Linsley v. Bushnell

15 Conn. 225
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 15 Conn. 225 (Linsley v. Bushnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linsley v. Bushnell, 15 Conn. 225 (Colo. 1842).

Opinions

Church, J.

1. Questions of minor importance have been discussed upon this motion, which it may be well to dispose of, before considering the leading principle of the case.

First, it has been objected, that the testimony of Collins was improperly admitted. Collins testified, that, immediately after the plaintiff received the injury, the defendant said, “ I did not mean to remove the cart and wood, until some body got injured, and then make known who put them into the travelled road.” And afterwards, he said, “What would you do ? I am provoked every day. I won’t touch the wood, if half Branford runs into it, and gets killed, &c.” This testimony was admissible, for several reasons. It conduced to prove, that the defendant knew the situation of the cart and wood ; — that he recognised them as his own, and had not abandoned them, or resigned his claim to any trespasser; — • that he had a reasonable time to remove them, but purposely permitted them to remain ; — and also, it furnished strong evidence of the recklessness of the defendant; and if it did not prove any special malice towards this plaintiff, it might legitimately affect the question of damages in the case. Hall v. Connecticut River Steam-Boat Company, 13 Conn. Rep. 319. Sears v. Lyons, 2 Stark. Ca. 317. Treat v. Barker, 7 Conn. Rep. 174. Churchill v. Watson, 5 Day, 140. Bracebridge v. Oxford, 2 Mau. & Sel. 77. Merest v. Harvey, 5 Taun. 442.

Secondly, it was objected that the facts claimed by the [235]*235plaintiff, do not sustain either count in his declaration. In the first count, it is aliened, that the defendant “ wrongfully and unjustly put and placed, and caused to be put and placed, divers, to wit, ten logs of wood, and a large ox cart, in the said highway ; and wrongfully and injuriously kept and continued, and negligently and wrongfully permitted the same to remain therein,” &c. In the second count, it is alleged, that the defendant, “ wrongfully and injuriously, kept and continued, and then and there negligently, knowingly and wrongfully permitted to be there kept and continued, and wrongfully and injuriously left in and upon said usually trav-elled path &c., the said cart and logs,” &c. The allegations in both counts substantially charge, not only that the defendant placed the cart and logs upon the travelled road, but also, that he wrongfully and negligently permitted them to remain and be kept there. We are strongly inclined to the opinion, that, in the absence of all proof that these incumbrances were placed upon the public highway, by any other person, the facts claimed by the plaintiff, would conduce, in some plausible degree, to prove, that they were placed there, by the defendant himself. At any rate, they prove conclusively the other charges, that the defendant wrongfully and negligently permitted them to remain and be kept there. Leslie v. Pounds, 4 Taun. 649.

Thirdly, an objection is made to the charge of the judge in relation to the principle which might have influence in the assessment of damages. And cases from Massachusetts and New-York, are relied upon in support of this objection. Whatever may have been formerly, or may be now, the practice of the courts of other states upon this subject, we are certain our own practice has been uniformly and immemorially such as the judge recognised in his charge in this case. Nolumus leges mutare. We have no disposition to discard our own usages in this respect. We believe them to be founded in the highest equity, and sanctioned by the clearest principles. The judge informed the jury, that in estimating the damages, they had a right to take into consideration the necessary trouble and expenses of the plaintiff, in the prosecution of this action.

In actions of this character, there is no rule of damages fixed by law, as in cases of contract, trover, &c. The object [236]*236is the satisfaction and remuneration for a personal injury, which is not capable of an exact cash ; valuation. The circumstances of aggravation or mitigation, — the bodily pain,— the mental anguish, — the injury to the plaintiff’s business and means of livelihood, past and prospective; — all these and many other circumstances may be taken into consideration, by the jury, in guiding their discretion in assessing damages for a wanton personal injury. But these are not all, that go to make up the amount of damage sustained. The bill of the surgeon, and other pecuniary charges to which the plaintiff has been necessarily subjected, by the misconduct of the defendant, are equally proper subjects of consideration'. And shall a defendant, who has refused redress for an unprovoked and severe personal injury, and thus driven the plaintiff to seek redress in the courts of law, be permitted to say, that the trouble and expense of the remedy was unnecessary, and was not the necessary result of his own acts, connected with his refusal to do justice i

, There is no principle better established, and no practice more universal, than that vindictive damages, or smart money,'may be, and is, awarded, by the verdicts of juries, in cases of wanton or malicious injuries, and whether the form of the action be trespass or case. We refer to the authorities before cited, and also to Denison v. Hyde, 6 Conn. Rep. 578. Woert v. Jenkins, 14 Johns. Rep. 352. Merills v. Tariff Manufacturing Company, 10 Conn. Rep. 384. Edwards v. Beach, 3 Day, 447. In this last case, Daggett, in argument for the defendant, admits, that where an important right is in question, in an action of trespass, “ the court have given damages to indemnify the party for the expense of establishing it.” The argument in opposition to the doctrine of the charge, is substantially founded upon the assumed principle, that the defendant cannot be subjected in a greater sum in damages than the plaintiff has actually sustained. But every case in which the recovery of vindictive damages has been justified, stands opposed to this argument. And we cannot comprehend the force of the reasoning, which will admit the right of a plaintiff to recover, as vindictive damages, beyond the amount of injury confessedly incurred, and in case of an act and injury equally wanton and wilfully committed or permitted, will deny to him a right to recover an actual indemnity for the expense [237]*237to which the defendant’s misconduct has subjected him. In the cases to which we have been referred, in other states, as deciding a different principle, the courts seem to have assumed, that the taxable costs of the plaintiff are his only legitimate compensation for the expense incurred. If taxable costs are presumed to be equivalent to actual, necessary charges, as a matter of law; every client knows, as a matter of fact, they are not. And legal fictions should never be permitted to work injustice. This court has repudiated this notion. It was formerly holder! in England, and perhaps is so considered now, that no action would lie for the injury sustained by the prosecution of a vexatious civil action, when there has been no arrest or imprisonment; because the costs recovered, compensated for that injury. But this court, in the case of Whipple v. Fuller, 11 Conn. Rep. 582.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Conn. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linsley-v-bushnell-conn-1842.