Watters v. Hayden

284 S.W. 828, 219 Mo. App. 673, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 27
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 828 (Watters v. Hayden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watters v. Hayden, 284 S.W. 828, 219 Mo. App. 673, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 27 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BECKER, J.

Plaintiff’s action is for damages arising out of an alleged assault and battery which is alleged to have been wilful, unlawful and malicious on the part of the defendants, who are husband and wife. The cause was tried before a jury where the plaintiff had a verdict for $250 actual and $250 exemplary damages against both defendants. The trial court sustained defendant wife’s motion for a new trial on the sole *676 ground that the court erred in overruling the demurrer offered by her at the close of all of the evidence. Plaintiff thereupon appeals from the action of the court in granting the new trial.

Plaintiff’s petition, which is directed against both defendants jointly, is conventional. The separate answer of defendant, Winfield S. Hayden, is a general denial, and as an additional answer denies that the assault was without provocation and alleges that the plaintiff disturbed the peace of defendants and that the plaintiff refused to leave the premises of the defendants when requested to do so by the defendant, Winfield S. Hayden, and that said defendant thereupon undertook to eject plaintiff from his premises and in so doing used no more force than was necessary, and that whatever injuries, if any, were inflicted upon plaintiff, were done by defendant in the necessary defense and protection of his home.

The separate answer of defendant, Ella M. Hayden, is a general denial, and further alleges that plaintiff made an assault upon her husband and that while her husband was defending himself and at a time when plaintiff and her said husband had, “become separated from each other, she ran between them in order to keep them separated, and denies that she at any time either beat, struck or assaulted the plaintiff or inflicted any injury upon him in any manner.”

In light of the ground assigned by the court as a reason for granting the defendant, Ella M. Hayden, a new trial, we of necessity set forth the material facts as they appear in the record before us.

On Sunday, May 6, 1923, the plaintiff, Sidney T. Watters, a young man aged twenty-five years, called at the home of the- defendants, Winfield S. Hayden and wife, at which time and place there, was a conversation between appellant Watters and defendant Winfield S. Hayden, as to an insurance policy, which had been mailed some months before to Watters by defendant, Hayden, and the payment of the premium had never been made, Watters claiming he had not ordered the insurance and *677 defendant Hayden claiming that Watters had kept the insurance and therefore owed him the premium. Some words were exchanged and according to the plaintiff’s testimony in the case, defendant Hayden, while they were standing on Hayden’s front porch, struck plaintiff in the face and about the head, said assault being without provocation. The assault upon plaintiff was begun on the porch and was finished out in the street in front of the house.

Plaintiff’s testimony is that he only tried to ward off the assault and keep from being beaten up and was in no sense an aggressor. It is not denied that plaintiff sustained a severe injury, his jaw having been broken on both sides.

At some time during the encountei’, and it was after plaintiff and Winfield S. Hayden had gotten to the street in front of Hayden’s house, the defendant, Ella M. Hayden was present on the scene and we quote the following from plaintiff’s own testimony as to what happened at this juncture.

“As we separated again, I was conscious of someone else on the opposite side, someone gave me a push from the left side; I knew it was a woman . . . this woman gave me a violent push from the left side, that was the first I saw. This woman was Mrs. Hayden, the defendant here. While Hayden was assaulting me from one side she pushed me from the other; when he was in front she pushed me from the back and she slapped at me. I mean Mrs. Ella M. Hayden, the -wife of the defendant, Winfield S. Hayden. . . . After a brief period of time they ceased their attack and my sight cleared up just a bit. ’ ’

And on cross-examination, plaintiff said: “After she came out, I know she slapped me and pushed me about and assisted the Judge” (meaning defendant, Win-field S. Hayden, who is a Justice of the Peace in Palmyra, Mo.) Continuing, plaintiff testified: “She slapped me with her hand or fist, I am thoroughly conscious of that. I think she attempted to hit me with her fist sev *678 eral times, but I know she slapped me with her open hand. I don’t know how hard she hit me. . . . Mrs. Hayden pushed me in the back and I think I said that she slapped me. . . .”

Emily Guard, aged eleven years, testified that she was sitting in a swing on the front lawn of a house almost opposite that of the defendant, Hayden; that she saw plaintiff drive up to the house and saw Winfield S. Hayden come out onto the porch and talk to plaintiff; that whilst the plaintiff was standing with his hands at his side, she saw Hayden draw back his closed hand in a manner indicating he intended to strike plaintiff; that she closed her eyes not wanting to see a fight; that when she looked again she saw plaintiff and Hayden fighting-out on the street near a cement box; that she then saw Mrs. Hayden in the street, and that she “had her hand in his (plaintiff’s) back pushing him and telling him to get into the car. ... I did not see her strike him.”

A neighbor, J. A. Clawson, who lived across the street from the defendants’ home testified that while he did not see the beginning of the trouble, he did see the defendant, Winfield S. Hayden, and plaintiff, “as they came off the porch; they worked their way to the street, having hold of each other and struggling around. I saw Mrs. Hayden, she came out and pushed Mr. Watters around and told him to get in his car and get away. I think she kinda helped them get separated; if I remember distinctly she was pushing- on Watters. I could not say that she did any pushing on her husband. After they separated 'Mr. Watters came over to the porch of my place with his car. He was bleeding at the mouth and I noticed his jaw was broken. ’ ’

On cross-examiñation this witness testified that he saw defendant, Mrs. Hayden, come off the porch; “that she came out and pushed Watters around and told him to get in his car and get away. . . . She pushed him around and she had her hands on him several times.”

*679 Mrs. Mary Guard, a witness for plaintiff, testified that she lived in one of the defendants’ houses close to the Hayden residence where they then lived; that she first noticed plaintiff and Winfield S.' Hayden when they were down at the cement box in the street, “when I first saw Mrs. Hayden she was standing on the sidewalk; she stood there quite a little while, then she came down where the men were, she put her hands on Mr. Watters and was talking to him.”

On cross-examination she testified that when she first saw the men by the mortar box, defendant Hayden was striking at the plaintiff and plaintiff had ‘ ‘ his hands up as though warding off a blow.”

As to Mrs. Hayden, she said that “from my observation it would be my judgment that she was trying to get Watters to get into the car and get away. She was striking at him by her gestures, that was what she meant.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 828, 219 Mo. App. 673, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watters-v-hayden-moctapp-1926.