Wood v. McKeever

41 P.2d 989, 141 Kan. 323, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1935
DocketNo. 31,718
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 989 (Wood v. McKeever) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. McKeever, 41 P.2d 989, 141 Kan. 323, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 143 (kan 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was a civil action for damages. Defendant shot the plaintiff, inflicting wounds and injuries from which he will never recover.

Plaintiff is a man of 48 years. In August, 1928, he obtained a written lease on a ranch of 600 acres known as the Lota McKeever ranch, in Harper county. The term was for three years, but plaintiff was permitted to overstay his term, and he was still in possession of the property on April 13, 1932, when the shooting occurred which gave rise to this lawsuit.

Defendant, K. K. McKeever, 62 years old, resided on a large ranch not far from the one leased and occupied by plaintiff. Defendant was one of two trustees appointed by the probate court to lease the Lota McKeever ranch. In March, 1932, defendant placed some cattle in plaintiff’s pasture under some arrangement of no [324]*324present importance. Later some other parties sought to put some of their cattle into the plaintiff’s pasture. This led to some wordy dispute between plaintiff and defendant. The latter reminded plaintiff of some delinquency in his payments of rent and declared he would take the pasture away from plaintiff. Shortly after noon on April 13, 1932, plaintiff went to the pasture for the avowed purpose of turning defendant’s cattle out of it. Defendant appeared on horseback armed with a revolver. He was accustomed to carry such a weapon attached to his saddle. Plaintiff rounded up some of defendant’s cattle to drive out of the pasture. Defendant placed himself and his horse at the gateway to head them off. This led to bitter words. Plaintiff reviled defendant as a coward for coming armed with a gun. Defendant drew his revolver and shot the plaintiff. The bullet shattered the breast bone, penetrated the lung and then passed through the left arm. Plaintiff fell from his horse. Defendant’s testimony concerning this incident was that antecedent thereto he had urged plaintiff to let the law settle their dispute; that plaintiff had said he didn’t need any law—

“When we got down in the corner of the pasture, where the cattle were, Wood started to ride on ahead as though he was going to open the gate, and I headed him off. . . . After we had got up to the cattle, he made the turn around behind me, as though he aimed to run the cattle through the gate. I told my dog to turn the cattle back, and the dog went behind and turned them east. ... I said to him, ‘Let these cattle alone.’ He said, ‘These cattle are going out.' Wood then reached around in front of him like he was after a gun. I did not see anything in his hand, but thought he was reaching for a gun. I reached into my saddle pocket and got my six shooter. I thought he had something in his hand, but didn’t take time to look to see what he had. When I shot him, I thought it was necessary for my own safety. . . . Wood partly fell and partly got off of his horse on the left-hand side.”

Defendant also testified that after plaintiff was shot he “made a run at defendant” with a hammer in his hand and threw it at defendant.

In a criminal prosecution which followed the foregoing incident, defendant was convicted of the crime of felonious assault under the crimes act (R. S. 21-434).

Plaintiff instituted this civil action for damages, pleading the material facts. Defendant’s answer included a general denial and an allegation that plaintiff’s injuries were augmented by his failure to care for them prudently.

[325]*325Jury trial; evidence adduced at length; verdict and judgment for defendant; appeal.

The first matter urged in plaintiff’s brief is a dissertation on the point that the evidence on behalf of defendant, if accepted as true, shows that plaintiff and defendant were engaged in mutual combat, the legal consequence of which would be to render defendant liable for any damages sustained by plaintiff. The case of McCulloch v. Goodrich, 105 Kan. 1, 181 Pac. 556, and earlier cases support the rule that persons consenting to and engaging in a mutual combat are liable reciprocally for injuries they may inflict on each other. Such was formerly the general rule of law, but present-day legal opinion has largely discarded it. (Restatement, Torts § 60, comment and illustrations.) However that may be, the matter is unimportant here, since no feature of the evidence tended to prove that the shooting and wounding of plaintiff occurred in or was the result of a mutual combat.

Appellant’s next grievance is partly directed at the jury’s disregard of what he considers the “clear and convincing” evidence. This point, however, presents nothing for appellate review. Included-in this assignment is a complaint touching the trial court’s refusal to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial; but this phase of the appeal can be dealt with more logically after some other errors urged on our attention are considered. One of these is based on the exclusion of-evidence offered by plaintiff to rebut defendant’s evidence in respect to the right of possession of the pasture at the time defendant shot the plaintiff. In his case in chief plaintiff had introduced his written lease of the pasture, which terminated August 1, 1931. He then attempted to show by oral testimony that he had been permitted to remain in possession for another year. This was excluded on defendant’s objection thereto. The court’s ruling reads:

“Objection sustained. I don’t see that it cuts any figure if he was occupying it at the time.”

Passing the question whether this ruling was correct or not, defendant was permitted to adduce evidence tending to show that plaintiff’s right of occupancy of the pasture had terminated. The record reads:

Defendant testifying on direct examination:

“I had a conversation with Wood about March 14th [a month before the shooting]. He ‘said he had decided to turn the pasture back to me.’ . . .
“Wood came to my place about noon on April 13th. The first thing he [326]*326said was, ‘How about the pasture?' ... I said, ‘Wood, you know the pasture is not for rent, and that you have turned it back to me.’ He said, ‘You want the pasture?’ I said, ‘Under our agreement you turned the pasture back, and I expect to keep the pasture.' ”

Cross-examination:

“When the three-year lease on this Lota McKeever land was up in August, 1931, I asked Wood if he intended to hold it for another year, and he did not say anything.”

On rebuttal, plaintiff tendered in evidence a letter from the co-trustee of the pasture, addressed to plaintiff’s wife six days after the shooting, containing a statement of account against plaintiff, which among other matters read:

“He [plaintiff] has had the use of the pasture for four years, having taken over the pasture in 1928. This makes a total of $990, so deducting from this, the total payments made, or $564.25, there shows an unpaid balance of $425.75 still due.” [Italics ours.]

This evidence was objected to by counsel for defendant on the ground that—

“It hasn’t a thing to do with the issues in this case.
“By the Coxjet : What is the purpose of this?

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 989, 141 Kan. 323, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-mckeever-kan-1935.