Court Opinion

ID: 6570939
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:28:41.181243+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:54.125750
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.

There are three modes of defence to the action of assault and battery.
*82The first is by pleading the general issue, which denies the whole charges in the declaration.
The second admits the facts, but avoids the conclusion in the declaration, by alleging that they were done through inevitable accident. This ought regularly to be pleaded in bar, and so has been the practice in this Court; but it appears by the books, that such inevitable accident may be shown in evidence under the general issue.
The third is a justification of the alleged trespass, and must always be pleaded in bar.
The evidence offered by the defendant’s counsel does not deny the allegations of the declaration, or excuse the facts of assaulting and beating the plaintiff. It does not even amount to a justification. Had it been pleaded in bar as such, the plea would have been clearly bad. The defendant offers to show seisin of the land in himself; but possession only, accompanied with such restricted acts as the law allows a man to do in defence of his possession, can amount to a justification.
It is no justification for an assault and battery, to plead that the assailant was defending his title. If a dispute of this nature exists, which cannot be settled by the parties, it is to be decided by Courts and Juries, and not by staves and blows, and breach of the public peace, and no evidence that the right or title to the land about which the dispute arose, and upon which the assault and battery ensued, can operate as any mitigation of damages.
Nor can a mere naked property in the crops standing and growing, without actual possession of the land, be pleaded in justification, or be given in mitigation of damages, under the general issue. The *83crops attached to the freehold do not come within the principles by which personal property is held; but if they were considered as a chattel interest, it would be of dangerous consequence to society to suffer a party to justify or to even mitigate the damages in assault and battery, by showing that he claimed property in things in dispute, while in possession of another.
The law will not suffer a man to reclaim his own property, either real, personal, or mixed, by breach of the peace.
The case cited from Butter's Nisi Prius is not in point. The Court in that case admitted every thing that was said at the time of the imprisonment to be heard in mitigation of damages. In the present trial, every thing said at the time of the assault and battery, has been or will be received in evidence in mitigation of damages; “ for every thing which passed at that time is part of the transaction on which the plaintiff’s action is founded, and he cannot be surprised by such evidence.” But he might be surprised by the admission of evidence of the defendant’s seisin of the land, and property in the crops standing and growing thereon, about which the dispute arose, which, it is suggested, led to the assault and battery ; for it is not evidence of any thing which passed at the time of the trespass alleged.
If the defendants thought such evidence available in their defence, they should have spread it on the record in bar. The plaintiff would have then been apprized of such defence, and have prepared himself to traverse the seisin of the land, or property in the crops, or by demurrer have shown such evidence impertinent.
Fay, for plaintiff.
Darius Chipman, for defendants.
The evidence cannot therefore be admitted.
Verdict for plaintiff, 1,000 dollars. Costs, 178 dollars.