Patterson v. Thompson

24 Ark. 55
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Ark. 55 (Patterson v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Thompson, 24 Ark. 55 (Ark. 1862).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fairohild

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record of this suit, which is an action on the case by the appellee for the debauch and getting with child of his daughter, presents for consideration these propositions: Whether the action was barred by limitation; whether the plaintiff had any right of action on account of the intercourse between the defendant and the daughter of the plaintiff; • and whether the verdict should not have been set aside for its allowance of excessive damages. All of these propositions, except a branch of the- first, which is presented by the plea of limitations of one year, are to be determined upon the evidence, and the legal principles which the evidence makes applicable to the propositions,

It does not seem to be contested, and if it were, the evidence makes it undeniable, that sexual intercourse was had between the defendant and a daughter of the plaintiff; and the latter deposes that it resulted in her pregnancy, and in the birth of a child. This, with the concurrence of other facts, would require a verdict for the plaintiff for some amount. And unless the assessment of damages be so great as to be disproportioned to the injury, the finding of the jury must stand as a proper assessment of damages, at least as one made by the proper tribunal, and that cannot be reviewed by this court. And perhaps a notice of some cases in which courts have declined to set aside verdicts for giving excessive damages may lead to the conclusion that the immunity of a verdict from interference by a court, upon this ground, ought to be expressed in stronger terms.

In the only case in which this court is remembered to have expressed its opinion on this subject, the jury had rendered a verdict of one hundred dollars in damages, for taking hogs that were not proved to be worth over twenty-five dollars. In reply to the point made for the plaintiffs in error, that the damages were excessive, the court said: “ Nor are we disposed to set aside the verdict on the ground of excessive damages * * * * The trespass in this case was rather a flagrant one. The plaintiff’s premises were invaded, his close broken, entered, his hogs driven off, killed and converted; and on the trial, the defendants proved . no color of title to the property. True, the value of the hogs was proven not to exceed twenty-five dollars, but the jury were not' confined, exclusively, to the Avalué of the hogs, in determining the amount of damages to be awarded to the plaintiff — they had the right to take into consideration the invasion of the plaintiff’s premises, the vexation to his feelings, the inconvenience to him arising from the deprivation of his property, as well as its value, and then to add something by way of smart money, or exemplary damages. Under all the circumstances of this case, we cannot conclude that the verdict for one hundred dollars was so exorbitant, as to indicate corruption or bad. faith on the part of the jury, and shall not therefore disturb it.”' Clark vs. Bales., 15 Ark., 458.

In an action for a libel, wherein fifteen huudred dollars damages had been found, when it was contended the plaintiff was entitled to nominal damages only, the supreme court of New York remarked: “The question of damages was within the proper and peculiar province of the jury. It rested in their sound discretion, under all the circumstances of the case, and unless the damages are so outrageous as to strike every one with the enormity and injustice of them, and so as to induce the court to believe that the jury must have acted from prejudice, partiality, or corruption, we cannot, consistently with the precedents, interfere with the verdict.” After citing several old English cases, the court proceeds: “ The law has not laid down what shall be the measure of damages in actions of tort. The measure is vague and uncertain, depending upon a vast variety of causes, facts arid circumstances, as the state, degree, quality, trade, or profession of the party injured, as well as of the party who did the injury. * * * The damages, therefore, must be so excessive as to strike mankind, at first blush, as being, beyond all measure, unreasonable and outrageous, and such as manifestly show the jury to have been actuated by passion, partiality, prejudice, or corruption. In short, the damages must be flagrantly outrageous and extravagant, or the court cannot undertake to draw the line : for they have no standard by which to ascertain the excess.” Coleman vs. Southwick, 9 John. Rep., 51-52.

Nine hundred and twenty dollars had been rendered as damages in a seduction case, which was claimed to be so unreasonable as to require the interference of the court, but SutheelaND, J., responded in this way: “ Nor do I think we are authorized to interfere on the ground of the excessiveness of the damages, although they appear to us much larger than they should have been. There were no aggravating circumstances in the case; no acts of seduction were used, for none were necessary. The character of the daughter had long been considered loose and abandoned. There were no wounded feelings, or blasted reputation to aggravate the moral impropriety of the defendant’s conduct, or to call for exemplary damages. We should have been better satisfied with a verdict barely sufficient to remunerate the plaintiff for her actual loss-. But the damages are not so flagrantly outrageous and extravagant as necessarily to evince intemperance, passion, partiality, or corruption on the part of the jury; and where that is not the case, the court will not undertake to set their judgment on a question of damages, in an action of this nature, in opposition to the judgment of the jury. It is the judgment of the jury, and not of the court, which is to determine the damages in actions for personal injuries. Sargent vs. Denniston, 5 Cow., 118.

It should be remarked of this case, that the court did set aside the verdict, for the reasons that' the jury did not intend to give any thing for the alleged seduction, and that the verdict was made up of an allowance of twenty dollars for the plaintiff ’s loss of service of the daughter, during confinement, and of nine hundred dollars, as the sum estimated by the jury necessary to support the child till it should become of an age to support itself.

In another action for seduction, in which the verdict was for six hundred and fifty dollars, the same court answered, to the same suggestion, that, “ The damages appear to be high, but not so excessive as to indicate passion, partiality, prejudice, or corruption, on the part of the jury.” Knight vs. Wilcox, 18 Barb., 221.

And so the court of appeals of Kentucky, in a case in which eighteen hundred dollars were awarded against the defendant for the seduction of the plaintiff’s daughter, held that, when the defendant had admitted the cause of action by default, and was shown upon the inquisition of damages, to be worth eighteen thousand dollars, the verdict was not so flagrantly excessive as to authorize a new trial. Applegate vs. Ruble, 2 A. K. M., 130.

Duberly vs. Gunning, 4 T. R., 651, is often referred to as the strongest case on record in which the damages were exemplary, but were allowed to stand, although for the sum of five thousand pounds, when the plaintiff in the action for criminal conversation, had so acted as to induce the court to believe that he had consented to the prostitution of his wife.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ark. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-thompson-ark-1862.