State Ex Rel. St. Joseph Belt Railway Co. v. Shain

108 S.W.2d 351, 341 Mo. 733, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 26, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 351 (State Ex Rel. St. Joseph Belt Railway Co. v. Shain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. St. Joseph Belt Railway Co. v. Shain, 108 S.W.2d 351, 341 Mo. 733, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 474 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

Certiorari to the judges of the Kansas City Court of Appeals bringing up the record of that court in Lyons v. St. Joseph Belt Railway Company, decided in June, 1935, and reported *736 in 84 S. W. (2d) 933. The defendant railway company, appellant there, is relator here.

The plaintiff Lyons had been in the service of the relator as a roundhouseman, roundhouse foreman, locomotive fireman and locomotive engineer for about thirty years. He was discharged in 1932, and sued the relator in the Circuit Court of Buchanan County for $2448 actual damages and $10,000 punitive damages for its alleged wrongful, unlawful and malicious failure to give him a proper service letter upon his discharge, as required by Section 4588, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2026). In that action he recovered $1 actual damages and $10,000 punitive damages, which latter award was reduced to $4000 by remittitur enforced by the circuit court on consideration of relator’s motion for new trial, and judgment was entered accordingly.

On relator’s appeal to the Kansas City Court of Appeals the judgment was affirmed. The relator contends here that the opinion of the respondent judges of that court contravenes the latest controlling decisions of this, court: (1) in upholding a certain Instruction No. 2 given by the trial court, ivhich, it is said, authorized an award of punitive damages in the unlimited discretion of the jury without requiring a finding of malicious o.r intentional' wrongdoing, and in ruling that this defect in the instruction was cured by other instructions given; (2) in refusing to set aside the judgment as being founded on passion and prejudice because the original verdict for $10,000 was grossly excessive; (3) and in affirming an award of $4000 punitive damages when the actual damages found were only $1.

The several instructions involved on the first point are as follows (the opinion also refers to instructions K and L, but we find they have no bearing on the questions here at issue, and hence do not set them out) :

Instruction No. 2 “The jury are instructed that in law there are two kinds of malice, actual malice and legal malice. By actual malice-is- meant actual spite and ill will. By legal malice is meant the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse.

“The jury are further instructed that the matter of awarding-punitive damages is entirely within the discretion of the jury, and you cannot award punitive damages on the first count of plaintiff’s petition unless you find and award actual damages on said count. ’ ’

Instruction No. 3 “The court instructs the jury that in law there are two kinds of damages, actual damages and punitive damages. Actual damages are for the purpose of compensating for the actual pecuniary injury or damage, if any, done to. a plaintiff. Punitive damages are for the. purpose of punishing and making an example of defendant for a wrongful act maliciously done.”

*737 Instruction I contained the following, among other things:

“You are instructed that in order to recover any such punitive damages, you must first find from the evidence that plaintiff is entitled to recover at least nominal actual damages on the first count of- his petition, and next, that in the opinion of the jury, the defendant ought to be punished by the assessment of punitive damages in favor of the plaintiff on account of a willful and malicious failure or refusal of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff a letter signed by the defendant’s superintendent or manager, correctly stating the duration and character of plaintiff’s services with the defendant and truly stating the cause for plaintiff’s discharge.”

Instruction J further said: ‘ ‘ The Court instructs the jury . . . that in order for the -plaintiff to recover punitive damages in addition to such nominal damages on the first count of his petition, you must believe and find from the evidence that the defendant willfully and maliciously refused to give the plaintiff a service letter of the character described in the other instructions in this case, and that in the judgment of the jury, the defendant ought to be punished therefor by assessing some further sum as punitive damages.”

The part of the opinion discussing Instruction No. 2 and the curative effect of the other instructions is as follows :

“12. The defendant complains of Instruction Number 2 given for plaintiff on account of the omission therefrom of any directions to the jury as to the facts to be found by it authorizing the assessment of punitive damages in its discretion or of any information as to -the law on plaintiff’s theory of the ease and on' account of an alleged affirmative misdirection therein to the jury to the effect that it was authorized in its discretion to award plaintiff punitive damages against the defendant upon the mere finding for plaintiff of actual damages against him, without regard to malice or intentional wrong upon the part of the defendant in doing the act complained of. However, when Instruction Number 2 for plaintiff is read in connection with Instruction Number 3 for plaintiff (which latter instruction advised the jury that punitive damages were such as.jmight be assessed for plaintiff for the act complained of when wrongfully or maliciously done), the jury could not have been misled by Instruction Number 2 into believing that it was authorized thereby to exercise its discretion upon merely finding that the defendant failed or refused to give a proper service letter and upon the mere finding of actual damages for plaintiff against the defendant on account of such failure or refusal. It was advised by Instruction Number 3 that such failure or refusal, if found, not only must have been a wrongful act but must have been one maliciously clone. The jury was advised by Instruction Number 2 that an act maliciously done was a wrongful act done through actual spite and ill will or one in *738 tentionally done without just cause or excuse. When the two instructions are read together, which they must be, the alleged misdirection that might otherwise appear in Instruction Number 2 standing alone and the omissions therefrom in the particulars complained of disappear. [Markowitz v. Kansas City, 125 Mo. 485, 28 S. W. 642; Meadows v. Pacific Mutual Life Tns. Co. of California, 129 Mo. 76, 31 S. W. 578; Brown v. Globe Printing Co., 213 Mo. 611, 112 S. W. 462.]

“13. Moreover, it appears that defendant requested and obtained instructions I, J, K and L covering the whole case, by which the jury was fully informed as to the burden of proof and the facts necessary to be found by it before the plaintiff could recover and before a verdict could be returned against the defendant. The defendant was therefore not prejudiced by the failure of the court to require full instructions upon the plaintiff’s part. The jury ascertained .from the instructions given the full theory of plaintiff’s case and the facts necessary to be proven, upon which his right of recovery. was predicated as well as the full theory of the defense. The jury was told in one of the instructions that all of the instructions were the instructions of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 351, 341 Mo. 733, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-st-joseph-belt-railway-co-v-shain-mo-1937.