Court Opinion

ID: 8183227
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:05:16.241351+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:19.306090
License: Public Domain

Cassoday, J.
At the time of the occurrence in question, January 21, 1888, the defendant Rev. Father Thomas Dempsey was the pastor of St. Philip’s Catholic Church at Highland, Iowa county, Wisconsin, and had been for several years. During the same time the plaintiff was a lawyer at *319Highland. He had some years before married a cousin of the priest; and he and his wife were both members of that church. Eor some time before the occurrences in question there had been an unfriendliness or misunderstanding between the plaintiff and the priest. The plaintiff wrote and sent to the priest the letter mentioned, January 15, 1888, and it tvas received by him on the same day. The letter contained a grave charge against the priest. In Avriting the letter, the plaintiff, as a member of the church, assumed a responsibility Avhich undoubtedly subjected him to inATes-tigation by the church or the constituted authorities thereof, and to be dealt with according to his merits. This court has recently disclaimed all right “to determine mere questions of faith, doctrine, or schism, not necessarily involved in the enforcement of ascertained trusts,” nor the “determination of legal rights.” Fadness v. Braunborg, 13 Wis. 293. We now disclaim any right of interference Avith mere church discipline, in the absence of any invasion of the legal rights of persons or property.
On the part of the defendants it is claimed, in effect, that at the time of the occurrences in question the plaintiff was invited to the parsonage for the purpose of enabling the priest “ to lay the' AA'hole matter before the leading members of the church, and give the plaintiff an interview before them; ” that the plaintiff came voluntarily, and without harm from any one, “ and then and there retracted ” the charges contained in the letter. There is evidence tending to support these claims. On the other hand, the plaintiff claims the facts substantially as summarized in the foregoing statement. The eA-idence is more or less in conflict. The determination of such conflict was-the province of the jury; and Avith the preponderance of evidence this court has nothing to do. There is certainly some evidence in the case to sustain the claims of the' plaintiff; and hence, for the purposes of this- appeal, the verdict and findings of the jury must be accepted by us as verities. We are only *320to consider, therefore, the correctness of such rulings of the trial court as have been challenged. The assignments of error are thirty-one in number. As to many of them, the rulings of the court were so manifestly correct as to require no mention. All of them are such as might arise on any trial for false imprisonment, and hence are common in their application. We shall only consider those material questions which seem to call for an expression of opinion.
1. Error is assigned because the court struck from the answer the portion relating to the action of the village board while the plaintiff was president thereof in 1885, respecting the sale of liquor on Sunday, and certain publications and controversies in consequence thereof. Certainly, such allegations, had they been proved, would have constituted no defense or mitigation of damages for false imprisonment more than two years afterwards. It is never essential to prove surplusage, and when such proof is offered it should be rejected. The only seeming excuse for such allegations in the answer is the fact that the complaint also alleged matters entirely irrelevant to the alleged false imprisonment.
2. We are not disposed to reverse this judgment for the exclusion of the juror Nelson. 1 In so far as there is an ab*321sence of statutory regulation or rule of court, the trial court must necessarily exercise a very large discretion in the impaneling of a jury; and the exercise of such discretion will not be disturbed except in case of its abuse or the violation of some rule of law. Santry v. State, 67 Wis. 67; Sutton v. Fox, 55 Wis. 531; Olson v. Solveson, 71 Wis. 663; Thomp. & M. Juries, §§ 258, 270, 271. The statute expressly precludes this court from reversing any judgment for any error not affecting the substantial right of the appellant. Sec. 2829, R. S. There is nothing in the record to indicate that by such ruling the defendants were in any -way prejudiced-.
3. Error is assigned because the court refused to allow the defendants to prove that the charges contained in the letter were false. As indicated, the letter wa.s received by the priest six days before the alleged imprisonment, and the charge contained in the letter relates to matters therein stated as transpiring some time before. The learned counsel for the defendants are undoubtedly right in claiming, in effect, that it must be presumed that the priest was innocent of the charges contained in the letter and that such charges were false. Such we understand to be the well-established rule of law. In an action for libel in the publication of an article charging the commission of a crime, the usual practice is simply to prove the publication; and no one would think it necessary, in addition, to prove that the charges contained in the article rrere false, since the law presumes all such charges to be false, and puts upon the person making the same the burden of proving them to be true. Such being the presumption of law, the defendants had the full benefit of it upon the trial, while the plaintiff, in the eyes of the law, appeared upon the trial under the disadvantage of having falsely charged the priest with the crime mentioned in the letter. The defendants could not by proof have made the priest’s innocence of that charge *322any more emphatic. This of itself was a sufficient reason for excluding such proof. But there is another still more commanding; and that is, if the defense had been allowed to put in such proof, theu, of course, the door would have been opened for the plaintiff to prove, if he could, that the charges contained in the letter were true. Had such been the course of the trial, the collateral and very remote issue as to such truth or falsity of the charges contained in the letter would have become the absorbing issue, and in fact overshadowed and swallowed up the real issue of false imprisonment. The court very properly excluded such proofs.
4. The defendants requested the court to instruct the jury as follows, which was given, after adding thereto the words in italics: “If the jury find that the plaintiff went to the house of the defendant Dempsey without the use of force, actual or threatened, to oblige him to do so; and if the jury further find that the defendants who went to the plaintiff’s office went there without any purpose to compel him to go to Dempsey’s house against his will, — then the defendants other than Father Dempsey are not responsible or liable for any blow or blows struck or acts done there,'merely because they were present. To make them liable for what transpired there, they must either have taken part in it, or must have known beforehand that it was to be done, or assented to it and countenanced it at the time it was done.” This is claimed to be an error, by reason of the provisions of sec. 2853, R. S. Where an instruction is requested and given after the same is modified, it is deemed refused as requested, and only given as modified; and where, as here, the modified instruction given includes all of the instruction requested, and, as modified, correctly states the law applicable to the case, no one is injured, and hence such modification is no ground for reversal. Sec. 2829, R. S.; Mason v. H. Whitbeck Co. 35 Wis. 164; Gilchrist v. Brande, 58 Wis. 192.
5. Exception is taken because the court charged the jury *323to the effect that the letter mentioned was “no justification for any unlawful acts which the defendants may have committed.” In a state governed by law, and under a constitution which prevents even the state from depriving any person of his liberty “ without due process of law,” or denying to any person, however lowly, “ the equal protection of the laws ” (sec. 1, art. XIY, Amend. Const. U. S.), there would seem to be no ground for claiming that any man or body of men, however exalted, may be a law unto themselves, and thus do what the state cannot,— imprison another “ without due process of law.”
6. Exception is taken to that portion of the charge to the effect that if the jury found that the plaintiff had been falsely imprisoned by the defendants, and that “ such illegal restraint was wilful and malicious,” then they were at liberty to “award to the plaintiff, in addition to the compensatory damages, such a sum by way of punishment and example as from all of the evidence ” in the case they might determine would be reasonable and just. Exception is also taken because the court charged the jury to the effect that if they found for the plaintiff, then he was entitled to recover full compensatory damages, and that such damages could not be lessened or mitigated by the writing of the letter. This last exception is strenuously insisted upon.
Whatever differences of opinion may have existed in this court prior to the decision of Craker v. C. & N. W. H. Co. 36 Wis. 657, as to the question thus involved, it was there settled that in actions for personal torts the “ compensatory damages ” recoverable “ include, not merely the plaintiff’s pecuniary loss, but also compensation for mental suffering;” that, in awarding such damages in such cases, “no distinction is to be made between other forms of mental suffering and that which consists in ‘a sense of wrong or insult.’ ” And a contrary intimation in a former case was *324thereby overruled. In Fenelon v. Butts, 53 Wis. 344, “the plaintiffs upon the trial waived all claim to exemplary damages.” The court refused to instruct the jury to the effect that if the defendant was liable for the false imprisonment alleged, then they “should take into consideration the circumstances of the supplementary proceedings;” and, if they found that the defendant “ was acting in gpod faith, in an honest endeavor to discover the plaintiffs’ property, before a person whom he supposed to be a legal officer, these circumstances” were “to be considered in mitigation of damages.” The court held, howmver, “ that, while proof of defendant’s good faith is admissible to mitigate punitory damages, it cannot be considered to mitigate compensatory damages, including those allowed for injury to the feelings.” This was followed in Corcoran v. Harran, 55 Wis. 122. In this last case the jury were, in effect, expressly instructed to give the plaintiff such amount as they thought “reasonable and just under the circumstances.” These cases are not in conflict with Maxwell v. Kennedy, 50 Wis. 645, since in an action of libel the plaintiff’s bad character would necessarily prevent his actual damages from being as large as if he were a person of good character.
We are asked to overrule Fenelon v. Butts and Corcoran v. Harran, supra, upon the point above indicated. After a careful consideration of the matter, we must refrain from doing so. In the very recent case of Goldsmith's Adm'r v. Joy, 17 Atl. Rep. (Vt.), 1010, the above and other cases in this court, as well as numerous cases in other courts, are carefully reviewed, and the conclusion reached that “provocation cannot mitigate actual damages for assault and battery.” Of course a plaintiff’s compensatory damages are limited to such as he actually sustains, under all the circumstances ; and it is such actual damages that cannot be lessened or mitigated. In the case last cited, it is maintained that the right to recover actual damages is in no way de*325pendent on the intention of the defendant; that “ even lunatics and idiots are liable for actual damages done by them to the property or person of another.” The moment it appears that the defendant was actuated by malice in doing the act complained of, then the jury are at liberty to award punitive damages; and since these may always be mitigated or lessened by provocation, even to the extent of extinguishing them altogether, it follows that the damages which are not subject to such mitigation' are such as are given by way of compensation merely. Since the jury awarded the plaintiff exemplary damages, and since, under the instructions given, they were at liberty to, and probably did, mitigate or lessen the amount of such punitive damages by reason of the letter, the defendants received the same benefit therefrom that they would had such deduction been made from the actual damages instead of from the exemplary damages.
U Assuming the facts to be as manifestly found by the jury, and we cannot say that the damages were excessive.
The other numerous exceptions in the case must be regarded as overruled. The several rulings to which such exceptions were taken are too clearly right to require mention.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.