Turk v. Martin

97 S.E. 351, 124 Va. 103, 1918 Va. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 14, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 S.E. 351 (Turk v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turk v. Martin, 97 S.E. 351, 124 Va. 103, 1918 Va. LEXIS 79 (Va. 1918).

Opinion

Kelly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by J. F. Martin to recover dam[105]*105ages from E. S. Turk for personal injuries resulting from an alleged felonious assault. There was a verdict and judgment for the sum of $500 in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant thereupon obtained this writ of error.

[1] Martin had been employed by Turk to work on the latter's farm near Staunton. He lived in the farm house. There is some dispute as to whether,.in a technical sense, he was occupying the house as a “tenant,” but this, as we shall presently see, is an immaterial question. After Martin had lived on the place and worked for Turk for several years with mutually satisfactory results, Turk was led to believe that Martin was acting dishonestly in his account of the proceeds and products from the farm. That whole matter, from the standpoint of each party, was fully developed before the jury but need not be gone into in any detail here. Suffice it to say that on the day of the assault, Turk drove out to the farm to settle with Martin, who, as a result of the differences which had arisen between them, was arranging to move away. When Turk got there, he became engaged in an altercation with Martin about some potatoes in the cellar. He claimed that they were his, and Martin declined to let him have them. Just what passed between them in this altercation is a subject of conflict; but the exchange of words between them was concluded by a statement on the part of Turk that he was going to have the potatoes, and-a threating warning from Martin that Turk must not come in the yard. Thereupon Turk entered the yard, started toward the cellar door, which was open, and Martin closed the door and attempted to lock it. As he did this, with his side or back towards Turk, the latter struck him several blows over the head with a pistol. These blows resulted in several gashes on Martin’s head, and would have knocked him down but for the fact that he fell over against the wall of the house. He was not rendered unconscious, and was able in a few seconds to walk up on the porch. [106]*106He at no time made any effort to strike Turk, and upon a careful review of the evidence, we entirely concur with the judge of the circuit court in his finding, as set out in his written opinion, that nothing which was said or done by Martin justified the assault. The case is one in which the plaintiff was entitled, upon the defendant’s own statement, to recover, as a matter of law, such damages as the jury, upon proper instructions, should award.

We do not overlook the contention of the defendant, Turk, that he struck Martin in the defense of his property rights, and that Martin, at the time, was in the very act of stealing from him the potatoes. A sufficient answer to this contention is, that the evidence plainly shows that the real occasion of the assault was Martin’s alleged offensive language and bearing at the time, and his alleged previous misappropriation of the proceeds of wood, hogs and other products of the farm; and that the potatoes were a minor consideration. Turk himself says that he went there to collect money from Martin for other things and that he “never had expected to bother about the potatoes.” He testifies further: “Well, if there had been nothing but seed potatoes between me and Martin he could have taken them and gone on with them, but I said to him, ‘if there are any seed potoes in that cellar I am going to have them,’ not meaning to go after them myself at all, and he said to me as savage as he could say it, ‘God damn you, don’t you come in this yard, if you do I will fix you.’ I just said, T will be there as quick as I can get there,’ and started right up along the fence to get to that gate, that goes in, and he was on one side and I was on the other. I honestly thought he was going to try to stop me from going in there, but he didn’t. The spring house sits there, and he turned and went around that way. I was not far behind him. He went as fast as he could to the cellar door, slammed it shut in my face and locked it and as he did so I struck him—right on the side [107]*107of the head. He bent over, and it didn’t make any difference to me where I hit him. I just hit him as soon as I got to him. I just wanted to let him know that he couldn’t talk to me that way around there and shut me out of my property. When he rose up I could see that I had hurt him because he kind of sickened, and got white, and I hit him a second time and probably a third, and his wife was looking out of the window and she yelled when I hit him.” Again, he testifies as follows:

“Q. But you determined to teach him a lesson, is that it?
“A. Yes, I knew he thought he could bulldoze me and do what he pleased with my property and I meant to prevent it.
“Q. And you were going to teach him a lesson?
“A. Yes, sir, that he could not deprive me of my property rights.
“Q. And you hit him twice while his back was to you?
“A. No, only once as he was locking me out of the cellar.
“Q. You knew that you had no right to hit him with something in your hand, didn’t you?
“A. No, sir, I took the chance, as I had the right to do in defense of my rights and I am going to stand by it.
“Q. And you say that while you could have killed him you hit him a staggering blow?
“A. Yes, sir, I intended to stagger him as I believed it necessary to stop him.
“Q. And when he raised up you hit him another blow?
“A. Yes, sir.”

After reviewing the voluminous evidence much more fully than we have done, the learned judge of the circuit court sums up the situation as follows: “So that by his own statement the difficulty was not precipitated by an attempt to recover his property, but was occasioned by Martin cursing him and by Martin’s previous conduct as he understood it. This, of course, does not justify an assault.” We con[108]*108cur entirely in this conclusion from the evidence. Viewed in its most favorable light for the defendant, there is nothing in it to support any theory that in law would have justified the assault; and the only reviewable question in the case is whether the court erred in any of its rulings upon the admission or exclusion of evidence and instructions to the jury.

The errors assigned related (1) to the admission and exclusion of certain evidence; (2) to the giving and refusing of certain instructions; and (3) to the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict of the jury. . • •

The first of these assignments, although seriously insisted upon, is of minor importance because the evidence respectively admitted and excluded would not have affected the right of recovery, and, in all probability, would have had very little effect upon the amount of the verdict. The action of the court in respect thereto involved no new questions of evidence, was plainly right upon well settled rules, and does not call for any discussion.

The third assignment is necessarily embraced in the second, because the ground insisted upon here in support of the motion to set aside'the verdict is that the court erred in its refusal to instruct the jury upon the defendant’s theory.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.E. 351, 124 Va. 103, 1918 Va. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turk-v-martin-va-1918.