1 I. The allegations are that the injuries were caused by kicking, and by beating and bruising with the fist. The court permitted the plaintiff to show, against objection, that his wife was living at the time of the injury, and was not living at the time of the trial. Complaint is made of the ruling. As the record appears in this court, the facts are immaterial. Appellee, in argument, says it was done to account for her absence as a witness, because she would have been a material witness as to plaintiff’s condition after the injury. The difficulty in that respect is that the record does not show the fact of her knowledge on that subject. The abstract does not purport to contain all the evidence, but it does purport to contain all the evidence pertaining to each and every question presented by the assignment of errors, and necessary to a proper consideration of them, and each of them. The abstract is not questioned, and hence it is taken as true. Therefore we must hold the evidence to be immaterial. When we take into consideration the record as presented, and assume, as we may, the ordinary intelligence of the jury, it may be said to appear that no prej udice resulted. If there were facts with *217which, to associate the particular evidence, to give it significance or bearing on either a right of recovery or the amount thereof, they are not in the record, and we cannot assume them. The absence of conditions from which prejudice might arise justifies a conclusion that there was no prejudice.
2. II. The defendant had been accused on information .of the crime of an assault and battery, and had pleaded guilty thereto. That plea was put in evidence on this trial, of which complaint is made. It is thought, because of some language in Crawford v. Bergen, 91 Iowa, 675 (60 N. W. Rep. 205), that the authorities are not in harmony as to the admissibility of such a plea in evidence, in a civil suit like this. The holding in that case is that the effect of such a plea, when put in evidence, is not conclusive as to the fact of guilt, but that the party may show, .in the civil suit for damages, that he was not in fact guilty. This holding is immediately followed by the language on which reliance is placed, as follows: “The admission of guilt should be held to apply to that trial only, because the parties are not the same, and the rules of practice and course of proceeding are different.” The meaning is this: By the plea in the criminal suit there was an admission of guilt that was conclusive in that case. That conclusiveness pertained to that suit only, but the plea, as the act or declaration of the party, may be put in evidence in the civil suit, but not with the legal inference as to conclusiveness. If the court had said in this suit that the allegations of an assault and battery were established because of the admission of guilt in the other suit, it would have been permitting the admission of guilt to apply in another suit, but it did not, by simply permitting the statement or plea to be considered without that effect,
*2183 III. The jury was permitted to find exemplary damages. It appeared in the trial of this case, that in the criminal suit a fine was imposed and paid. It is urged, that that fact should defeat an allowance of exemplary damages in this ease, because otherwise there is a double punishment. That the claim, has strong support in reason hardly admits of doubt, but a contrary rule seems to have obtained in this state since the case of Hendrickson v. Kingsbury, reported in 21 Iowa, 379. Each party has seized upon particular language in that case for support of his claim; but, when all the language is considered, it makes the distinction between the punishment for the wrong done the public, for which the- punishment is inflicted in the criminal action, and that done to the individual, for which punishment may be imposed by the jury in the civil action. Reddin v. Gates, 52 Iowa, 210 (2 N. W. Rep. 1079), is like this case in its facts, and conclusive of it. See, also, Root v. Sturdivant, 70 Iowa, 55 (29 N. W. Rep. 802). That other states have announced a different rule is true, but a review of the cases would be of no use.
4 IV. Defendant offered to prove the circumstances under which he entered his plea of guilty in the criminal action, which offer was denied. The right was claimed on the theory, that what was then said, was a part of the transaction or conversation, and permissible under the provisions of Code, section 3650, which provides that, “when part of an act, declaration, conversation, or writing is given in evidence by one party, the whole on the same subject may be inquired into by the other.” That precise question was ruled against appellant’s theory in Root v. Sturdivant, supra. The judgment is AFFIRMED.