Tetzner v. Naughton

12 Ill. App. 148, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 168
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 9, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Ill. App. 148 (Tetzner v. Naughton) 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
Tetzner v. Naughton, 12 Ill. App. 148, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 168 (Ill. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Lacey, J.

This was an action on the case brought by the appellee against the appellants, Henry Tetzner, Bobert Beck-with, John Buckrice, Bernard Hagelow, Jacob Frieler, Henry Holthusen and Christ Lay, and also the following named persons, viz.: Charles Hack, Fritz Graze, William Wahl, Louis Gerlach, Walter Aubaker, Louis Schroder, John Dietrich, Charles Hansberg, Charles Hunter and James Clinton, all saloon keepers except Eobert Beckwith, who was the landlord of Henry' Tetzner, to recover damages claimed to have been sustained by her for the loss of her means of support, on account of the demoralization and death of her husband, Thomas Haughton, caused, as she charged, by the sale to her husband of intoxicating liquors by the above named parties, who were the original defendants.

The action was brought under the Dram Shop Act, and was tried Hay 2, 1882, and on the trial of the cause the appellee being unable to prove any sale of liquor to her husband by the intervening agency of the ten last named defendants, the suit was on her motion dismissed as to them.

The jury found a verdict in favor of the appellee against the seven defendants, the appellants, for the sum of $2,804, finding four dollars of that sum actual damages, and the balance, $2,800, exemplary damages. A motion for a new trial being overruled by the court, judgment was rendered on the verdict, from which judgment an appeal was taken to this court.

The declaration contains four counts. The first count charges that Thomas FTaughton was her husband on and before September 25, 1876, and remained so until' his death, September 23, A. D. 1881; that for a long time prior to the first named date he followed the business of contractor, farmer, butcher, speculator and day laborer, and derived therefrom a yearly income of $2,000, and provided comfortably and liberally for his wife and six minor children. That, on the said 25th day of September, 1876, and other days preceding his death, the defendants at the town and city of Elgin sold and gave to said Haughton intoxicating liquors, and thereby caused him to become habitually intoxicated, and in consequence thereof he wasted and squandered his money and property and became impoverished, reduced, degraded and wholly ruined in body and mind and estate, and wasted his time in idleness and dissipation, and spe.nt most of his earnings and some of the earnings of his minor children for liquor at the dram shops of the defendants, neglected his business, and by reason thereof failed to provide for his wife, himself and children, etc. The second count is the same in substance as the first with exception of the additional charge that in further consequence of the habitual intoxication caused by the defendants, he, on the 22d day of September, A. D. 1881, was run over by the cars, and in consequence died of his injury on the 23d day of September, 1881, by means of which appellee had been permanently injured in her means of support, etc. The third count is in substance the same as the first with the exception it charges Robert Beckwith and James Clinton were the owners of two certain buildings where all the liquors were sold, and rented them to the other defendants, knowing that intoxicating liquors were to be sold in them.

The fourth count is the same as the last above named, with the exception it shows the death for the same causes and same reasons set out in the second, and claims damages for injury to her permanent means of support on account of the death of her husband. Each defendant pleaded separately a plea of the general issue by their respective attorneys. As to the character and personal history of Thomas K aughtou, and the circumstances of his death, the evidence pretty clearly shows that he had been a constant drinker for some twenty-five years, and for the last ten or fifteen years had been an habitual drunkard and no change appeared in him in this particular that was very marked either for the better or worse, for at least the last ten years prior to his death.

Some of the witnesses thought that for the last two years he had rather improved because the saloon keepers refused to sell him so much liquor as the}7 formerly had done. Others thought he was rather worse. He liad shifted around in various employments; at one time, about from seven to nine years before his death, he had been a saloon and hotel keeper himself, the saloon being attached to his hotel, and after that followed various employments as a laborer and otherwise. Witnesses state that he was rather better as a “boss” than a laborer. He had ceased to have any property or be of any support to his family for seven or eight years prior to his death. At the time of his death lie was utterly destitute of any means, his funeral expenses being paid by-money raised by subscription by his neighbors, including some of the saloon keepers.

The jury were no doubt justified in finding that he had become demoralized and worthless to himself and his family bv the constant and excessive use of intoxicating liquors, and that he had been habitually intoxicated for many years. The jury found that the actual damage to his wife to her means of support was four dollars. They found his value to be merely nominal. When sober he appeared to be vigorous enough and capable of doing work if he1 had been so disposed, but appeared to prefer spending his time in drinking and idleness.

All that the proof shows in regard to the manner of his death is that he went to the depot of a railroad about half past six o’clock in the evening of Sept. 22, 1881, and that shortly after he was found with his limbs badly crushed, and he was badly shocked; that he died the next day of the wounds received. Ho doubt he was run over by the cars, and the evidence, we think, fairly justified the jury in finding that he came to his death by reason of his intoxication that was upon him at that time.

As to where he got the intoxicating liquor that caused his intoxication in whole or in part, by means of which he lost his life, the evidence only tends to show that he got one drink that day in Henry Tetzner’s saloon, and that he was in the defendant Hagelow’s saloon and was seen to drink one drink in that saloon and one in Lay’s saloon.

The drink charged to have been sold by Tetzner was proved by James O’Brien, who drank with him. There is no evidence that the other defendants, Frieler, Buckrice and Holthusen sold him or gave him liquor that day. The charge in the second count of the declaration is that Naughton lost his life on account of his habitual intoxication, induced by the ntoxicating liquors sold or given to him by the defendants. This charge is wholly unsustained; he lost his life by reason of the particular intoxication on the day of his death. The fact that he was an habitual drunkard, even if that induced him to drink the liquor by means of which he became intoxicated, could not, in a legal sense, be deemed to be the cause of his death. The appetite and desire to drink intoxicants may have been the cause of his drinking the liquor that caused his death, but in that case it would only be the cause of the cause, not the cause itself.

In the case of Shugart v. Eagan, 83 Ill. 56, brought to recover damages, under the Dram Shop Act, referred to the permanent means of support of the plaintiff by the death of her husband, alleged to have been caused by the sale of intoxicating liquor to her husband by the defendant, by means of which he became intoxicated and lost his life in consequence.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ill. App. 148, 1882 Ill. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tetzner-v-naughton-illappct-1883.