard of plaintiff’s rights, that the jury may, in their discretion, in addition to compensatory damages, give punitive or exemplary damages against the defendant as a punishment to them, to prevent them from repeating like offenses,,and also to prevent others' from committing like offenses.” The objection urged to this instruction is that it permitted the jury in fixing the quantum of damages to ascertain: first, what damages would compensate the plaintiff for the injury he received; and second, if they decided to award exemplary damages, to ascertain what amount would be sufficient to punish the defendants for the alleged assault, and to add these two amounts together as their verdict. It cannot be denied that this is the effect of the instruction. Under our holdings compensatory damages include allowances for mental anguish and pain and suffering, and for this reason there is very little occasion for the allowance of exemplary damages. Damages called exemplary or punitive damages are more frequently allowed in those jurisdictions where compensatory damages do not include the items of mental anguish, pain and suffering, but only actual pecuniary loss, and are justified largely upon the ground that they are a compensation to the party for the mental anguish, pain and suffering endured by him. In this jurisdiction all such items of damages are included under the head of compensation, and whatever may be allowed by a jury as exemplary or punitive dam[504]*504ages is something strictly as punishment, something to which the plaintiff is in no wise entitled as a compensation, either for any actual pecuniary loss, or for any pain suffered, or humiliation which he may have endured. In a case like this it will be borne in mind that all damages inflicted upon the defendant are purely exemplary or in the way of punishment. He gets nothing, and even to the extent that damages are awarded as compensation to the plaintiff for the injury he receives, they also accomplish the purpose of punishing the defendant, so that it is quite clear that where the damages found by the jury as compensation for the injury inflicted are sufficient of themselves to punish the defendant for the wrong he has done, in a case in which punishment is proper, no additional damages should be awarded for that purpose. The plaintiff has no right to it; he is fully compensated, and if the defendant is fully punished by the amount awarded as compensation there is no reason for adding anything to the amount thus ascertained. ■ From this it will be seen that before there can be any award of punitive or exemplary damages it must be first ascertained by the jury that the award of compensatory damages is insufficient for the purpose of punishment. Even then, should the jury determine that it is a proper case for the award of punitive damages, there should only be added to these compensatory damages such sum as will make the whole sufficient for punishment. In other words, the first inquiry, if the jury finds there is a right to recover, would be, how much is the plaintiff entitled to as compensation? Second, is this a ease in which exemplary damages are proper to be allowed? Third, if so, are the compensatory damages ascertained sufficient as a punishment to the defendant? If they are sufficient, that is the end of the inquiry, and the verdict should be for the amount the plaintiff is entitled to l’eeover as compensation; but, should the jury be of opinion that this is not sufficient to adequately punish the defendant, then the next and last inquiry is, how much in addition to the compensatory damages would be required to make the punishment adequate? When this amount is determined and added to the amount fixed as compensation, the aggregate should be.the jury’s [505]*505verdict. Claiborne v. Ry. Co. 46 W. Va. 363; Allen v. Lopinsky, 81 W. Va. 13, 94 S. E. 369. The instruction given in this case is a clear deviation from the rule lad down in the above cited cases.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 968, 81 W. Va. 500, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hess-v-marinari-wva-1918.