Sumner v. Kinney

136 S.W. 1192, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1007
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 1192 (Sumner v. Kinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumner v. Kinney, 136 S.W. 1192, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1007 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JAMES, C. J.

This is an action by Kinney for damages, alleging that appellant, Sumner, unlawfully, wrongfully, and maliciously assaulted plaintiff by striking him with his fist a severe and stunning blow upon his face or head, knocking him down the stone steps of the Brewster county courthouse to the ground, and after he fell upon the .ground, and while he was in a stunned and helpless condition, continued the assault by stamping plaintiff in the face with his shoes.

Plaintiff alleged his injuries to have been .serious and permanent, specifying same, alleging physical and mental anguish; that night after night he would be unable, and is now unable, to sleep because of the physical pain, and at times he would suffer the most acute paroxysms of pain, of such nature that he has been obliged to resort, and is still obliged to resort, to the use of opiates in •order to obtain relief therefrom; that he was 44 years of age, engaged in ranching -and farming, and capable of earning $1,200 per annum, and by reason of his injuries his -earning capacity has been completely destroyed, and that for medical treatment and drugs, rendered necessary by said assault, he has incurred a liability of at least $150, and he prayed for $20,000 actual, and $10,000 exemplary, damages.

Defendant pleaded general denial, not guilty, self-defense, and contributory negligence, and that plaintiff’s injuries were caused by his own unlawful acts; that plaintiff was not knocked from the top step to the ground, but purposely fell from same; that plaintiff is exaggerating and feigning his pains and injuries; and that, if he has suffered any pain or injuries, they were not the direct or proximate result of any act of appellant, but from other injuries or causes, not attributable to appellant, brought on by the use of opiates, exposures, and physical conditions and infirmities that appellant is in no way responsible for.

Plaintiff has recovered $2,500.

[1] We overrule the first assignment of error. If there was in the court’s statement of the issues an omission to mention any defense, it would not constitute error requiring a reversal. It seems to us that most, if not all, the omissions referred to were covered by the statement that defendant denied all and singular the allegations of the petition. However, unless the matters omitted were requested to be supplied, appellant cannot object in this court, for the first time, to the omission. Railway v. Helm, 64 Tex. 147.

The second assignment is without merit, the paragraph of the charge complained of being legally correct.

[2] The third assignment complains of this paragraph of the charge: “When an injury is caused by violence to the person, the intent to injure is presumed, and it rests with the person inflicting the injury to show the accident or innocent intention.” This was a correct enunciation of the law on the subject. Johnson v. Daily, 136 Mo. App. 534, 118 S. W. 530.

[3] The fourth complains of the following paragraph of the charge: “No verbal provocation justifies an assault, but insulting and abusive words may be given in evidence in mitigation.” The point of objection to this well-known rule seems to be that it was misleading in the use of the words “assault,” instead of “assault and battery.” We over-, rule the assignment.

[4] The fifth complains of this paragraph of the charge: “Violence to the person does not amount to an assault and battery when it is inflicted in self-defense, against unlawful violence offered to the person; but only that degree of force must be used which is reasonably necessary to repel the threatened violence. The danger of violence to the person, in order to justify an assault and battery by any one, need not be real, but may be apparent only, provided he acted on a reasonable apprehension of danger of violence, and the circumstances must be viewed from the standpoint of the person acting thereon at the time.” This charge is correct, and not subject to any of the criticisms offered to it. Beavers v. Bowen (Ky.) 80 S. W. 1165. In this connection we overrule the seventh assignment of error. ’

The sixth complains of paragraph 8 of the charge, .which we find to be another correct instruction, notwithstanding the objections urged against it. The paragraph of the charge assailed by the eighth assignment we also find to be correct, and therefore overrule it.

[5] We also sustain the charge complained of by the ninth assignment. One of the crit *1195 icisms is that the expression, that the jury' might, in estimating the damages, “take into consideration the mental pain and suffering, if any, consequent upon the injuries, if any,” authorized double damages in that it allowed recovery for mental and physical pain and in addition thereto “suffering.” This serves to illustrate the hypercritical character of many of the points raised against the court’s charge, paragraph by paragraph.

[7] The tenth complains of the following paragraph: “You are charged, with reference to the complaint against O. E. Sumner, filed before the justice of the peace of Brewster county on February 14, 1910, and with reference to the judgment of said justice of the peace on said complaint, that the same were admitted in evidence in this cause as any other fact in evidence; said judgment is not conclusive of defendant having committed an unlawful assault and battery upon plaintiff as charged in said complaint for the purpose of this cause, but you may consider said judgment as any other evidence in arriving at your verdict, and give it such weight and probative force as you may deem it entitled to.”

This is complained of upon the grounds: (1) It was error to single out said testimony, and tell, or in effect tell, the jury that it was admissible to prove that defendant was guilty of the assault and battery alleged by plaintiff. (2) It was error to tell the jury that they could consider said testimony as any other testimony in arriving at this verdict, and give it such weight and probative force as they may deem it entitled to. (3) That the effect was to give said fact undue prominence, and was upon the weight of the evidence.

[6] The judgment of the justice’s court was a conviction of this defendant for this very assault upon a plea of guilty. That it constituted proper testimony in this case is shown by Abbott’s Trial Evidence (2d Ed.) p. 819: “The conviction of defendant on a criminal prosecution for the same assault, if founded on a plea of guilty, is competent as an admission, but it is not conclusive.” And here we overrule the thirty-first assignment, which contended that the testimony was not admissible for any purpose. The charge complained of was correct. It was proper, in the interest of defendant, for the court to give the instruction upon the particular evidence, else the jury might have taken it as conclusive. We observe that defendant sought to have this fact singled out' and charged upon, because, under his seventeenth assignment (which is here overruled), he complains of the refusal of his charge to the effect that this judgment was no proof at all of the fact.

[8]

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 1192, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumner-v-kinney-texapp-1911.