Campbell v. Magruder

Pleasants, J.

Appellee brought this suit under the Dram Shop Act against appellants, saloon keepers, for injury to her means of support by the death of her husband through intoxication caused by liquors sold or given by them to him. We presume the plea was not guilty, though the abstract is silent on that point. Plaintiff recovered judgment on a verdict for §1,000.

There was evidence both positive and circumstantial, to support the finding upon all the material allegations, and also to the contrary. It is unnecessary to discuss it or to say on which side, in our opinion, was the preponderance.

Appellants assign for error, that the declaration states no time or place when or where the alleged wrongful acts of the defendants were committed; that the record does not show that any replication was filed, and that there was no issue joined.

From the abstract it appears that the first count alleged that plaintiff was the wife of Thomas Magruder up to the time of his death, which occurred on the 10th of October, 1S89, at Coles County, Illinois; that the defendants “ on, etc., and divers other days,” sold and gave himintoxicatingliquors, etc.; that the second count, after giving the place and date of his death, proceeds to charge that, on the day aforesaid the defendants there sold and gave, etc., and that the third and fourth set forth substantially the same facts as in the second. Thus in three of the four counts the time and place were averred. It may be presumed that the foundation for the statements that no replication was filed or issue joined, is the fact that the similiter was not added to the plea. The defects thus lately complained of are not so serious that the plea, trial, verdict, judgment and statute of amendments and jeofails would not cure them.

Ho error in admitting or rejecting evidence is suggested in the argument, unless it be the allowance of hypothetical questions on the basis of the undertaker’s statement as to the con-ten ts of the dead man’s stomach; to which we see no objection, and none is particularly made. The witness did not pretendió know the contents, but he certainly had some means of forming an opinion, judgment and belief, and he stated it only as such. It was for the jury to determine its weight, and entirely proper to base the questions to the experts upon the hypothesis of its truth.

The first, second and fourth instructions given for the plaintiff, considered separately, are defective. Each of them states that plaintiff has a right to recover for the injury here complained of, if it was the direct result of her husband’s intoxication, against any and all who caused his intoxication, in whole or in part—in the language of the statute, substantially, as far as it goes, but omitting the clause “ by giving or selling (to him) intoxicating liquors.” This is an essential element of the wrong. The statement in the declaration contains it, and the instructions also should have included it. Yet we can not reasonably suppose that the jury were misled by its omission in these, since it appears in those numbered six and seven, and is very clearly so declared in those given for the defendants and numbered two and three. Such also, would be the general understanding from the terms here used.

Plaintiff’s third was somewhat loose, but the subject was so treated in defendant’s second as to prevent the possibility of a mistake about it, if instructions could prevent it. The amount found is proof enough that there was none in fact.

Seeing no sufficient reason for a reversal, the judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.