Court Opinion

ID: 7366621
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:16.6531+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:47.135368
License: Public Domain

de GRAFFENRIED, J.
Belton W. Coleman brought this suit against the Birmingham Railway, Light & *482Power Company, which operates a line of street cars in the city of Birmingham, to recover damages which said Coleman claims he sustained on account of certain abusive language which it is alleged was used towards him, and on account of an alleged assault with a pistol which was made upon him by a conductor of said Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Company while said Coleman was a passenger on one of its street cars.
There were two counts to the complaint. The first count charged the abusive language, and the second count charged the assault with the pistol.
There was the plea of the general issue, and also a special plea. This special plea, the appellant contends, was filed to both counts. The special plea was treated by the court below, and, as we read the plea, was properly treated by the court below as a plea to the second count only.
1. The facts show, beyond doubt, that appellant’s conductor did present a pistol at close range at the appellee, and they also show that when he did so he applied certainly one abusive epithet to appellee.
In civil, as distinguished from criminal, actions, an intent to injure is not essential to the liability of the person committing the assault. — Gariton v. Henry, 129 Ala. 479, 39 South. 924; McGee v. State, 4 Ala. App. 54, 58 South. 1008. “In fact, we think that at times courts have fallen into error in applying, or in attempting to apply, the rules applicable only to civil actions for assaults and batteries or trespass to the person to the facts in criminal prosecutions.” — McGee v. State, supra; Thomason v. Gray, 82 Ala. 291, 3 South. 38; Chapman v. State, 78 Ala. 463, 56 Am. Rep. 42.
Under.the evidence of the conductor in this case (and his evidence was the most favorable evidence which was introduced on behalf of the appellant), the conductor *483committed an assault upon the appellee for which the appellant is civilly liable unless the conductor was free from fault in bringing on the difficulty or trouble which resulted in his presenting his pistol at the appellee and unless, also, at the time he so presented the pistol, it reasonably appeared to the conductor that it was necessary for him to do so to protect his own person from a battery at the hands of appellee.
In the case of Birmingham Railway & Electric Company v. Baird, 130 Ala. 334, 30 South. 456, 54 L. R. A. 752, 89 Am. St. Rep. 43, this court, referring to the right of a conductor in charge of a passenger train of a common carrier to assault a passenger on such train, said: “He cannot assault a passenger in retaliation for an assault committed upon himself or upon another passenger, and a fortiori he cannot assault a passenger for abusive words, or in revenge or punishment under any circumstances, and if he does assault a passenger otherloise than under a necessity to defend himself or a passenger from battery, or in rightfully ejecting a passenger Avho, by his conduct toward other passengers, has forfeited his right of carriage, the carrier is liable. The fault of the passenger short of producing a necessity to strike in self-defense Avill neither justify the conduct- or in striking nor relieve the carrier from liability for his act. Possibly such fault could be considered in mitigation of damages.” — Ala. City, G. & A. Ry. Co. v. Samply, 4 Ala, App. 464, 58 South. 974; Ala. City, G. & A. Ry. Co. v. Sampley, 169 Ala. 373, 53 South. 142.
We are therefore of the opinion that the trial court Avas free from error in giving charge 4 (which the reporter will set out) to the jury at the written request of appellee.
2. We knoAV of no case in Avhich it has ever been held that a conductor of a passenger train can justify the *484use of abusive or insulting language towards a passenger. If a conductor abuses or insults a passenger, the circumstances surrounding the occurrence may be shoAvn, and, if-such abuse or insult was brought about by the misconduct of the passenger, then the jury may consider that in mitigation of damages, but certainly such passenger Avould be entitled to recover at least nominal damages. — Lamphin v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, 106 Ala. 287, 17 South. 448. The trial court Avas therefore free from error in giving charge 3 (Avhich the reporter will set out) to the jury at the written request of appellee.
3. The appellant assigns as error the following excerpt from the oral charge of the court: “* * * And if there was an unlawful assault committed on the plaintiff here and that was Avithout justification on the part of the conductor, why, in that sort of a case, you could impose what the Iuav calls punitive damages; that is, damages that undertake to punish the wrongful act. That is left to your sound judgment and discretion."’ This portion of the charge must, to be understood, be read in connection Avith what the court said immediately preceding it, and we think that it is evident that, Avhen so read, the court intended to say to the jury, and did in fact say to the jury, by the use of the above words, “in that sort of a ease,” that if there Avas an unlawful and unjustifiable assault committed by the conductor upon appellee, accompanied with wrongful, abusive, and insulting language, applied at the time of the assault by the conductor to appellee, then that under the law the jury in their discretion were authorized to aAvard appellee exemplary damages. The oral charge of the court may be somewhat involved, but it is, as a Avhole, entitled to a fair and reasonable construction at our hands, and the above excerpt from the charge, read in *485connection with the rest of the charge which explains it and forms a part of it, was a simple statement to the jury that if the conductor unlawfully and AVithout justification assaulted the appellee, and if, at the time he did so, he humiliated appellee by applying abusive and insulting language to him, then the jury were authorized to award exemplary damages to appellee Avithin their discretion. The trial court cannot be put in error for making the above statement to the jury in the connection in which it Avas made. — 13 Cyc. p. 105, sub. ix; Wilkinson v. Searcy, 76 Ala. 176; Lienhauf & Strauss v. Morris, 66 Ala. 406; Willis v. Miller (C. C.) 29 Fed. 238. In civil actions for damages for assaults and batteries or for assaults, exemplary damages are recoverable Avhenever the “Avrongful act Avas done Avantonly or maliciously or Avas attended Avith insult, oppression, or other circumstances of aggravation.” — 13 Cyc. 1108.
4. While the laxv cannot furnish a standard for the admeasurement of damages for physical pain and mental suffiering in money, and for that reason must leave such compensation to the sound discretion of the jury, Avho, under the evidence, when such damages are recoverable, are to alloAV the party so suffering such sum as they deem just, not in excess of the amount sued for, nevertheless.such damages, Axdien recoverable are actual damages in the same sense that damages for the loss of an eye, an arm, or a foot are actual damages. If, in such a case, the discretion of the jury is abused and the jury award the plaintiff excessive damages, or on the other hand, abusing their discretion, award the plaintiff no damages, such verdict may be set aside by the court. When a plaintiff is entitled to actual damages, the jux-y must award them. The amount of such actual damages, subject to the above control of the court, is. when compensation is to be awarded for mental pain *486or physical suffering, or both, necessarily left to the good sense and sound discretion, under the evidence, of the jury trying the case. Exemplary damages are never recoverable as matter of right, and for that reason the law, in cases authorizing their imposition, leaves the question as to whether they shall be alloioed at all, and, if so, the amount of such exemplary damages, not to exceed the amount sued for, to the sound discretion of the jury, who must exercise that discretion in the light of the evidence in the case. Of course, when exemplary damages are allowed by a jury in a particular case, the trial judge ma.y, if the verdict is so excessive as to show that the jury abused the discretion which the law committed to them, set the verdict aside. — Montgomery & Eufaula Railway Co. v. Mallette, 92 Ala. 209, 9 South. 363; Seed’s Case, 115 Ala. 670, 22 South. 474.
Charge 5 was, to say the least of it, calculated to confuse and mislead the jury, and for that reason was properly refused.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Dowdell, C. J., not sitting.