Orscheln v. Scott

90 Mo. App. 352, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 2, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 90 Mo. App. 352 (Orscheln v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orscheln v. Scott, 90 Mo. App. 352, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 319 (kanctapp 1901).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This is an action for damages alleged to have resulted to plaintiff by, reason of defendant’s assault upon him with a knife whereby one of his eyes was cut out. The verdict and judgment in the trial court was for plaintiff in the sum of $3,000. Of this sum the verdict stated that $2,500 was for compensatory and $500 was for punitive damages. The answer, besides a general denial, pleaded plaintiff’s own first assault. Tbe case was in this court prior to this and will be found reported in 79 Mo. App. 534.

The trial court, over defendant’s protest, instructed the jury that they might allow, in addition to compensation, exemplary damages if they found for plaintiff. The objection to this instruction has made it necessary for us to go over the testimony preserved in the record that we might be able to say whether defendant was so far at fault as to justify his punishment in addition to making compensation for the injury inflicted.

Plaintiff lived near a railroad station called Vermont and defendant lived at Bunceton on the same line of road, the two places being from three to five miles apart and both in Cooper county. The assault occurred at Bunceton. Plaintiff owed defendant something over three thousand dollars and had secured the payment thereof by a mortgage or deed of trust on his farm. Interest was due defendant on this indebtedness and on the day of the difficulty defendant had started from Bunceton to plaintiff’s farm "to collect the interest, but [358]*358on going to the morning train for that purpose was told that plaintiff was at Boonville, the countyseat of Cooper county, where he had just finished trying a ease against the railway, and that he would pass through on the evening train. Defendant, therefore, went to the evening train and found the plaintiff there under the influence of liquor. It was shown that he had been to Boonville trying the ease aforesaid, the day before, and that he remained over to the next day drinking considerably ill company with one Wilson until the evening train came when he and Wilson, in possession of a bottle of whiskey, got aboard, continuing their drinking between Boonville and Bunceton. Plaintiff and defendant do not agree in words as to what took place at the train. Yet it is clear enough, even from plaintiff’s version, when all proper and legitimate inferences are drawn therefrom, that when defendant asked him about the interest and thus found out his condition and learning his refusal to pay, defendant was anxious to break off the conversation and leave him; that defendant undertook to go out of the ear; that plaintiff took hold of him for the purpose of detaining him; that defendant persisted in leaving and that plaintiff followed him to the platform, insisting on talking to him, and finally laying hands on him to further detain him; and that defendant pushed him back and went away. It appears in the clearest way that defendant did not want to discuss the matter with him and that he left the railroad station with no thought of any further meeting and with no knowledge that plaintiff would not remain with the train and proceed on to Vermont, near which station was his farm. But plaintiff did not continue on his way. He remained in Bunceton, he says, to try to sell some hogs, with the proceeds of which he could pay a portion of the interest. Whatever his object, he met defendant, when, according to his own statement, the subject was again brought up by him. Plaintiff says they met on the street the second time, when the assault followed. But [359]*359there is no pretense that defendant sought this meeting. Again the interest subject was mentioned and, as plaintiff says, when defendant refused to give him time for the payment he told him that he was trying to “trick him,” and that thereupon the defendant called him a vile name and that he then advanced upon defendant, saying that he had no right to use that language to him. Then, according to plaintiff’s testimony, defendant began to strike at him with his fist and he retreated, warding off the blows, and when he had backed from ten to -twenty feet defendant struck him with a knife, which he had presumably taken from his pocket during the encounter. Plaintiff stated that they had always been friends and that up to the time of the harsh words at the last meeting they had not been angry and their talk had been friendly. But if we leave the mere word-recital in plaintiff’s testimony in his own behalf and connect it with the evidence given by the other witnesses to the difficulty introduced by him, we find that it shows plaintiff to have been the aggressor. That he was striking at defendant, the latter backing away- and asking him several times to go away, or to stand back. That defendant’s hat had been knocked off or had dropped off. That after he had backed perhaps twenty feet he began an advance on plaintiff, the latter backing and striking for nearly the same distance, when defendant struck him with the knife. That plaintiff after being cut in the eye asked defendant what he did it with, that he could not have done it with his fist'. That defendant answered he had cut him because he had first said he was going to cut defendant, and that he had been trying to evade him all evening.

The evidence was so overwhelmingly against any such willful, wanton and malicious state of mind on defendant’s part as would justify the submission of the question of exemplary damages to the jury, it was clearly error to submit it. The result of the difficulty was most unfortunate. But the [360]*360conceded relation of the parties; tbe continued effort made by defendant to avoid the difficulty; the showing made by plaintiff’s own witnesses that defendant retreated in the first instance and repeatedly asked plaintiff to desist, leads inevitably to the conclusion that but for plaintiff’s own conduct, most likely produced by his condition, the difficulty would not have occurred. And while we do not say that defendant is not liable to render compensation for the severe injury inflicted, we quite willingly hold the case is not such as justifies exemplary damages.

It was a part of defendant’s defense that a concert of action or conspiracy existed between plaintiff and his companion Wilson, to assault him. He introduced evidence for the purpose of showing the conspiracy. The court, not deeming this evidence sufficient upon which to base a finding withdrew it from the jury and instructed them that there was no evidence tending to establish such conspiracy. In such action we think the court underestimated the evidence on that head. There was evidence tending to show that plaintiff and Wilson had been together that day in Boonville and were drinking together in saloons; that they procured one, perhaps two, bottles of whiskey which they used in common; that they took one of these with them on the train and each drank therefrom between Boonville and Bunceton; that during the evening after leaving the train they were together, or near each other, and at each meeting between plaintiff and defendant (including the last one), Wilson was near by. That he interfered in their conversation more than once and made demands on defendant concerning plaintiff’s indebtedness. ' In other words, he attempted to make plaintiff’s trouble his own up to the point of actual conflict. At one point of his interference between them, and after having been told by defendant to keep away from them, he said to a third party, “if I had anything to do with it, or Scott had trouble with me I would cut his heart out,” [361]*361and.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 Mo. App. 352, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orscheln-v-scott-kanctapp-1901.