Sills v. Mid-South Sports, Inc.
This text of 550 So. 2d 909 (Sills v. Mid-South Sports, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Grover Donald SILLS, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
MID-SOUTH SPORTS, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*910 Henry H. Lemoine, Jr., Pineville, for defendant-appellant, James E. Duggan, II.
Bruscato, Loomis & Street by Anthony J. Bruscato, Monroe, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before MARVIN, NORRIS and LINDSAY, JJ.
MARVIN, Judge.
"Hacksaw" Duggan, a professional wrestler who makes his living "entertaining fans," appeals a judgment against him awarding $25,432 in damages to a fan whose eye socket was fractured when Duggan intentionally struck the fan one or more times with his fist.
Duggan contends that the trial court should have found that the fan was the aggressor or in any event that provocation by the fan and the fan's young brother-in-law should mitigate the amount of damages.
The issues are factual. Not finding clear error, we affirm. Tripoli v. Gurry, 253 La. 473, 218 So.2d 563 (1969); Harris v. Pineset, 499 So.2d 499 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1986), writs denied.
FACTS
Defendant Duggan is a 30-year-old, 6' 3" 270-pound athlete who had been a professional wrestler for three years after a football career (a varsity lineman for four years at SMU and then for two years for the Atlanta Falcons in the NFL). He continues to physically exercise to keep his body in shape and can bench press 330 or more pounds.
Hacksaw is a member of a troupe of wrestlers that tour wrestling arenas in various cities to "perform" and "entertain" fans. He is frequently "cast" as a "bad guy," whose role it is to demonstrate "dirty and unfair tactics" purposely designed to "stir up" and rile the fans. This feature, the "good guys" against the bad, continually attracts fans to pay admission, hoping to see the "bad guys" get their due.
Like other wrestlers on the card, Hacksaw is remunerated by a share of the "gate," or paid admission. The Monroe Civic Center requires the promoters of wrestling matches to hire off-duty uniformed policemen to escort the wrestlers to and from the ring and provide them protection from the fans whom the bad guys have intentionally incited and made unruly. Such policemen were present when the incident which provoked this action occurred in the arena in Monroe.
In the last match of the evening, a tag-team match, Hacksaw and his teammate performed their roles as "bad guys," physically "whipping," however unfairly, their opponents who were performing as "good guys." As intended, the fans at the conclusion of the "match" were on their feet, incensed at the result. The fans booed and hissed, shouted expletives, and threw ice, paper cups, and other available things at the bad guys and into the ring.
Among the crowd were Donald Sills, his wife, and her 17-year-old brother, Victor Caldwell, who was about 6' 1" and 135 pounds. Sills, who describes himself as a "little short fat boy," is a 5'9" and 240-pound 40-year-old wrestling fan who is not an athlete. Sills was not seated next to the aisle in which Hacksaw and his teammate were each being escorted to the dressing room by a policeman, but was four or five seats away from the aisle.
A rolled-up cup of ice, thrown by a fan in the vicinity of Sills, hit Hacksaw in the face or head as he was being escorted down the aisle. Believing that young Caldwell threw the cup of ice, Hacksaw pointed at Caldwell, exclaiming "there the little SOB is." *911 Hacksaw moved chairs and advanced toward Caldwell and Sills from several feet away. Young Caldwell was pushed backwards, whereupon Sills, who even Hacksaw said, assumed a "defensive posture" with his arms raised. The trial court found that Sills, with his arms near his body, raised his hands with his palms straight out near his head and stated "Don't hit the kid!!!" Hacksaw then struck Sills with his fist, fracturing the orbital floor of Sills' eye socket and knocking Sills to the floor. The trial court correctly summarized the conflicting testimony:
Sills testified that Hacksaw came out of the arena and started down the aisle towards the dressing room. When he was approximately eight (8) or ten (10) feet from the position of [Sills] ... Hacksaw pointed towards Victor Caldwell and said "there the little SOB is." Hacksaw then came down the aisle toward Victor who was pushed backwards or knocked down. Sills held his hands up palms straight out close to his body and stated "don't hit the kid!" Sills admitted that he might have touched Hacksaw when he raised his hands up. In a matter of seconds, Hacksaw struck Sills twice on the right side of his head and face on the cheekbone below the eye....
Hacksaw testified that when he exited the ring the police officer followed him. As he was going down the aisle [toward the dressing room] he was struck in the face by a large cup of ice, rolled up tightly [that was] thrown by a young man. He moved down the aisle which brought him closer to the boy. When he was about ... 2 ½ feet [away] he pointed at [the boy] and stated, "that's him the SOB ..." He then testified that Sills, who was to his left, came across and hit him across the face, but he did not know whether Sills' hands were open or closed. He stated that Sills assumed a defensive posture in that his hands were up around his shoulder level and that he punched Sills hard enough to put distance between himself and Sills. Duggan admitted that Sills did not make any effort to hit him again and that his punch "dropped" Sills, who grabbed Duggan by the leg as he went down. Although he denied kicking Sills, Hacksaw stated that he broke Sills' hold on his leg by using a football maneuver.
A witness (Grice), who was in the aisle seat, testified that after Hacksaw stated "let me get to that SOB," and pushed away the chairs in front of him, he passed Grice, putting his hand on Grice's shoulder and spinning him around. Hacksaw then pushed Caldwell and turned to his left and hit Sills in the face and head.
The trial court concluded that, although the evidence was unclear as to whether Sills actually initiated contact with Duggan, Duggan "suffered absolutely no injuries of importance." The court further found
that the instigating factor of the altercation was Hacksaw being struck in the face by a cup of ice thrown by Caldwell as Hacksaw came down the aisle,[1]
that, regardless of Caldwell's actions, Hacksaw should not have pushed chairs aside to physically encounter Caldwell,
that Duggan had physically threatened Sills' brother-in-law, and
that Sills acted reasonably to stop the fight and protect Caldwell.
In finding Hacksaw legally responsible for the damage Sills sustained, the trial court found that Sills' conduct did not justify Hacksaw's battery upon him, noting that Louisiana frowns on self-help remedies and that Hacksaw had other and more reasonable alternatives available, including the nearby Monroe police officers.
The trial court additionally concluded:
Moreover, the altercation herein complained of would have been avoided altogether if Hacksaw and Borne had proceeded straight down the aisle towards the dressing room. Thus, the court has determined that Hacksaw provoked the *912 altercation by moving in a hostile manner in the direction of the boy. Even if Hacksaw believed in his own mind that he was defending himself, he used far excessive force than was necessary against Sills under the circumstances. Emphasis added.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
550 So. 2d 909, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 1650, 1989 WL 112091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sills-v-mid-south-sports-inc-lactapp-1989.