Case Name: George D. Genung, Respondent, v. Hugh J. Baldwin, Appellant
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1902
Citations: 77 A.D. 584
Docket Number: 
Parties: George D. Genung, Respondent, v. Hugh J. Baldwin, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 77
Pages: 584–588

Head Matter:
George D. Genung, Respondent, v. Hugh J. Baldwin, Appellant.
Provocation—considered in reduction of actual as well as of punitive damages.
In an action to recover damages for an assault and battery, evidence of provocation may be taken into consideration by the jury in reduction of actual or compensatory damages as. well as in reduction of punitive damages.
Parker, P. J., dissented.
Reargument of an appeal by the defendant, Hugh J. Baldwin, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Tioga on the 9th day of September, 1901, upon the verdict of a jury for $450, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 5th day of September, 1901, denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
Upon the original argument of the appeal the court affirmed the judgment. The opinion handed down thereon is reported in 75 Appellate Division, 195.
Frederick F. Fawkes, for the appellant.
Frcmk A. Bell and Martin S. Lynch, for the respondent.

Opinion:
Chester, J.:
This court, after deciding the appeal herein, granted a motion for a reárgument.
The principal question urged upon the attention of the court upon the reargument was, as to whether or not the learned justice who presided at the trial erred in refusing to charge the jury that evidence of provocation by the plaintiff might be considered in mitigation, of actual and compensatory damages. The defendant had an exception to this refusal.
When the case was originally argued counsel did not. call the attention of the court to the case of Riff v. Yovmans (86 N. Y. 324), nor was any emphasis given to the distinction between the application of provocation in mitigation of punitive damages and of its application in mitigation of actual damages. The question raised by defendant's exception above mentioned was not considered by the court in deciding the appeal, as appears by the opinion then handed down which is reported in 75 Appellate Division, 195.
The case of Kiff v. Youmans (supra), like this, was one for an assault and battery. The assault in' that case was committed while the plaintiff was a trespasser upon the defendant's premises and the defendant used more force than was necessary in ejecting him therefrom. The court charged the jury that, in case they found the defendant's acts were wanton and malicious, they might, in addition to the compensatory damages, return a sum by way of punitive or exemplary damages. The plaintiff had a verdict. The judgment on the verdict was affirmed by the General Term, but was reversed by the Court of Appeals. Judge Danforth, who wrote the opinion in the latter court, says (p. 330): " It still remains that the plaintiff provoked the trespass; was himself guilty of the act which led to the disturbance of the public peace. Although this provocation fails to justify the defendant it may be relied upon by him in mitigation even of compensatory damages. This doctrine is as old as the action of trespass and is correlative to the rule which permits circumstances of aggravation, such as time and place of an assault, or insulting words, or other circumstances of indignity and contumely, to increase them. If the injury of which he complains came in part from his own • act, there is less reparation demanded from the defendant, for the law seeks to do justice between the parties, and will not require one to atone for the other's error. If satisfaction is to be made for the breach of public order, it is not due to him, for his own wrong is the consideration upon which it stands, and for that he cannot be allowed to profit. Otherwise he would receive compensation for damages occasioned by himself." He cites with approval the case of Robison v. Rupert (23 Penn. St. 523). That was a case where the plaintiff was shot when, with others, he was annoying and disturbing the defendant, and after he had been warned to desist. The court, charged the jury " that these circumstances should go in mitigation of exemplary damages, but that the plaintiff was entitled to full compensation for all his sufferings, losses and expenses, notwithstanding the character of the provocation by which he drew them on himself." The plaintiff had a verdict, and upon error brought by defendant the court reversed the judgment, saying, "where there is a reasonable excuse for the defendant, arising from the provocation or fault of the plaintiff, but not sufficient entirely to justify the act done, there can be no exemplary damages, and the circumstances of mitigation must be applied to the actual damages."
The reason for this doctrine is well stated by Sedgwick in his well-known work on Damages (Yol. 2 [7th ed.], p. 521, note b) as follows: " The distinction as to the effect of mitigating circumstances on actual and on exemplary damages is, that where the excusing or palliating circumstances involve no fault of the plaintiff, they may prevent exemplary damages and limit the recovery to ¡actual compensation. Where there is a reasonable excuse for the defendant, arising from the provocation or fault of the plaintiff, but not sufficient entirely to justify the act done, the circumstances of mitigation must be applied to the actual damages. If it were not ,so, the plaintiff would get full compensation for damages occasioned by himself. The rule ought to be, and is practically, mutual. Malice and provocation in the defendant are punished by inflicting -damages exceeding the measure of compensation, and in the plaintiff, by giving him less than that measure."
There is some conflict of authority between the courts of the different States upon this question. One or two, notably Vermont (Goldsmith v. Joy, 61 Vt. 488) and Illinois (Donnelly v. Harris, 41 Ill. 126), have held that provocation can be considered only in mitigation of punitive damages. But I think the rule is otherwise in this State, and that the principle stated in Kiff v. Youmans must be followed here.
The respondent endeavors to distinguish the case at bar from that -ease, claiming that there the only question was whether punitive •damages were lawfully allowed, which is not the question here, but 1 think in another respect the cases are alike in principle.
The plaintiff here was the editor of a newspaper ; the defendant was president of the village of Waverly, where both resided. The •defendant testified that on the same day, and prior to the assault, he bad read some articles in plaintiff's newspaper severely criticising bim, and that they made him very angry. . If this evidence is true, it showed that the plaintiff here, like the plaintiff in the Kiff case, was at fault, and that the articles were the cause of the defendant's anger at the time of the assault. If the defendant's anger at that "time was in fact provoked by plaintiff, the cases are not fairly to be distinguished in that respect.
I think that, under the authority of the Kiff case, the court erred in not permitting the jury to take the circumstances proven in mitigation by the defendant in reduction of actual or compensatory damages as well as of punitive damages, and for this reason the judgment must be reversed.
This conclusion renders the consideration of other questions unnecessary.
Smith, and Kellogg JJ., concurred; Chase, J., concurred in result; Parker, P. J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with.costs to appellant to abide event.
Casjes DETERMINED IN THE FOURTH DEPARTMENT IN THE APPELLATE DIVISION, germtoxv 1902.