Lister v. McKee

79 Ill. App. 210, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 237
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 12, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 Ill. App. 210 (Lister v. McKee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lister v. McKee, 79 Ill. App. 210, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 237 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

He. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee sued appellants in trespass for assault and battery. The jury found appellants guilty and assessed appellee’s damages at $10,000. Appellants moved for a new trial, whereupon appellee remitted $7,500 from the verdict, and the court overruled the motion for a new trial and rendered judgment for $2,500.

It is not claimed by appellee that the elder Lister struck him, and the evidence shows that he did not, but appellee claims and testified that he was present when his son, Joseph Lister, Jr., assaulted and beat appellee, and that the elder Lister encouraged such assault and battery. In this appellee is not corroborated by any other witness. On the contrary, Joseph the elder denies it, and his testimony and that of his son and Mike Smith, is to the effect that he, Joseph, Sr., interfered between appellee and Joseph, Jr., to separate them and put a stop to the occurrence. In this state of the evidence it can hardly be said that it preponderates as against the elder Lister. Peaslee v. Glass, 61 Ill. 94; Belden v. Innis, 84 lb. 78; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Alexander, 46 Ill. App. 505.

Appellee testified that Joseph Lister, Jr., beat him. His testimony as to his injuries is, in substance, as follows:

“When I left the factory, my face was all swollen up before I got home; I could not see out of my left eye, and my right eye was closed; I found a cut on my neck and some blood there in my hair; after I left the factory I went home and laid down on the lounge, and my wife went after Dr. Booth; she put some raw beef on me, and washed my face and helped fix myself up. I had severe pain all the time; felt it in the side of my head; over the right eye, and all through my jaw and in the back of my neck. I saw Dr. Booth the next day; went to bed that afternoon and was confined, practically, to the house only a couple of weeks or such a matter. I don’t know; I couldn’t say how long; I was not in bed; I was able to get around. Dr. Booth treated rue at that time; was in his care until August the same year. The first time he treated me he applied applications to my face; he bandaged my head in a solution of some kind, to take down the swelling and to take the color out of my face; he treated me that way until the color came back to my face, and then I had that numb feeling; I couldn’t bite on anything hard; the numb feeling was in my jaw; had to use light food. The doctor gave me an electric battery to apply to my face.”

He says further that his head has hurt him ever since he was injured. Dr. Booth, a witness for appellee, testified that he visited him February 4, 1895, being the next day after he claims to have been injured, and found his left eye almost completely closed, the right eye very much swollen, the right cheek bone appearing as if it had received a severe stroke, the blood settled or congested on his face, a contusion on the back of his head about half the size of a small egg, and that he was suffering great pain; also, that he could only move his jaw a very little. On cross-examination this witness testified that there was partial facial paralysis.

Dr. Bennett, witness for appellee, testified that, about May 1, 1895, he examined appellee; that he had facial paralysis on the right side of his face, and that the only effect of that would be that “it might interfere to a slight extent with his eating, with his facial movements, but that is all. It would not interfere with his general health.”

There was no attempt made by appellee’s attorneys to prove that his alleged injuries are permanent, nor is this claimed.

James Youngs testified that, during the spring and summer of 1895, after the time of the alleged assault, appellee was at his home four or five times, and that he appeared as well as he had ever seen him.

Appellee testified to having received a severe beating by Joseph Lister, Jr., but here, also, the evidence is conflicting; the evidence for the appellants being that the younger Lister shoved him, when he fell down, and that he struck him only once. In this state of the evidence the instructions should have been ¿courate. C. C. Ry. Co. v. Canevin, 72 Ill. App. 81, and cases cited.

Appellee’s second and fourth instructions are as follows :

2. “ The jury are instructed that if two or more persons commit an unlawful assault and battery upon the person of another, then each person who participates in such assault and battery is guilty, and is liable for all the damages which the party injured may sustain in consequence of such assault and battery; that when two or more persons unite in an act which constitutes a wrong to another, intending at the same time to commit the act and do it under circumstances which fairly show that they intended or authorized the consequences which followed, then the law compels each to bear the responsibility of all. And if the jury believe from the evidence in this case that Joseph Lister, Jr., committed an assault and battery on the plaintiff, as alleged in the declaration, and that said assault and battery was committed in the presence of Joseph Lister, Sr.; and if, further, from all the circumstances disclosed in the evidence, you find that both Joseph Lister, Jr., and Joseph Lister, Sr., intended the consequences which followed, then each is liable as principal and to the same extent as though each had actually participated in committing the assault and inflicting tlie injury.”
i. “ The jury are instructed by the court that if, under the evidence, you find the defendants, or either of them, guilty of the assault and battery, as charged in the plaintiff’s declaration, and that such assault and battery was unprovoked by the plaintiff and was maliciously, willfully and wantonly committed on the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff suffered actual damage thereby, then the jury, in fixing the amount of the plaintiff’s damages, are not confined to the actual damage proved, but they may give in addition thereto such exemplary or punitive damages, or 1 smart money,’ as in their judgment will be just and proper as a punishment to the defendants, or either of them, in view of all the facts and circumstances proved on the trial; and in determining the assessment of such exemplary or punitive damages they may take into consideration the circumstances of the defendants, or either of them, as to wealth and property, so far as these appear from the evidence; that they may take into consideration also the position of the plaintiff in society, his age and pecuniary circumstances, so far as they appear in the evidence; and they may give a yerdict for such a sum as from the evidence they think the plaintiff ought to receive, and the defendants, or either of them, ought to pay, under all the circumstances of the case.”

The first sentence of the second instruction announces a correct rule of law, but' the second sentence is erroneous, in that it instructs the jury that they may find Joseph Lister, Sr., guilty on mere proof of intention, and the instruction is well calculated to mislead the jury into supposing that such intention may be inferred from the mere fact that he was present when the assault was committed by his son.

“ Mere presence at the commission of a trespass, or other wrongful act, does not render a person liable as a participator therein.” Hilmes v. Stroebel et al., 59 Wis.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Ill. App. 210, 1898 Ill. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lister-v-mckee-illappct-1898.