Scheufele v. Newman

210 P.2d 573, 187 Or. 263, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 194
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 573 (Scheufele v. Newman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scheufele v. Newman, 210 P.2d 573, 187 Or. 263, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 194 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

*265 BELT, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from an alleged assault and battery. In the complaint it is alleged, so far as material herein, that defendant wrongfully and maliciously struck the plaintiff on the shoulder, jaw and face with a heavy rifle, thereby causing a laceration to his lower jaw and lip, a fracture of an upper front tooth, and an injury to the nerves and soft tissue of the chin. Plaintiff also avers that on account of this attack, he has sustained a “permanent scarring and disfigurement.”

Defendant in his answer admitted that he struck plaintiff and that he sustained some injuries, but denied that he was damaged in the sum of $5,000.00, or any part thereof. As an affirmative defense the defendant alleged that he was the owner of the land where the incident occurred; that it was posted against trespass; and that plaintiff, although requested to leave the premises, refused to do so and defied defendant to put him off if “he was able to do so.’ ’ Defendant further alleged in substance that when he undertook to eject plaintiff from the premises, the plaintiff resisted his efforts and that he was obliged to meet plaintiff’s “opposition and force with force” and defend himself against plaintiff’s “acts of resistance and belligerency. ”

Plaintiff in his reply denied the affirmative matter alleged by defendant.

Under these issues briefly stated, the cause was submitted to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $2,037.50, general and special damages, and the sum of $2,500.00, as punitive damages. From the judgment based on such verdict, the defendant appeals.

*266 The action arose ont of the following facts. Defendant is the owner of a summer home near the confluence of Gordon creek and Sandy river about seventeen miles from the city of Portland. It is conceded that he owns land on both sides of Gordon creek and to the ordinary high water mark on Sandy river.

Plaintiff, accompanied by his wife, a few relatives, and friends, went from Portland to Sandy river on a picnic on July 4, 1946. The place chosen for picnic purposes was not on the land of the defendant. Plaintiff decided to go fishing and about eleven o’clock in the morning reached the place in question near the confluence of Gordon creek with Sandy river.

It is plaintiff’s contention that he was fishing in Sandy river, below the ordinary high water mark, at the time of the alleged assault and battery and that since Sandy river was a navigable stream — as contended by him- — he was not a trespasser. Defendant asserts that plaintiff was fishing in Gordon creek— an admittedly non-navigable stream — and that he was a trespasser on premises owned by him.

Plaintiff thus testified as to what occurred:

“Q. Then while you were fishing there did you hear any sounds?
“A. Yes.
“ Q. Would you tell us what you heard.
“A. Well, I heard some explosions.
C i * * # #
“Q. Then after you heard the explosions what happened then ?
“A. Well, they were repeated, and then there was some splashes in the water.
“Q. Where were the splashes ?
“A. W ell, near where I was fishing. ’ ’

Plaintiff testified about seeing the defendant and his son approach and that the defendant shouted that he *267 owned the property and for him to get off. Plaintiff answered that he was not on private property and he “didn’t have to get off.” As the defendant and his son approached, plaintiff testified that he saw that both of them were armed. The defendant had a regular Army rifle weighing about nine pounds. The son was armed with two revolvers.

# * «8
“ Q. Then what happened, if anything?
“A. Then Mr. Newman says, ‘I am a deputy sheriff, and I order you off the river. ’
“Q. Then what happened?
‘ ‘ A. Then I told Mr. Newman if he was a deputy to come over and show me his credentials and I would leave.
“Q. Then can you tell us in your own words what happened ?
“A. Well, Mr. Newman had this big gun, and he began to waive it around a little and point it my way a couple of times, and I was getting pretty scared. But he didn’t do anything, and then he pointed it into the water and shot again. And then he ordered me off again, and I insisted that he show me his credentials. So after that immediately, why, he came past Mr. Dawson, who was fishing on this little bank there, and waded across Gordon Creek and then across this branch over to where I was, so that I was facing just the reverse of what I had been, looking downstream and facing Mr. Newman and he was facing upstream. ’ ’

When the defendant was two or three feet from the plaintiff:

Í < * $ # *
“Q. What was the position of the rifle at that time?
“A. He was holding it across his front. I couldn’t tell you the exact position, because I wasn’t paying close attention to how he held the rifle.
*268 “Q. What was the next thing yon knew, Mr. Scheufele ?
“A. W ell, I was getting up off the river bank.
‘ ‘ Q. Were you in the water
“A. Yes, I had sat down in the water.
£Í * # # #
“Q. Were you in control of your senses? Did you have your faculties about you?
“A. Well, enough to insist that he show me his credentials, yes.
‘ ‘ Q. Did he show them to you ?
“A. Yes, he did.
£ 6 # * $ *
“A. After he showed me his card as a deputy sheriff, why, I left, turned around and started walking back down the stream. ’ ’

L. J. Dawson, who was fishing about thirty feet from the plaintiff, testified about seeing the defendant and his son approach, both being armed:

“Q. (By Mr. Peterson) What did the son say at that time and place ?
“A. The son held the gun on Mr. Scheufele there that revolver — .38, .45, or what it may be — and he says ‘I’ll hold him there, dad, while you cross the river.’ In the meantime Mr. Newman crossed the river and went over on the other side.
“Q. (By Mr. Peterson) Would you tell us what you saw and heard?

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Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 573, 187 Or. 263, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheufele-v-newman-or-1949.