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At the request of plaintiff, the court, upon the question of damages, charged:

"I charge you, further, that, if you find that the defendant or any of his clerks sold Frank Simmons any of the intoxicating liquors that have been mentioned, on any of the dates mentioned, then the plaintiff is

entitled to recover at least $50 and such exemplary damages in addition thereto as you think she ought to recover."

And further, upon his own motion:

"The actual damages are such as this mother would actually and really suffer, and the statute says it shall not be less than $50. It may be as much more as you think the actual damages to her are. There is no great amount of evidence of any actual damages above the $50. It does not appear that the boy contributed any great amount toward her own support. * * *

"I charge you further, on the part of the plaintiff, that in determining the amount of exemplary damages, you will award the plaintiff such a sum as will compensate her for the injury to her feelings, if any such injury exists, caused by the wanton, reckless, and unlawful acts of the defendant or his agents in selling the intoxicating liquor to the minor son of plaintiff. The amount of exemplary damages can be any amount which the good judgment and common sense of the jury settle upon."

* * *

The evidence in the case showed that the minor was the son of plaintiff by a former marriage, and that she had remarried four to five years before the claimed sales; that the minor during that time had worked out most of that time, and had been at the home of his mother but a small portion of the time. There is no evidence that she depended upon him for her support, and during all that time he had given her but $1. Defendants admit that the question of whether the claimed sales to the minor were made was a question for the jury to determine.

It is insisted that the erroneous portions of the instructions above quoted are:

* Then the plaintiff is entitled to recover at

least $50, and such exemplary damages in addition thereto as you think she ought to recover," and "the actual damages are such as this mother would actually and really suffer and the statute says it shall not be less than $50. It may be as (much) more as you think the actual damages to her are.

We think this charge was misleading and erroneous. The court did not correctly state the terms of the statute, which are:

66* * Shall be liable for both actual and exemplary damages therefor in such sum not less than

* *

*

fifty dollars as the court or jury shall determine."

In this case it will be necessary to determine whether, under this statute, which provides that a violator "shall be liable for both actual and exemplary damages," a different rule shall be applied from the one well settled in this State, that all damages recoverable in civil actions are compensatory, and not by way of punishment. The question arises, in the case at bar, and similar cases under this statute, upon claims that charges to juries with respect to the measure of damages are erroneous because of the improper use of the terms "exemplary" and "actual."

In Scripps v. Reilly, 38 Mich. 10, 23, this court reaffirmed and restated the meaning in this State of actual damages, saying:

“(1) In any injury entitling the party to redress, damages to the person, property, and reputation, together with such special damage as may be shown, are recoverable.

"(2) Where the act done is one which, from its very nature, must be expected to result in mischief, or where there is malice or wilful or wanton misconduct, carelessness, or negligence so great as to indicate a reckless disregard of the rights or safety of others, a new element of damages is allowed, viz., for injury to the feelings of the plaintiff.

"(3) Damages for injuries to feelings are only allowed in those torts which consist of some voluntary act or very gross neglect, and depend in amount very much upon the degree of fault evinced by all the circumstances.

(4) Where the tort consists of some voluntary act, but no element of malice, carelessness, or gross negligence is shown to have existed, but that the wrong was done in spite of proper precaution, the damages to be awarded on account of injured feelings, will be reduced to such sum as must inevitably have resulted from the wrong itself.

"(5) Where, however, the elements exist in a case, entitling a party to recover damages for injured feelings, the amount to be allowed for shame, mental anxiety, insulted honor, and suffering and indignation consequent on the wrong, may be increased or aggravated by the vindictive feelings, or the degree of malice, recklessness, gross carelessness or negligence of the defendant, as the injury is much more serious where these elements, or either of them, are shown to have existed.

"(6) This increase of damages dependent upon the conduct of the defendant must be considered in this State as actual damages, although usually spoken of as exemplary, vindictive, or punitory, and the amount thereof to be recovered, where recoverable at all, as they are incapable of ascertainment by any other known rule, must rest in the fair and deliberate judgment and discretion of the jury acting upon their own sense of justice in view of all the circumstances, both mitigating and aggravating, appearing in the case, and which can fairly be said to give color to or characterize the act, aided, however, by such instructions from the court as will tend to prevent the allowance of damages merely fanciful, or so remote as not fairly resulting from the injury."

It has been the rule in this State for many years that damages in civil cases must be limited by some rule of compensation which has been adhered to. It is true, charges have been sustained where exemplary damages have been referred to as "punitory" or "vindictive" (Ross v. Leggett, 61 Mich. 452 [28 N. W. 695, 1 Am. St. Rep. 608]), but the court has in no case not dependent on statute given sanction to the distinct instruction that the jury may award a sum by way of punishment to the defendant, by whatsoever term such sum may be designated.

"As the case must go back for a new trial, we think it proper to say that in defining exemplary damages to the jury, while the circuit judge was probably within the law,

inasmuch as no further instructions upon that subject were asked, yet we deem it better for the court to caution the jury, that the added damages in a case of this character should be such damages as will compensate the plaintiff for injury to her feelings occasioned by the wrong of the defendant. While it may not be error to refer to exemplary damages as such, yet it has never been the policy of the court to permit juries to award captiously any sum which may appear just to them by way of punishment to the offender, but rather to award a sum, in addition to the actual proven damages, as what, in their judgment, constitutes a just measure of compensation for injury to feelings, in view of the circumstances of each particular case. Scripps v. Reilly, 38 Mich. 10." Ford v. Cheever, 105 Mich. 679, 685 (63 N. W. 975).

*

"Damages for injury to feelings, shame, mortification, mental anxiety, insulted honor, and indignation have always, in this State at least, been regarded as actual damages, and not as exemplary, punitory, or vindictive damages. Scripps v. Reilly, 38 Mich. 10. Confusion arises from the use of terms in this class of cases, and it would be well if the terms 'exemplary damages,' 'punitory damages,' and 'vindictive damages' were omitted from the judicial vocabulary, in this class of cases at least." Long v. Printing Co., 107 Mich. 207, 215 (65 N. W. 108).

"The court was in error, however, in instructing the jury that plaintiff was entitled to exemplary damages, in the absence of any explanation as to what was meant by that term. Detroit Daily Post Co. v. McArthur, 16 Mich. 447." Lucas v. Railroad Co., 98 Mich. 1, 5 (56 N. W. 1039, 39 Am. St. Rep. 517).

"Wilful trespasses, assaults and batteries, libels and slanders, false imprisonment, and perhaps other actions, where the injury is in part to the feelings of the plaintiff, to his shame and humiliation, are cases where 'increased' damages may be given." Durfee v. Newkirk, 83 Mich. 522, 527 (47 N. W. 351).

In the statute quoted, supra, the words "actual" and "exemplary" are used with reference to damages to be recovered, and from the use of those words it is assumed that the rule already stated is not to be applied to cases under this statute, and that it was intended to change the rule relative to the measure of damages. No reason is

advanced why a different rule should be applied to cases of this kind. Upon consideration it will be seen that the elements of damage which enter into them are no other or different than in other tort actions for damages, namely, damages for injury to feelings, shame, mortification, mental anxiety, insulted honor, and indignation, which have always in this State been regarded as actuai damages for which compensation is to be given, not smart money to be exacted.

We find but one case in this court under this statute from which it can be claimed that any other view has been taken, viz., Theisen v. Johns, 72 Mich. 285, 293, 294 (40 N. W. 727). In the opinion, Mr. Justice LONG speaking for the court, we find the following language:

"It is evident the legislature intended that, in prosecutions for damages under this statute, if the jury found liquors had been furnished to a minor under the age of 18 years, in violation of the act, then the plaintiff might recover the penalty, which should in no case be less than $50 for actual damages, and such exemplary damages as the jury might find under all the circumstances of the case. It might appear by the evidence given that the plaintiff had suffered a much larger amount in actual damages than $50 and this the jury could give, up to the amount claimed in the declaration, if, under the circumstances of the case, the facts of the case warranted it, and the plaintiff had sustained actual damages to that amount, together with such exemplary damages as they might find were warranted by the circumstances of the case.

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Later, this court, in opinions written by Mr. Justice MONTGOMERY, in two cases, cited and approved this case. Sterling v. Callahan, 94 Mich. 536 (54 N. W. 495); Cramer v. Danielson, 99 Mich. 531 (58 N. W. 476). In these cases, however, the question under discussion was not involved. In a later case-Haviland v. Chase, 116 Mich. 216, 217 (74 N. W. 477, 72 Am. St. Rep. 519)-an action of trespass vi et armis, in affirming the rule that damages in civil cases should be limited by some rule of compensation, as laid down in Scripps v. Reilly, supra, Mr. Justice MONTGOMERY, speaking for this court, said:

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