Wilson v. Middleton
Before: Lyons
Synopsis
Appeal from the Superior Court of the city of San Francisco.
Wilson sued Middleton for an assault and battery, laying the damages at $20,000.
The defendant answered, 1st. Denying the complaint. 2d. That the plaintiff had provoked the defendant by filing in the Probate Court a false and malicious affidavit, reflecting upon the defendant as administrator of Penalta.
On the trial, it appeared that the defendant had been fined for the assault and battery in question; and the defendant’s counsel asked the Court to charge the jury that they had no right to award exemplary damages for a personal injury for which the law provided a punishment,by criminal prosecution; but the Court refused the instruction. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for $3000. It seems a motion for a new trial was made upon the affidavit of Middleton, that he had discovered, since the trial, that the plaintiff had been in the habit of feigning sickness, &c. The motion was overruled, and judgment rendered on the verdict April 18th, 1851. The appeal was taken July 18th, 1851, but no statement of facts or bill of exceptions was filed. The transcript contained the evidence given on the trial, and the affidavit in support of the motion for a new trial. The appeal was from the judgment generally.
Chief Justice Lyons delivered the opinion of the Court. This is an appeal from a final judgment taken since the 1st of July, 1851, at which time the statute prescribing the mode of bringing up causes on appeal became the law. No statement of the case containing the grounds on which the appellant relies for a reversal of the judgment of the Court below has been annexed to the record, but the judgment roll alone has been presented here. The latter disclosing no error, the judgment must be affirmed.
Dwinille for the appellants, filed a petition for rehearing, arguing against the exclusion of the affidavit, &c., from the record, at great length.
Feb. 11th. Justice Heydeneeldt delivered the opinion of the Court. This case was tried in the Court below a sufficient time before the Practice Act of 1851 went into operation, to lead to the conclusion that the case was prepared under the act of 1850. It has, however, been held by this Court, in several cases, that a mere transcript of the evidence as taken down and reported by the clerk forms no part of the record, unless it be embodied in a case, or a bill of exceptions, and have the signature of the judge. A different rule might lead to great abuse in the preparation of exemplifications for the action of the Appellate Court. But even were it otherwise, the decisions heretofore made must be regarded as a judicial construction of the act of 1850, from which we are not at liberty to depart.
The refusal of the judge to give the charge as requested, which appears in the record, and was signed by the judge, is in itself a bill of exceptions, pro tanto. But it is so clear that there is no error either in that refusal, or in the refusal to grant the new trial on the affidavit of the defendant, that we are constrained to deny the motion for re-argument.
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