Steeve v. Smith

153 Ill. App. 630, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 1006
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 11, 1910
DocketGen. No. 5,230
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 Ill. App. 630 (Steeve v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steeve v. Smith, 153 Ill. App. 630, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 1006 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Anna Steeve claims that George B. Smith struck her in the mouth on July 4, 1906. She brought this suit against him to recover damages therefor. He pleaded the general issue and son assault demesne. On a trial she had a verdict and a judgment for $2,000 and he has sued out a writ of error to review said judgment. He claims that there was no foundation in the proof of vindictive damages, and that the verdict was grossly excessive as compensation for the injuries inflicted. She claims that vindictive damages were warranted by the proof, and that the verdict was justified as compensation merely.

The parties are related by marriage, Smith’s only daughter having married Mrs. Steeve’s brother. Smith owns a farm a few miles north of Elburn. Charles A. Steeve, the husband of Mrs. Steeve, was a tenant on Smith’s farm, and lived in the lower part of the house, and used a part of the barn, while Smith reserved another part of the barn and the upper part of the house, in which he and his wife lived. Mrs. Steeve’s proof is that on the afternoon of July 4th at two or three o ’clock, she was seated upon the porch on the south side of the building with her two boys and her little daughter and two hired men, named Elmer and Elias Anderson, employed at the farm across the road, who had taken dinner with her family that day. The young folks weré exploding fireworks. Her husband was inside the house. Smith came around the corner of the house from the barn, which was north of the house, and asked the smaller boy if he threw that stone, and the boy answered, “No.” Then he took hold of the older boy and asked him if he threw that stone, and that boy said “No.” Smith threatened to beat the boy, or had his fist doubled up as if to hit him; Mrs. Steeve went between them and told Smith not to hit the boy, that he did not throw any stones; Smith said: “Shut up or I will knock you down,” and struck her a hard blow in the mouth, which loosened two teeth, bruised the outside of her lip, cut the inner side of her lip and caused her lip and nose to bleed; and for a long time thereafter her teeth were sore when she used them. She staggered backwards, sat down in her son’s lap, screamed for her husband and he came out, and the men had some kind of a scuffle upon the ground, which resulted in Smith rising from the ground with his face bleeding. Mrs. Steeve’s version was sustained by the testimony of herself, her two sons and the two Andersons. Smith testified that the boys Were in his part of the barn, interfering with his carriage and also with popcorn, sweet com and fine seed corn, which he had hanging up in his part of the barn, and that he asked them to go away from his part of the barn, and then he went back into a room in the barn where he was at work; that soon a stone was thrown into the place where he was working; that then the boys went to the house; that very soon a large stone was thrown and struck the edge of the door and splintered it and grazed Smith’s shoulder; that he then went around to the front of the house and put his hand on the shoulder of the oldest boy and asked him if he threw that stone; and Mrs. Steeve ran up between him and the boy, saying: “I will fight you, I will fight you, I will fight you,” and struck him on the arm; that he did not double up his fist but raised his hand, she being on the porch and he on the ground, one and a half or two feet lower, and.pushed her back, and that in doing so, the tip of his fore finger accidently struck her lip and forced it against her teeth so that it drew a little blood; that she immediately screamed for her husband, who came out and jumped at him, and knocked him down three times in succession, until Mrs. Steeve said: “You have licked him enough; let him go; he don’t know what he is doing now;” that he did not strike her husband at all; that her husband knocked Smith’s glasses into his eyes so that he could not see which way he was going; and that when he finally got away from Steeve he was out in the road two rods from the porch. There were no serious direct effects of the blow struck by Smith. One of Mrs. Steeve’s witnesses, a justice of the peace, testified that he saw her in Elburn at four o’clock that afternoon. She milked four cows that evening, and one of her witnesses, a constable, testified that he saw her in Elburn at seven o’clock that evening. Mrs. Steeve had five witnesses to support her version, while Smith had no eye witness but himself. He is therefore heavily overborne by the greater number of witnesses. Nevertheless, his version, of the transaction does not stand wholly without confirmation. While Mrs. Steeve’s sons and one of the Andersons testified that their visit to the barn was before dinner and not after dinner and that no words passed there with Smith, the other Anderson testified that they were at the barn for a long time after dinner and that Smith requested them to go away from his part of the barn. It is also plain from the testimony of several of Mrs. Steeve’s witnesses that, although the porch was on the south side of the house and the barn was north of the house, they all knew that Smith was coming before he got there, and that at least one of the boys had been around the corner of the house and had seen him coming. While they all testified that Mrs. Steeve did not strike Smith, it was proved by way of impeachment that one of the Andersons told a witness soon after that Mrs. Steeve struck Smith, and, on motion for a new trial, the affidavit of Gray, the owner of the farm across the road and the employer of the Andersons, was filed, stating that after he got home at five o’clock that night, Elmer Anderson told him that one of the Steeve boys threw a rock at Smith and that Smith then ran up to the house and took hold of one of the Steeve boys and Mrs. Steeve then attacked Smith and that Smith pushed her away; and that Elmer did not state that Smith struck Mrs. Steeve or used any violence against her, except to push her away. Another circumstance tending to discredit the force of the proof offered by Mrs. Steeve was the presence of beer. Steeve had come home from Elburn late the night before, bringing a keg of beer for their fourth of July celebration. He went to Elburn in the forenoon of the fourth with his milk, and reached home about eleven o’clock a. m. He then slept till dinner time. They all testify that he and the two Andersons each had one glass of beer before dinner and one glass of beer at dinner, and that no more beer was taken, and that Mrs. Steeve and her boys had none. After dinner Steeve went to sleep again andv slept till this controversy arose at two or three o’clock. The Steeve boys testify that no more of the beer was taken and that the rest was afterwards emptied out. TMs story of the failure to drink the beer after getting it on purpose for a fourth of July celebration taxes the credulity of the court. It is much more probable that the excitement there was produced by the beer. Gray, in his aEdavit, on motion for a new trial, states that when he reached home at five o’clock one of the Anderson men was decidedly under the influence of liquor and that the other one was drunk. As'this trouble occurred about three o’clock and Mrs. Steeve’s proof shows that she was in Elburn by four o’cldck, the theory that the beer was the cause of the excitement and that the injury was apparently slight is rendered exceedingly probable.

Nothing that Mrs. Steeve did justified Smith in hitting her in the mouth, either with his open hand or clenched fist, and she has a cause of action for the injuries resulting therefrom unless she assaulted him first.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 Ill. App. 630, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steeve-v-smith-illappct-1910.