Welch v. Jugenheimer

8 N.W. 673, 56 Iowa 11
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 21, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 8 N.W. 673 (Welch v. Jugenheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welch v. Jugenheimer, 8 N.W. 673, 56 Iowa 11 (iowa 1881).

Opinion

Servers, J.

I. Against the objection of the defendant the plaintiff was permitted to testify, respecting her husband, as follows:

“Question. State how did he treat the family when in this condition; what maltreatment you received?”

[13]*131. evidence : saie of iiitoxieatmg liquors. Answer. “Not very good. He would come home and if everything, both his work and mine, was not done all up, he would curse and abuse the family. I was compelled to get up out of bed at a late hour and do ox work of any kind while he was in that condition. Sometimes, if I did not have wood plenty, he would growl about it, and curse and swear that he had left me there to do the work, and wanted to know why I did not do it.” Another witness was permitted to testify as follows:

Question. “Now state if at any time when in this condition, you saw him abuse his family?”

Answer. “I could not hardly say; I can only say he was cross and ugly.”

Another witness was allowed to testify as follows: “When he is intoxicated he is pretty cross to his family, and when he aint intoxicated, he is as good as the common run of men to his family. When he is intoxicated, he will cuss his family and jaw his wife. Once down at his mother’s before she had the conversation with Jugenheimer, the defendant, I was present; they wanted to go home, and he cussed her and told her to get her shawl or he would go off and leave her.” Other testimony of like character was admitted. It was all inadmissible under the rule recognized by this Court in Calloway v. Laydon, 47 Iowa, 456. There was no evidence whatever that the abusive language and conduct referred to tended in any way to impair the plaintiff’s health.

II. The plaintiff was also permitted against the defendant’s objection to testify as follows:

Question. “Now, you may state to the jury how many members in the family you have, and their ages, that is, the ages of your children?”

2_____ • Answer. “One. She will soon be three years old; she will be three years old in February.” This testimony was improperly admitted under the rule established by this court in Huggins v. Kavanagh, 52 Iowa, 368, and Weitz v. Ewen, 50. Id., 34.

[14]*14III. Against the objection of the defendant the plaintiff was also allowed to testify as follows, with reference to her husband:

Question. “What did he say, if anything, about attending and helping you in the case?”

•3. Answer. “Why, he said he would never do that; he demanded his fees, and I did not have them for him, and he me that I might take the papers back, that he would not take them; he would not take the copy. He said if he was fetched up he would go against me; he said 'he never would have anything to do with it, and if he was fetched up he would go against me. Yes, I worked for some of the provisions, dresses, and so on; I do not remember that he furnished anything, but he might.”

■ This testimony is not relevant to any issue in the case. Its only effect would be to create an undue sympathy for the plaintiff on the part of the jury, and thus unfit them in a measure for a calm, cool and dispassioned consideration of the case. The evidence should not have been admitted.

IY. The evidence shows that the defendant’s brewery is situated outside the corporate limits of the city of Washington. The plaintiff was permitted to introduce an ordinance of the city of Washington prohibiting the sale of beer within the corporate limits, and also to prove that no license had been issued for the sale of beer in the city. It is insisted by the appellee that this testimony was admitted to rebut the claim of the defendant that the plaintiff’s husband procured the beer, causing the injuries complained of, in the city of Washington. The evidence, we think, was not competent for this purpose. It could have no effect upon the issues in this case except upon the presumption that persons within the corporate limits would not violate the ordinance, and that, therefore, the law must have been violated by the defendant. There can be no presumption that persons within the corporate limits are more law abiding than those without.

[15]*154. iNToxicATdamage™ or' sale of: when recoverable, [14]*14Y. The court instructed the jury as follows: “If you find. [15]*15from the evidence that defendant did sell beer to plaintiffs husband within the two years prior to August Id 1879, and you further find from the evidence _ . „ , , _ ,. that at the time of such sale or sales, as the case may be, the plaintiffs husband was either intoxicated, or was then a person in the habit of becoming intoxicated, and the plaintiff has shown that she has been damaged thereby in her person, property, or means of support, then she may recover such actual damages thus sustained, as shown by the evidence. And in addition thereto you may, if you think proper, allow vindictive or exemplary damages.”

This instruction is erroneous. Section 1557 of the Code gives to the wife who shall be injured in person, property, or means of support by her intoxicated husband, or in consequence of his habitual intoxication, a right of action against any person who shall, by selling intoxicating liquors to her husband, cause his intoxication. The mere selling of intoxicating liquors to a person intoxicated, or in the habit of becoming intoxicated, does not of itself confer the right of action. In order that a right of action may exist the liquor sold must cause, or contribute to, intoxication, and the wife must sustain some injury by the intoxication. It is apparent that if the plaintiff’s husband bought beer from the defendant, the plaintiff may have been damaged to the extent of the price paid and the value of the time spent at the defendant’s brewery, although the beer so bought may not have contributed to his intoxication, and may not have been drunk by him. This instruction would allow a recovery under just such a state of facts. Under the instruction it is not made essential to a recovery that the beer sold should have caused, or contributed to, intoxication.

YI. The defendant assigned as error the giving of the following instruction:

5____ “The Statnte also provides that courts and juries shall construe the law hereinbefore recited so as to cover the act of giving, as well as selling, by per[16]*16sons not authorized.” It is claimed that section 1554 of the Oode containing this provision is not applicable to the act of giving intoxicating liquors to a person intoxicated or in the habit of becoming intoxicated. This question was determined adversely to the position of appellant in Churoh v. Higham, 44 Iowa, 482.

e. BvpBNCE: actcf degroe required. VII. The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that it is a violation of the criminal statutes for a person to sell or give to another, while intoxicated, any intoxicating liquors, and that the jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant so did, before they would be warranted in finding against him. This instruction was refused and the j ury were instructed that a preponderance of the evidence was sufficient to enable the plaintiff to recover. This action of the court is assigned as error. Barton v.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W. 673, 56 Iowa 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-jugenheimer-iowa-1881.