Sheehan v. DeWitt

430 P.2d 652, 150 Mont. 86, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 268
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1967
Docket11178
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 430 P.2d 652 (Sheehan v. DeWitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheehan v. DeWitt, 430 P.2d 652, 150 Mont. 86, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 268 (Mo. 1967).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict. The plaintiff brought the action to recover damages for an assault upon him by defendant. The verdict and judgment *88 were $1,500 as compensatory damages and $5,000 as exemplary damages.

Plaintiff is the county attorney of G-ranite County. In his capacity as county attorney he had been informed by one Bailey that defendant, appellant E. A. DeWitt, here, had taken some of his, Bailey’s cattle and refused to give them to him. Plaintiff wrote a letter requesting defendant to come to his office to discuss the situation; the defendant went to plaintiff’s office and the following account of the assault was related by plaintiff:

* * I extended my hand and shook hands with him, and I informed him who I was, and told him that my name is William Sheehan, and I was the county attorney, and I thanked him for coming in. He sat down at one side of the desk, and I sat down on the other side of the desk, and I think I should tell you that it is a different desk than we have there now, as it was a very narrow desk at that time, and since then we have a much wider one. Well, then we visited for a moment or two about maybe the weather or something like that, and he announced to me that he had been an attorney at one time, and practiced, if I remember right, in Oregon, and I again stepped up from my chair and extended my hand and shook hands with him, and I congratulated him, and said to him that we shouldn’t have very much trouble over this thing then, because I said to him that he would know and understand why I wanted to talk to him, and everything was very agreeable. So then I proceeded to tell him, with details, about what this situation was that I have just explained to you, and I noticed that he was becoming a little angry, and I made it very clear to him that I was not accusing him, but all that I had asked him up there for was to see, because I have been in this game a while, and I wanted to know what both sides of the thing was, and what the explanation might be, and I asked him to please wait until I had finished, and then he could tell me actually what happened, and so I went on then and explained some *89 more of the details of this contract, and as I remember it, twice I asked him to wait, as he broke in and wanted to talk, and I asked him to wait until I had finished, and I could see that he was getting a little upset, and then I got down to the end of it, and I said that Mr. Bailey had accused him of stealing his cattle, and right then he said, ‘You are a God-damn liar,’ and he hit me in the face, and it was just so quick that I didn’t realize that a man that old could do it. So I reached for the telephone, realizing that he was an old man, to call Nick to come and get him, and I did say then, ‘You are going to be arrested,’ in no uncertain terms, and, as fast as that, he grabbed the telephone out of my hand, and I stepped around my desk and passed him to the door, and I will admit that I was really angry by this time, and I said, ‘Now, you get out of here,’ and I held the door open, and he really moved out. Now, that is the story.”

The injury was described by the plaintiff as follows:

“Q. Where were you struck? A. In the chin. * * *

“Q. Was it a hard blow? A. Yes.

“Q. Did it cause pain? A. Yes.

“Q. Did it cause any bleeding? A. Yes.

“Q. And what did you do? A. I walked out in the hall from my office — from my outer office, and my secretary was out, and I walked out in the hallway, and my secretary and the clerk of court were walking up the stairs, and I — well, it is hard to remember exactly the words that I said, but I was really upset by the whole affair, and was kind of numbed by it, and one of the women suggested to me that I had better get my handkerchief because your face is bleeding, and I proceeded to wipe it off, and then is when I began to realize what had happened, and immediately I tried to see where he had gone because I wanted him picked up, and when I couldn’t see him outside of the courthouse, why then I proceeded to Dr. Cunningham’s office for an examination, to see if anything had actually hurt my jaw or anything like that.

*90 “Q. You went to see Dr. Cunningham? A. Yes.

“Q. And it turned out to be not serious ? A. That’s right.

“Q. And the doctor attended to you briefly and then released you? A. That’s right.

“Q. And then what did you do, Mr. Sheehan? A. Well—

“Q. Did you come back to your office at all, Bill, do you recall? A. I don’t exactly remember that, but I remember that I was tremendously upset, and it seems to me like I went home.”

As to the injury previously described by quoting plaintiff’s testimony, Dr. Cunningham was called by plaintiff and testified that upon examination there were contusions of the lower lip and that no treatment ivas necessary.

The appellant sets forth four issues for review, but as we view the case, only one issue need be reviewed to determine the case; that one is that the jury verdict was excessive.

The only evidence concerning damages is that previously set forth. Not even a doctor bill was put into evidence. Plaintiff could not even remember whether he went home or came back to the office. The doctor who examined him said no treatment was necessary and that it was not serious. On this minimal showing a verdict of $1,500 for compensatory damages was returned. It seems that just such a simple recitation as this answers the issue that damages awarded were excessive.

Plaintiff, respondent here, seemingly recognizes the lack of proof of damages because in this brief he goes on to relate that because of defendant’s bragging around the county about slapping the county attorney that the county attorney “did suffer from the humiliation and mocking of the citizens in the community because it was quite a joke for several months.” Perhaps this is so, but if it is, it simply was not proven or even mentioned. Plaintiff goes further in his brief to recite that $5,000 as compensatory damages had been prayed for in the complaint, and the jury had reduced this to $1,500.00, and that *91 somehow this bolsters the proof of the amount of damages. The logic of this reasoning escapes us!

Keeping in mind the only proof of damages, we shall call it minimal, though a poke in the chin by an assailant who he described as being “just so quick that I didn’t realize that a man that old could do it” may be more serious than minimal. The defendant described himself, and it was not challenged as, “Well, I am all crippled up, but I done the best I could— my hands is all crippled up with arthritis * *

Our attempts to describe the injury, and thus the only measure of damages proven here (lacking as the proof did, medical proof, loss of earning, any substantial pain or impairment, or even inconvenience) is made in an effort to achieve some sort of yardstick to gauge whether the verdict was excessive.

A discussion of damages generally by Federal District Judge William J. Jameson in a reported opinion in Chavez v.

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Related

Gunning v. General Motors Corp.
779 P.2d 64 (Montana Supreme Court, 1989)
Kelleher v. State
503 P.2d 29 (Montana Supreme Court, 1972)
Sheehan v. DeWitt
456 P.2d 49 (Montana Supreme Court, 1969)
Wilson v. Gehring
448 P.2d 678 (Montana Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
430 P.2d 652, 150 Mont. 86, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheehan-v-dewitt-mont-1967.