Welsh v. Pritchard

241 P.2d 816, 125 Mont. 517, 1952 Mont. LEXIS 99
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1952
Docket9014, 9014A
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 241 P.2d 816 (Welsh v. Pritchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welsh v. Pritchard, 241 P.2d 816, 125 Mont. 517, 1952 Mont. LEXIS 99 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE FREEBOURN:

John P. Welsh, plaintiff and respondent, and his wife, Katherine Welsh, sued Griff Pritchard and his wife, Dora Pritchard, in separate actions for damages. The two eases were consolidated for trial and the jury returned a verdict for each plaintiff against defendant, Griff Pritchard, each in the amount of $250, as exemplary damages.

On July 16, 1948, Griff Pritchard purchased a house in Great Falls for $4400 cash “not to live in” but for the purpose of fixing it up and selling it at a profit.

A news advertisement for a house, listing a telephone num *519 ber, canght his eye. Calling the telephone number, he contacted Mrs. Welsh. The Welshs rented the newly acquired house, paying $65 and the water bill as monthly rental. From this time until April 1, 1949, no difficulty developed between the parties and the rent was paid on the first of each month, in advance. As testified by Pritchard, ‘ ‘There has never been any quarrel between me and the Welshs over money.”

On April 15, 1949, Pritchard served the following written notice on the Welshs: ‘‘I hereby terminate our verbal rental arrangements from month to month, and request possession May 1,1949. ” The Welshs did not comply with such notice and demand.

The notice was insufficient under Montana law to form a basis of a court action to remove the Welshs from the premises, since such notice, the rent having been paid in advance, must be of thirty days duration. R. C. M. 1947, sec. 42-206.

The "Welshs made offer of the rent on the first of May and June, which offers were refused by Pritchard, although such rentals reached him by deposit to his credit in the bank. His reason for refusing such rent was: ‘‘I did notify the Welshs of the termination of my agreement and I didn’t propose to extend that agreement by accepting payment again.”

Great Falls was under federal rent control and Pritchard sought an order from such authority permitting him to evict the Welshs, which was denied. Such authority did, however, reduce the rent from $65 to $60 a month.

On June 25,1949, Pritchard appeared at the Welshs’ kitchen door, rapped, walked in and seated himself in the living room. Minutes later his wife, Dora, a paralytic needing assistance of a woman servant, in addition to a crutch and cane, entered the house through the front doorway, Pritchard opening the door for them. Mrs. Pritchard, who seems to have been an innocent victim of circumstances, was seated in one of the Welshs’ living room chairs, and there is evidence she did not move from such chair during the day and night of June 25 and 26. A *520 straight-backed chair, a rocking chair, a radio, some papers and magazines, were moved in. Later a bedstead, springs and mattress were moved in and set up in the Welshs’ living room. When asked by Mrs. Welsh what all this meant, Pritchard replied, “We came over to stay.”

If Welsh had any idea that his home was his castle, or that he and his family alone would enjoy the privacy and quiet of his domicile, such idea was rudely shattered and took wing when he reached home and found the Pritchards and their belongings cluttering up the living room. Things looked bad and they were to become worse before becoming better. He was in for days and nights that would try any man’s soul.

As Welsh entered the living room he apparently did not see his real antagonist, Griff, who was sitting to one side, his cane between his knees. Welsh directed his attention to Mrs. Pritchard and, unmindful of her crippled condition, moved toward her extending his hand and asking her to get out of the chair. Then it was that Griff went into action, impelled by the thought “that he was going to attack my wife.” He might have shouted, “Unhand her, villain,” but as 72-year-old Griff headed for the 48-year-old Welsh, his words were: “Don’t you touch that woman, old man,” as he wiggled his cane to gain his balance.. Welsh said Griff raised his cane as though to strike him. Then and there, as Griff said, he was “afraid of nothing. ’ ’

The record does not show Griff’s fighting weight, but Welsh was a heavyweight at 195 pounds. Without a shake of the hand and before Griff his guard could raise, Welsh, as Griff tells it, “landed on me with all his might,” and Griff went down from the dynamite. Griff hit, not the canvas or the deck, but a small rug upon the floor. As he lay outstretched upon it Welsh skidded it and “rugged” him toward the door. Through the doorway into the porch, where the rug halted, while Griff continued to the lawn, entirely oblivious to what was going on. Returning consciousness left him feeling “as though I had come from the other world. ’ ’

*521 He was suffering terrific pain in the right shoulder and right side of his chest; his face was bruised, swollen, cut, and bleeding. Already suffering from diabetes, and gangrene in one foot crippling him so he needed a cane to get about, Griff was in poor shape to return to the scene of battle. With difficulty he raised himself from the grass and crept and dragged himself to a sitting position on the front porch. There he sat collecting his faculties and taking .stock of the situation when the police officers arrived. No comfort gave they as they stopped to chide, for as Griff put it, “they only asked me two or three or four smart questions and then they went up the steps and through the front door inside.”

Griff pulled himself upright, “hung on to the post for a minute,” then staggered to the living room again to face his foe.

In that living room he and his wife stayed for 17 days and nights and until July 11, 1949, unwanted guests of unwanted tenants. Griff pulled stakes on July 11, 1949. Just why is not clear, but like the Arab he folded his tent and silently stole away.

The evidence indicates that during his stay in the Welshs’ living room a warrant of arrest was served upon him, but to this he paid no attention and he was not arrested. It also appears that a federal court order was served on the Pritchards directing them “to refrain further from using the premises.” Then, too, a justice court action was commenced by Welsh seeking the Pritchards’ removal from the premises and seeking-damages from them. Trial of this action was set for July 12, 1949. No trial was had and that action was dismissed.

Griff, his trials and tribulations not over, found himself defendant in two damage actions brought by the Welshs. On March 24, 1950, a jury in the Cascade county district court, after hearing the evidence on both sides, held that Griff must pay each of the Welshs $250 as exemplary damages, the outcome of his disruption of the Welsh home life during the 17 day and night vigil.

*522 This is the verdict rendered in favor of Welsh: “We, the jury in the above-entitled action do find our verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, Griff Pritchard, and do assess him compensatory damages in the sum of $ None Dollars and do further assess as exemplary damages the sum of $250.00 against the defendant, Griff Pritchard.”

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Bluebook (online)
241 P.2d 816, 125 Mont. 517, 1952 Mont. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-pritchard-mont-1952.