Mendelsohn v. Anaheim Lighter Co.
Before: Crockett
Synopsis
Appeal from tbe District Court of tbe Seventeenth District, County of Los Angeles
Action for damages against defendants for failure to deliver certain lumber received by it from vessels lying in the harbor of Anabeim landing, Los Angeles County, which defendant agreed to carry from said vessels to land, and deliver to plaintiff witbin a reasonable time.
Plaintiff alleges tbat a part of said lumber was rafted from one of said vessels, and allowed to remain in tbe water for a period of three weeks, by which it„ was greatly damaged, and nearly ruined, and tbat another portion of said lumber was not delivered at all; by reason of wbicb they claimed to be damaged in tbe sum of twelve thousand dollars.
Judgment was rendered for tbe plaintiff’s for twenty-five hundred dollars damages; defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied by tbe Court, and defendant appealed from tbe judgment and from the order denying the motion for a new trial.
First — The verdict is too defective to support a judgment. It does not find tbe matter at issue either one way or tbe other. In giving a general verdict the jury are required by the Practice Actio pronounce upon the issues either in favor of the plaintiff or defendant. The general form of such a verdict (for the plaintiff), is, in effect, a finding that the material allegations of the complaint are true, and that the plaintiff has suffered damage in a specified sum, on account of the injuries alleged in the complaint. (Prac. Act, Secs. 174, 176; Patterson v. United States, 2 Wheat. 221; Boss v. Austile, 2 Oal. 183-6; Woodson v. McGu/ne, 17 Oal. 298; Barnes v. Williams, 11 Wheat. 415.)
Second — -There was an abuse of discretion by the Court, in permitting an amendment to the complaint, after the jury was empanneled, by which the defendant was prevented from having a fair trial.
Third — A new trial should have been granted, on the third ground alleged, viz : accident and surprise, against which ordinary prudence could not have guarded. (Prac. Act, Sec. 195, and cases cited.)
As to liability of principal for acts of agent, see Sedgwick on the Measure of Damages, pages 537,467, note; Wardrobe v. Gal. Stage Go. (7 Oal. 118); The Amiable Nancy, (3 Wheat. 546.) There were no grounds to charge the defendant with malice. The only evidence upon the subject referred exclusively to the defendant’s agent, and did not in any way implicate the defendant.
Punitive damages cannot be given against a principal for malice on the part of his agent. (Wardrobe v. Gal. Stage Go., 7 Oal. 118; Hie Amiable Nancy, 3 Wheat. 546; Hill v. N. 0. and Opelousas and Great Western B. B., 11 Louisiana, 292; Borland v. Galhoun, 13 Id. 445; Milwaukee & Mississippi B.B. Go. v. Finney, 10 Wisconsin, 388.) Both the rule as to the principal’s liability, and its limitation is given by the maxim: “Qu,i facit per odium facit per se.”
Crockett, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, Temple, J., Wallace, .J., and Bhodes, C. J., concurring:
The verdict in this case was not void for uncertainty. The only office of the verdict is to express, in clear and intelligible language, the result at which the jury has arrived; and when the jury in this case said in their verdict that they found the plaintiffs to be “entitled to the sum of $2,500,” it was equivalent to saying that they found the issues in favor of the plaintiffs, and assessed the damages at that sum. The verdict admits of no other rational interpretation. Nor did the Court err in ' denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial, so far as it was founded on the ground of surprise resulting from the amendment of the complaint. The attorneys in a cause must be held to have had notice of the proceedings therein, which occurred in their presence, in open Court, during the progress of the trial. Any other rule would lead to perjury and fraud. Of course nothing of the kind is imputed to the respectable attorneys in this cause; but the rule for which they contend would be most pernicious in practice and should not be tolerated. On the conclusion of the testimony, the Court, on the request of the plaintiffs, charged the jury, in sub[661]stance, that if the damage to the lumber was wantonly and maliciously caused by the defendant, the jury might give punitive damages; and refused to give an instruction ashed by the defendant, embodying the converse of this proposition; and this ruling is assigned as error on two grounds, to wit: first, that there was no evidence tending to show any wanton or malicious conduct on the part of the defendant, and that the defendant is not liable for punitive damages for the wanton and malicious acts of his servants and agents, done without his consent or privity; second, that the rule of damages is not correctly stated in the instructions given. If the rule be, as claimed by defendant, that punitive damages are not allowable in actions founded solely on contract, this case does not come within the rule, the action being founded partly on the contract made with the defendant, but chiefly on an alleged breach of its duty as a common carrier for hire; and no one, I apprehend, will maintain that a common carrier is ip no case liable to punitive damages for a wanton, malicious and tortuous breach of his duty. If the proprietor of a stage coach should wantonly and maliciously overturn it, with the intent to hill or inflict bodily injury upon a passenger, it is too plain for argument that in an action by the passenger the jury might give punitive damages. In like manner, if a family picture, having no appreciable market value, be delivered to a common carrier to be transported for hire, and if he wantonly destroy it, it is plain the damages would not be confined to the mere money value of the picture. In such cases the carrier would not only be guilty of a violation of‘ the contract, but of a. gross, wilful and tortuous breach of a duty enjoined upon him by law, for which he would be liable to punitive damages. If, therefore, there was any evidence in the cause to authorize this instruction, it was properly given by the Court. But whilst there was evidence tending to show that the damages to the lumber was caused by the malicious and wanton acts of the agents and servants of the defendant, I discover nothing in the record tending to prove that the defendant authorized or
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