Kear v. Garrison

7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 516
CourtScioto Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 516 (Kear v. Garrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Scioto Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kear v. Garrison, 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 516 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Russell, J.

This is an action under the Adair Liquor Law, and the plaintiff alleges that she is the wife of George Garrison; that he is a man who, when sober, can earn a good living, and whose services are worth from three to five dollars per day; but when intoxicated he cannot and will not work, and she says that he is in the habit of getting intoxicated. She further says that on the 4th day of June, 1894, she filed with the clerk of the city of Portsmouth a legal notice, in writing, as provided by section 4358 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, warning the saloon keepers of the city of Portsmouth not to sell her husband any intoxicating liquors. She says that the notiee was in force on the 11th day of July, 1895, when the defendant, Kear, wrongfully sold a drink of whisky to her husband, and he became intoxicated; that by reason of the intoxication he lost time, and that she lost the means of support she would otherwise have had; that by reason of his abuse of her, while he was in this state of intoxication, she became sick. She asks for damages, in the sum of one thousand dollars. The answer is a general denial

The case was tried to a jury, and a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff against Kear, the owner of the saloon, for the sum of $323.00. Mr. White, the owner of the property, was also defendant, but the jury found in his favor. The defendant, Kear, filed his motion for a new trial, on the grounds that the amount of the damages was excessive, and that the verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence; also, that the court erred in admitting evidence on behalf of the plaintiff and excluding evidence on behalf of the defendant. The common pleas eourt reduced the verdict to $150.00, and, on that amount being accepted by the plaintiff, the motion was overruled.

[517]*517On the trial of the ease there were three exceptions taken by the plaintiff in error to the ruling of the court on the evidence. The first, on the examination of the plaintiff, Virginia Garrison, when the question was asked her:

“ Q. What effect do .these sprees have upon you ? A. It makes me nervous. ’ ’
Objection by the defendant; overruled by the court, and exception noted.
‘1Q. What effect did his condition have (this particular spree) on your health? A. It made me very nervous and weak. I am not able to look after myself, much less him; I have both to look after.
“Q. How long were you nervous and sick at this time? A. I could not exactly tell you; some two or three weeks. It takes that long for this nervousness to wear off, on account of my nervous system being shoekedi”

Now, while counsel only objected to the first question that was asked, it is claimed that where there is a series of questions asked that are on the same subject, they are only required to object to one question; therefore, they claim their objection to the first question was ample. We think the objection was not well taken, and shall rely in support of this position on the ease of Mulford v. Clewell, 21 O. S., 191, to which I shall refer later. We are satisfied that they were mistaken as to what the plaintiff had a right to prove.

Nervousness may cause sickness; if it causes sickness, it becomes a physical injury under the statute. The party is just as incapable, if suffering at the time from abuse and cruel treatment — just as incapable of attending to business, and suffers physically as much and sometimes more, than if actually struck a blow by the other party; and we think that the decision to which reference is made bears out our views in that respect.

The next objection is in the cross-examination of the plaintiff, on page sixteen of the bill of exceptions:

‘‘ Q. You thought of demanding” (that is, the plaintiff; she was on stand), “you thought of demanding some money from him, didn’t you?”

(Referring to Jordan, the man she thought sold her husband liquor, at another and a different time from the one sued on.)

Objection by plaintiff; not considered competent by the court. Objection sustained. Exception noted by defendant.

Now, what could be the object, on the trial between Kear and the plaintiff, in introducing testimony to show that this woman had demanded money of Jordan because Jordan had sold her husband liquor? We can all see at once that it does not bear upon the issues in this ease. It was not the same sale, or the same intoxication for which she was demanding money from Kear for the selling to her husband; she was simply demanding money of Jordan because he had sold whisky to her husband at another time, and had injured her. She had a perfect right to do that. But it is claimed by counsel that they expect to show that she also demanded money of others, and that there was a conspiracy between plaintiff and her husband. Well, now, they have not introduced a particle of evidence to sustain that claim, as the reeord shows. If they could have found anything of the kind, that would be a matter of defense. If plaintiff and her husband had entered into a conspiracy by which he was to obtain the liquor, and then she was to demand money [518]*518of the saloon keeper selling the same to him, that would be something to set np in the answer, and, if found true, it would be a defense. But nothing of that kind appears from the evidence, and counsel did not state the basis of what they expected to show in proving that statement, and it is enough to say that they did not attempt to do so in the case.

The exception noted on page forty-three of the bill of exceptions is simply the same question as before; it was asked of Jordan himself, and objected to. He was asked whether or not plaintiff had demanded of him the sum of fifty dollars, and whether she did not afterwards agree, or say, that she would take a less sum? Suppose she did. She had a right to go around the town and demand damages from anyone who had sold her husband liquor in violation of the law and the notice she had given. That was not trying the question of whether or not she had a cause of action against Near for selling her husband liquor, but it was a cause against somebody else. The court, in the ease at bar, was not trying any question of that kind, and we think the evidence was not competent.

Now, the next question is, was the verdict against the manifest weight of the evidence. We think this a very slim ease; we think it would so appear to any court or jury, and if the case had come up on error, with the amount of the judgment that was originally rendered by the jury, $323.00, we should not have hesitated a moment to set it aside.

Here, in this ease, the evidence shows that the party took one drink in Kear’s saloon in the morning, and that the same forenoon he followed that drink up by two more at other saloons. There is nothing in the evidence to show that there was any great or considerable amount of damage occurred from this drink, as the result of it, or in connection with the others. But he did, as I have said, drink at the other two places, then went home and continued in a drunken and sick condition. Counsel have attempted to prove by the neighbors that he did not remain sick; that on the forenoon of that day he was out on the street hunting work; but I think the evidence shows that he was in no condition to hunt very much work; he was not in that kind of business.

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7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kear-v-garrison-ohcirctscioto-1896.