
    LINCOLN A. LOWE, Appellant, v. JOHN W. FREDE, Respondent.
    Kansas City Court of Appeals,
    December 5, 1910.
    1. NEW TRIAL: Appeal. No appeal lies from an order overruling a motion for new trial.
    2. APPEAL: Jurisdiction. Where the plaintiff’s petition claims judgment beyond the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals and the verdict is for the defendant and the plaintiff’s motion for new trial is overruled and appeal taken from such order to the Court of Appeals, the latter has not jurisdiction to dismiss the appeal, though improperly taken, and the case should he transferred to the Supreme Court.
    Appeal from Atchison Circuit Court. — Ho». Wm. C. Ellison, Judge.
    Transferred to the Supreme Court.
    H. B. Williams, L. J. Miles and Jno. W. Stokes for appellant.
    (1) In view of the evidence confined to the altercation on the sidewalk, or outside of defendant’s building, to which plaintiff elected to submit to the jury that issue only, and the instruction given on part of defendant, it is hard to reconcile defendant’s instruction with the instruction given on part of plaintiff. In the plaintiff’s instructions the jury are directed to confine their investigation to the occurrence on the outside of the building, and those instructions on the part of plaintiff were in harmony with the trial court’s theory of the case as evidenced by his ruling — plaintiff to elect upon which of the altercations he would proceed, the court holding that there was two independent offenses — the one in the building and the other on the outside. The evidence shows that the defendant struck, jerked and wrenched plaintiff without any legal justification therefor (all occurring on the outside of the building) other than abusive language used by Lowe toward Frede. “No epithets by one man to another, however obscene, indecent or abusive, can justify either man in the laying violent hands upon the other.” Yager v. Berry, 82 Mo. App. 534. (2) Under' the pleadings in this case there could be no justification, as we understand the law to be that there are but three defenses that may be set up. One is “Not guilty,” the other is “mcmus molliter imyusuit” and the third is “son assault demesne/’ neither of which is set up in the case, but defendant contented himself with a general denial. Orchelen v. Scott, 90 Mo. App. 352. (3) There being no justification for the assault, either set up in the pleadings or proved in developing plaintiff’s case, plaintiff is at least entitled to nominal damages. “"Where a legal right has been invaded nominal damage may be recovered without proving actual damage.” Lampert v. Drug Co., 119 Mo. App. 693; Burdall v.. Johnson, 122 Mo. App. 119; O ’Leary v. Rowan, 21 Mo. 117; Sloan v. Speaker, 63 Mo. App. 321. (1) Words of provocation and insult will not mitigate compensatory damages resulting from an assault. Yeager v. Berry, 82 Mo. App. 534.
    
      L. D. Ramsay and Lee Mullins for respondent.
    (1) I do not challenge the correctness of appellant’s abstract and in 'such cases the court will accept it as correct and look to it alone for the record" of the' case. When there is no counter-showing made, the court is bound by the recital of the appellant’s abstract. Ricketts v. Hart, 73 Mo. App. 648. (2) This abstract showrs no judgment in the ease, and of course he appealed from the order of the court, overruling- his mot-ion for a new trial, as lie states on the first page of his book, at the beginning of his statement, but, by our statute, section 806, E. S. 1899, says you cannot appeal unless judgment is rendered. Tou may appeal from an order granting a new trial, because the statute says so, but it does not say you may appeal from an order overruling the motion, and that section of the statute enumerates all our rights and excludes all not so enumerated. With no judgment, appeal should be dismissed. Herxman v. Daily, 74 Mo. App. 505. (3) The court very fully and fairly gave appellant all necessary instructions applicable to the difficulty on the outside of the house, the only one submitted, and they are so plain that no juror was misled. They all understood them, and respondent was given no1 instruction whatever as to the only difficulty on trial, but in-as-much, as all witnesses testified to all that took place, both in the house and out of the house1, and the matter was all mixed and mingled together, so that the jury was very likely to become confused, it became the duty of the court to give the cautionary instruction given to the respondent, the only one he received in the case. Of course, such evidence, all mixed up. and given at one hearing, might mislead the jury. See? Even counsel for appellant became mixed on it and unintentionally parade it in this court on page 14 of his book, about the center of the page, where they get in the jerking and wrenching and hurting, which all the evidence confines to what took place on the inside of the house. The court was justified, under such circumstances, in giving us that, our only instruction in the case, as a caution ag’ainst outside matter inseparably blended with the evidence on the difficulty being tried. “It is not only the office of instructions t© inform the jury as to the law of the issues raised, but when the evidence is of such a character as might easily , lead, to the raising of false issues,” the rule is that the court ought to guard against such an issue by appropriate instructions. Estes v. Shoe Co., 155 Mo. 577. (4) The instruction is right in the abstract and could not mislead. Beryamine v. Railroad, 133 Mo. 274; Meyers v. Railroad, 59 Mo. 223. (5) Appellant introduced all the mixed testimony, and made no election until the evidence was all in. Leeper v. Poschai, 70 Mo. App. 117.
   ELLISON, J.

Plaintiff's action is for assault and battery, in which he prays judgment for fifteen thousand dollars compensatory and fifteen thousand dollars exemplary damages, making a total of thirty thousand dollars which he seeks to recover. There was a trial and a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff then, in due time, filed a motion for new trial and this was overruled. No judgment was rendered for defendant and plaintiff took his appeal from the order overruling the motion for new trial. The statute (sec. 806, R. S. 1899, sec. 2038, R. S. 1909) authorizes an appeal from an order granting a new trial, but not where a new trial is refused. Plaintiff’s appeal is therefore without legal right or authority.

We would dismiss the appeal but for the fact that we are without jurisdiction. The sum in controversy is the amount of plaintiff’s claim, which, as already stated, is thirty thousand dollars. That sum is beyond our jurisdiction and is in that of the Supreme Court, to which we will order the cause transferred.

All concur.  