Saunders v. Mullen
This text of 24 N.W. 529 (Saunders v. Mullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff was the owner of a restaurant which, because [729]*729of the levy, was closed from Friday evening until the forenoon of the following Monday. The property attached consisted of cakes, bread, pies and other contents of the establishment. The cakes, pies and bread were greatly injured or entirely spoiled. The plaintiff had in her employ clerks, cooks, and possibly other employes, to whom she paid wages during the time the restaurant was closed. The foregoing matters embrace all the actual damages which the evidence tends to prove. We have carefully read the evidence, and readily reach the conclusion that the actual damages sustained could not possibly have exceeded $50. The amount allowed, therefore, as exemplary damages is at least $650.
We are forced to the conclusion that this amount is excessive. When the actual damages are so small, the amount allowed as exemplary damages should not be so large. It evinces, we think, prejudice on the part of the jury, caused in this case, no doubt, by the arbitrary conduct of the defendant, and the total disregard of the ordinary requirements and conduct due from any person to his unfortunate debtor, and which we have no doubt was intensified in the minds of the jurors because the plaintiff was a woman, who seems, under the trying circumstances, to have acted with great prudence and discretion. Still we cannot but think the punishment too great. The amount of punitive damages that may be given in any case rests largely in the discretion of the jury. But such discretion is not unlimited. . A court, and especially an appellate tribunal, should not interfere in such cases unless the conclusion is irresistible that the amount allowed is so great as to evince prejudice on the part of the jury. The wrong done the plaintiff was a grievous one; the manner of doing it was well calculated to wound her feelings; but still she was only deprived of her property for about thirty-six business hours, and her-actual damages, as we have said, could not have exceeded $50.
[730]*730
Reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
24 N.W. 529, 66 Iowa 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-mullen-iowa-1885.