Leedy v. Hoover

125 N.W. 394, 160 Mich. 449, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 787
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1910
DocketDocket No. 120
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 394 (Leedy v. Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leedy v. Hoover, 125 N.W. 394, 160 Mich. 449, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 787 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

The plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for $200, in an action of trespass for assault and battery, and defendants have appealed.

Permanent Injury. Counsel allege that the court erred in permitting evidence of permanent injuries and instructing the jury that they might award damages for permanent injuries; the declaration not alleging any permanent [451]*451injury. We are unable to find in declaration or proof a statement that plaintiff had suffered a permanent injury, but the declaration does contain averments that warranted the recovery of prospective damages for injuries not wholly recovered from at the time of filing. We have examined the pages cited in support of this claim without avail; counsel not having pointed out the language relied upon. We infer that counsel find it in the description of the injuries received, evidence of which was competent in any case. We find no claim of damages based upon the permanence of any injury, and no allusion to a permanent injury is made in the charge.

The following is the charge complained of:

“ And under the declaration on this case, and in view of the foregoing instructions on damages, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover damages for the injuries suffered for their natural consequences up to the time of the trial, together with such prospective damages of a like character as would be reasonably probable to result from the nature and effect of the injuries received, and which cannot exceed the sum named in the declaration, which is $10,000.”

The declaration alleges:

“ With their hands and feet, stones, sticks, and cluhs make an assault upon him, the said plaintiff, and did then and there push, kick, strike, knock, pound, beat, bruise, stamp upon, wound, and ill treat the said plaintiff, and did then and there strike the said plaintiff a blow over the head with a large stick, cutting a large gash in his head and felled him, the plaintiff, to the ground, and did then and there stamp upon and kick the said plaintiff in the back, side, ribs, and elsewhere, and did then and there jump upon and pound with their clenched fists the said plaintiff in his face, head, shoulders, and body with such force and violence that his head and face were pounded into a jelly, and almost killed him, the said plaintiff, whereby and in consequence of which said several matters the said plaintiff became, and was, and is, sick, sore, lame, disabled, and disordered, and hath so continued to be sick, sore, lame, disabled, and disordered for a long space of time, to wit, from thence hitherto, and yet continues to be [452]*452sick, sore, lame, disabled, and disordered, and in further consequence of said several matters and things the said plaintiff became, and was and is, disfigured in and about his face and head and greatly injured thereabout, and became, and was, and is, injured internally, and suffers great bodily pain in and about his head, face, and body.”

We think no error was committed in this regard.

Cross-Examination of Plaintiff. Counsel asked plaintiff:

“Do you remember being in a poker game down to Bangor one time, and drawed a gun on A. Harbin, and he choking you there until you nearly died ?
“A. No, sir; I never was. Now, that is a false statement entirely.
Mr. Cavanaugh: Wait a moment. I object to that for the reason that it includes a statement that counsel .knows did not exist, and further object to it in any event because it is not competent in the condition that this case is at present.
‘ ‘ Mr. Barnard: We expect to go into several fights with this man.
ilQ. How many fights have you had in your lifetime, sir ? ”

The object stated was to show that defendants had heard of said alleged fights where plaintiff had drawn weapons. The court excluded the testimony until proof should be offered that defendants had heard of the transaction, disposing of the question on the order of proof. No effort was made to show such information. It was also claimed that defendants had a right to such testimony to discredit plaintiff. No error was committed. While it would not have been error to admit the testimony, the subject was within the reasonable discretion of the trial judge.

Complaints of Injury. Counsel contend that testimony of plaintiff’s wife and physician that he made exclamations of pain and complained of his back was inadmissible. We have held that where a physician or other person is called for the purpose of obtaining information upon which to base his evidence, his testimony regarding complaints and expressions of pain should, be excluded. In [453]*453addition to the two cases cited by counsel, viz., Kelley v. Railroad Co., 80 Mich. 237 (45 N. W. 90, 20 Am. St. Rep. 514), and O’Dea v. Railroad Co., 142 Mich. 268, we call attention to the cases cited in the latter case at page 270 (105 N. W. 746), which show a limitation of the rule relied on in this case. We think the testimony was admissible, subject to the scrutiny of the jury. The statement of the wife that he complained of his back does not appear to have been objected to and is not within the motion to strike, as we are unable to find that it “was made after the action was commenced,” to which class of statements the motion applied. We find no error in the charge, nor was the refusal to give defendants’ requests erroneous.

Coercion of the Jury. Complaint is made that the trial judge coerced the jury, thereby obtaining a verdict, in that he told them that, unless they agreed unanimously upon the answer to questions submitted to them, he would not receive their verdict. At the close of the charge a juror said:

“Supposing, judge, the jurors ignore that, then what?
The Court: You can’t ignore it. You must answer those questions, and no verdict will be received until you answer them. That is the law.”

After being absent for a time, the jury returned into court and the following proceedings were had:

The Court: Mr. Foreman, I understand that you have a request that you desire to make known to the court.
The Foreman: Your honor, we don’t understand exactly about these special questions. Now, we can settle everything but the answers to those questions and the signatures.
The Court: In what respect ?
The Foreman: Well, the jurymen want to know whether they have to, for instance, take the first question —if they are divided on it whether they have got to— whether they can sign their names giving their vote on it.
liThe Court: Well, you will have to answer those questions, gentlemen, as they appear there. As I said to you, either in the affirmative or negative; as you find the [454]*454evidence to be, either yes or no, and that is something you will have to agree upon the same as any other part of the verdict.

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255 N.W. 316 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 394, 160 Mich. 449, 1910 Mich. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leedy-v-hoover-mich-1910.