Thompson v. Johnson Thompson v. Johnson. Johnson v. Thompson

180 F.2d 431, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2438
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 1950
Docket12925_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 180 F.2d 431 (Thompson v. Johnson Thompson v. Johnson. Johnson v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Johnson Thompson v. Johnson. Johnson v. Thompson, 180 F.2d 431, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2438 (5th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

The suits from which these appeals come were for damages for assault and battery. They' are from judgments in two of three suits brought, one by George .Thompson, one by his wife, Mrs. Eddie Ray Thompson, and the third by his mother who, the judgment being in tier favor, did not appeal.

The claim in each of the suits appealed was that the three named defendants, acting together, had assaulted and battered each of the plaintiffs.

The defendants, denying plaintiff’s claims, alleged: that there was no concerted assault upon anyone; that George Thompson and Roy Johnson became involved in a fist fight; and that Garner Johnson, in order to prevent Mrs. Thompson from seriously injuring Roy Johnson by striking him with an iron jack handle, had, exerting no more force than was necessary, caught and held her.

Tried to the court without a jury, the undisputed evidence established: that the Thompsons had been tenants of Garner Johnson; that at the time of the assault ánd battery complained of, George Thompson was lawfully on defendant’s property, having gone there with the permission of Garner Johnson, communicated by him through the sheriff, for the purpose of searching for his cow; that notwithstanding the fact that he was lawfully on said premises, the defendants, under a preconcerted plan, had gone together for the purpose’ of driving him off the premises; that, having first armed themselves with a gun, they had driven up to the premises, where the plaintiff was, for that avowed purpose; and that, leaving their loaded and cocked gun in the car, they had proceeded together on foot to eject plaintiff from the place.

As to what occurred when they reached plaintiff, there is conflict in the evidence. Plaintiff and his witnesses testify: that, warned by his wife that defendants had *433 a gun, and of his imminent danger, plaintiff was running back to the road and the car when, without having done or said a thing to provoke it, he was tripped and mercilessly beaten and maimed by Roy Johnson, a husky burly man, Thompson being small and slight; and that the other two defendants not only stood by looking on and doing nothing to prevent the brutal assault, but actively aided and abetted Roy by seizing plaintiff’s wife and mother and preventing them from coming to his aid.

The defendants’ version of the occurrence, while somewhat different in fact, is no more helpful to them in law. It is that as the three defendants approached plaintiff, Roy, a little ahead of the rest of them, walked up right close to plaintiff and said, “I thought I told you to stay off this place”, and Thompson said, “I will come on this place when I get good and damn ready, and no son of a bitch like you is going to stop me”; and then Roy hit him, and the fight took place.

Roy further testified, “I didn’t a go out there with the intention of starting a fight. My primary reason was to get him off the place down there, that is, away from the pasture”.

The testimony of the plaintiffs, as to what was done to plaintiff’s mother and wife, was that they were cursed, harshly and roughly handled, and abused and vilified, while that of the defendants was that they were merely held with just enough force to prevent them from engaging in the fight, and that it was the women who were doing the cursing and vilifying.

The district judge, at the conclusion of the evidence, without resolving any of the conflicts, stated, “There may be a good many conflicts about certain phases of this lawsuit, but there is no doubt that the plaintiff should recover as against the defendant, Roy Johnson. Men don’t get one shoulder dislocated and the elbow on the other side wrenched out, and the ligaments torn in ordinary fist and skull fight' — that just doesn’t happen; that was deliberate and intentional — bound to have been. Granted, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Thompson cursed him. He had a right, if that be true, under the law, to hit him, but he didn’t have any right to go far enough to dislocate his arm and shoulder.” He then gave judgment for the plaintiff against Roy Johnson for $2500 actual, and $1000 punitive, damages, and, saying, “There is some evidence in the case that there might have been a conspiracy, but it is purely circumstantial, and there are circumstances the other way that are just as strong”, denied plaintiff a judgment against Garner and Robert Johnson.

In the suit of Mrs. Thompson, the wife,' saying that Garner Johnson’s act in seizing and holding her to prevent her from hitting Roy Johnson with a piece of iron was not unlawful, that there was nothing in the case that would prove to him that either the elder Mr. Johnson or Robert Johnson, in the heat of that thing, could tell that their son and brother had inflicted any such grievous injuries on the plaintiff as are shown, the judge denied plaintiff any recovery.

In the suit of Mrs. Thompson, the mother, he gave judgment against Robert Johnson for $500, and that judgment is not appealed from.

Mrs. Thompson, the wife, is here insisting that the judgment against her should be reversed and remanded for a new trial, and George Thompson is here urging that the judgment in his case, insofar as it was in favor of Robert and Garner Johnson, should be reversed and here rendered or remanded for a new trial on the issue of punitive damages.

Roy Johnson has appealed from the part of the judgment against him imposing punitive damages.

Plaintiffs-Appellants invoke the settled principles of law covering concerted wrongful action: that in addition to persons who actually participate in an assault and battery, persons who aid, abet, or procure the commission thereof, are subject to a civil action therefor; 1 that on the theory that the act of one is the act of all, the rule of joint and several liability of tort feasors prevails where the tort *434 feasors act in concert or unity of action, and, therefore, applies to tort feasors who intentionally unite in the wrongful act or who are present, assist, or participate therein ; 2 and that where two or more persons engage in a common enterprise, they are jointly liable for wrongful acts done in connection with that enterprise, at leas't-where the enterprise is an unlawful one, in which case all are answerable for any injury done by any one of them, although the damage done was greater than was foreseen or the particular act done was not contemplated or- intended by them. 3 They insist that, as a matter , of law, .they should have had judgment against all of the defendants for their actual damage.

They insist, too, that while different rules -prevail in different jurisdictions, as to the award of punitive damages, 4 it is settled law in Mississippi that damages should be assessed-against all of the defendants jointly according-to the amount which the most culpable'of them ought to pay. 5

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Bluebook (online)
180 F.2d 431, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 2438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-johnson-thompson-v-johnson-johnson-v-thompson-ca5-1950.