Lykins v. Hamrick

137 S.W. 852, 144 Ky. 80, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 6, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 852 (Lykins v. Hamrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lykins v. Hamrick, 137 S.W. 852, 144 Ky. 80, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 562 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Hobson

Affirming on the original appeal; on the cross appeal the judgment is reversed, with directions to enter a judgment dismissing Lykins’ petition with cost.

R. F. Lykins brought this suit against W. H. Ham-rick and John Hamrick, alleging in his petition that W. H. Hamrick on June 20, 1908, -assaulted him and cut him with a sharp knife near to his heart, inflicting painful injuries to his damage in the sum of $10,000, and that John Hamrick was present aiding and abetting W. H. Hamrick in so doing. John Hamrick, filed an answer traversing the allegations of the petition, W. H. Ham-rick, by his answer, pleaded that he cut the plaintiff in his self-defense, and that at the time the plaintiff cut him in the thigh inflicting a serious injury bn him to his damage in the sum of $10,000, which he pleaded as a counterclaim, praying judgment against the plaintiff therefor. The issues were made up and the case was submitted to a jury, who returned the following verdict:

“We, the jury, find that neither the defendant nor the plaintiff is entitled to any damage and that each party pay his cost.”

The court entered a judgment pursuant to the verdict. ■ Lykins appeals, and Hamrick prosecutes a cross appeal.

The proof introduced on the trial showed these facts: W. H. Hamrick and Lykins were neighbors and had always been friends. Hamrick’s son was paying attentions to Lykins’ daughter, and Lykins objected to him as a suitor for his daughter. There was some discussion of the matter between Lykins and Hamrick, but. nothing said of a hostile character. Some days after this when Lykins was sitting on ,a porch at the postoffice, W. H. Hamrick and his brother, John, drove up from Yanceburg. W. H. Hamrick' got out of the buggy, and began singing a little song, at which' Lykins took offense. He thereupon left the porch over the protest [82]*82of Ms friends, drew Ms knife as he went down the steps, and advanced ont in the direction of W. EL Ham-rick, who met him in the pike with his knife drawn. As soon as they reached each other both began cutting, and when they were separated, both were cut. While the cuts were dangerous, both got well. Lykins’ wound was apparently more dangerous than Hamrick’s, but Ham-rick was slower in getting well. The case was submitted to the jury under instructions which are very clear. We are asked to reverse the judgment on three grounds: First, that the verdict is palpably against the evidence; second, that Lykins may recover, although he invited and brought on the difficulty by attacMng Hamrick; third, that the jury’s verdict is illegal, not in obedience to the instructions, and simply an arbitration by them of the matter in dispute.

WMle there is no one who testifies positively to seeing Lykins cut Hamrick, the witnesses' agree that they ' both began cutting at each other when they met, and that when the fight was over both were cut. Hamrick was unhurt when the difficulty.began; he was seriously wounded when it was over. He says! that Lykins cut him, and all the circumstances sustain his testimony. It is true he might have cut himself accidentally without knowing it, but this was a question for the jury. The instructions of the court w;ere as indicated in Beavers v. Bowen, 80 S. W., 1165, and aptly submitted to the jury the question whether Hamrick cut Lykins in his necessary self-defense; whether Lykins cut Hamrick and if he did whether he acted in his necessary self-defense. The instructions aptly defined what would be and what would not be self-defense by the parties under the evidence, and no serious complaint is made of the instructions which were • given. We can not say that the verdict of the jury is not fully justified by the evidence on the ground that Hamrick and Lykins each made an attack on the other with an open knife, that neither was without fault; as each attacked the other and thus made the danger to himself by placing his antagonist in like peril.

The plaintiff asked the court to instruct the jury that if Lykins and Hamrick we^e equally guilty in seeking and bringing on the difficulty, then neither of them could rely on self-defense, and that they should find [83]*83for Hamrick suck damages as ke sustained and for Lykins suck damage as ke sustained by tke injuries inflicted on kim, set off one sum against tke other and render a verdict for tke difference in favor of the one entitled thereto. Tke court refused to so instruct tke jury, and of this Lykins complains. Tke rule is stated in 3 Cyc., 1070, tkat consent can not avail as a defense in a case of mutual combat, suck fighting being unlawful. Tke same rule is given in 2 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 987; Cooley on Torts, 188; Adams v. Waggoner, 5 Am. Rep., 230; Grotton v. Glidden, 30 Am. St. Rep., 413; Willey v. Carpenter, 15 L. R. A., 853; Shay v. Thompson, 48 Am. Rep., 538; Stout v. Wren, 9 Am. Dec., 653. Tke rule, however, allowing a man to recover damages for tkat wkick ke causes himself, and thus allowing kim to be enriched by the wrongful act wkick ke procured, is condemned in Bishop on Non-contract - Laws, Section 196, 1 Jaggard on Torts, 199; Galbraith v. Fleming, 60 Mich., 403. In Goldnamer v. O’Brien, 98 Ky., 569, this court after referring to tke conflict of authority on tke question said:

“While we readily appreciate tke argument tkat, so far as tke State is concerned, no consent can be pleaded in justification, we have not been able to understand bow, in a civil suit' in which tke party consenting alone is interested, compensation can be allowed by tke law. If both parties to tke action are violators of tke law, must tke mouth of one be closed and tke complaint of the other beard? Tke parties stand on’an exact equality before the law, and, if one wrongfully consented to beat another, the other as wrongfully consented to be beaten.”

It is true tkat both Lykins and Hamrick are liable in a criminal prosecution by tke State and tkat in suck a prosecution neither could rely on tke fact tkat tke other consented to.be beaten or tkat tke conflict was a mutual combat. It is true tke agreement to fight was unlawful, but we do not see why in a civil action tke rule should not apply that tke law will refuse relief or an award of damages to kim who voluntarily engages in a thing forbidden by law. Tke fight being unlawful, and both being equally to blame for tke fight, it is hard to see upon what principle, tke law should in a civil action make a settlement between wrongdoers. It is a wise [84]*84rule of the law to leave the wrongdoer where it finds him, and it seems to us that the rule applies equally to violations of the law by fighting as to other violations. We, therefore, adhere to the conclusion reached in the case above referred to. It is true, that case did not involve a breach of the peace, but was a suit for an abortion. But an abortion is a more grave offense than a breach of the peace, and more condemned by the law.

There would have been no question of the sufficiency of the verdict, if it had been in these words:

“We, the jury, find that neither the defendant nor the plaintiff is entitled to any damage.”

This part of the verdict responds aptly to the instructions of the court and decides every question submitted by the court to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 852, 144 Ky. 80, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lykins-v-hamrick-kyctapp-1911.