Marks v. Reissinger

169 P. 243, 35 Cal. App. 44, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 395
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1722.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 169 P. 243 (Marks v. Reissinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. Reissinger, 169 P. 243, 35 Cal. App. 44, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 395 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

The action was brought by plaintiff as administratrix of the estate of her husband, on .behalf of herself and her three minor children, to recover damages for the death of her husband, alleged to have been caused by blows wrongfully inflicted upon him by defendant. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of ten thousand dollars, and judgment was entered accordingly. The appeal is by defendant from said judgment and from an order denying him a new trial.

Briefly, the facts of the ease may be stated as follows: Harry Marks, the deceased, was the owner of a number of work horses with which he engaged, in the summer months, in the business of logging in Plumas and Sierra counties and, in the winter months, in plowing for different parties in Tuba and Butte counties. In March, 1912, he was engaged in plowing some land about six and one-half miles from Marysville and had spent the night of March 12th with his family in Marysville. On the morning of the 13th of March, George W. Hughes, a brother of Mrs. Marks, who was employed by Harry Marks, drove into Marysville with a four-horse team for the purpose of securing supplies for the men and teams. He was accompanied by a matt named Frank Robinson and another named Petrie. Late in the afternoon, these three men, accompanied by Marks and a man named Craig, started to drive back to the place where they were working. Some of the party had been drinking during the day and Hughes testified that Robinson and Craig were “pretty drunk” and that Marks and Petrie were sober. When the party arrived at the saloon and brewery owned and conducted by the defendant, Robinson, desiring another drink, alighted from the wagon and started toward the saloon. He became engaged in a controversy with Herman Fehr, an employee at the brewery, which soon became a scuffle. Marks remarked that he was “going in to get Mr. Robinson,” and went to where the two men were. Shortly afterward Hughes followed him and he testified that Robinson and Fehr were scuffling and that Marks was standing by looking on. He *47 said that Pehr had Robinson down on the floor and the latter “hollered ‘Enough/ and Mr.'Marks stepped over and said, ‘ Humpy, Prank says he has got enough, ’ and just then a man hit Harry three times over the head with a billy and kind of staggered him down and a fellow named ‘Red’ Quinlan hit Harry and knocked him clean down and he got up and the fight kind of stopped and the fellow that hit him with the billy run into the building, into the saloon, I judge. . . . Mr. Marks was struck with a billy on the left side of his head.” The man who struck the deceased with the “billy,” which was shown by the evidence to be a piece of rubber hose, was the defendant.

Dr. J. H. Barr attended deceased from the 14th of March, 1912, until his death, which occurred on the first day of May following. He testified that Marks complained of pains on the left side of his head. After his death he performed an autopsy upon the body. He testified: “An incision was made, removing the scalp, and on the removal of the scalp on the left side of the head, . . . located about halfway between the top of the head and the median line was a blood extravasation below the periosteum. . . . We found the membrane thickened and congested and adhered to the brain. . . . We found the brain lacerated and infiltrated with pus. ... I would say trauma was the cause of the conditions I observed and found in the head of Harry Marks on this occasion. By ‘trauma’ I mean violence. ... A blow of any kind could inflict that; a fall could also inflict it; but the individual would have to fall with his head downward to inflict it in that place.” Dr. Barr stated that the cause of the death of Marks “was injury to the skull—I will get it properly worded. Injury to the head; laceration of the brain on the left side.” He said that the injury was to the left of the median line and on the left side of the head.

Dr. David Powell, who assisted Dr. Barr in the autopsy, corroborated the latter as to the conditions in the head and brain and the cause of Marks’ death.

The first assignment of error is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury.

1. While we deem it unnecessary to recite herein in detail the testimony of the various witnesses, we may nevertheless properly refer to some of the testimony in a general way for the purpose of showing that there is a sharp conflict in the *48 evidence upon the material points in the case, and that therefore the verdict of the jury must stand. In the first place, it may be remarked that it is to be conceded that the testimony of the witnesses for the defendant that were present at the time of the trouble and claimed to have witnessed it tended to show that a general row, started by the man Robinson, above referred to, was in progress in the brewery and that the deceased was mixed up in it; that the defendant ordered the men to cease making a disturbance in his place; that the defendant procured a piece of hose and again stepped up to the fighting men and ordered them to stop fighting; that the deceased made some remark to the defendant and also made a demonstration as though he intended to assault him, whereupon the defendant struck the deceased with the said piece of hose several times on the shoulder, not with sufficient force, however, to knock him down or to the floor; that thereafter the deceased went on the outside, picked up a heavy stick and threatened to “settle” with the defendant; that thereupon one Quinlan, with his fist, struck Marks twice —once in the mouth or side of the neck and once in the nose. The defendant testified that he had in the saloon a piece of hose about two and one-half inches in diameter, which he kept there for the purpose of “protecting himself.” He admitted striking the deceased with the hose, but denied that thus he struck him on the head.

There was further testimony (given by Dr. Barr) that, after the deceased was injured at the brewery, he was taken down with pneumonia from which Dr. Barr declared he had entirely recovered, serious symptoms from the effects of the blows upon his head having shortly thereafter manifested themselves.

Dr. Kaufman, for the defendant, testified that he was present and witnessed the autoptical examination of the deceased by Drs. Barr and Powell, and declared it to be his opinion that Marks’ death was not the result of any injury to his head or brain, but was directly caused by pneumonia.

■ Thus it will be noted that, as stated, there is a pronounced conflict in the evidence upon the two important questions of fact in the case, viz.: 1. Whether the defendant, without cause or not in necessary self-defense, struck the deceased on the head with the piece of hose; 2. Whether the cause of Marks’ death was from the effect of the blows so delivered by *49 the defendant. It is true that but one witness (Hughes) testified that the blows delivered by the defendant were upon the head of the deceased when the latter was doing no more than attempting to stop the fight or scuffle going on between Fehr and Robinson, and that, prior to being so struck, the deceased had made no hostile or. threatening movement or demonstration toward the defendant. The defendant’s witness, Hardy, it might be well to explain in this connection, admitted that he told theo attorneys for the defense and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 243, 35 Cal. App. 44, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-reissinger-calctapp-1917.