rhymegirl said:
Is there anyone on AW who can answer a legal question for me?
In my novel, I made one of the characters get arrested for punching someone, and I want to make sure this would really happen. Or would the person not get arrested unless the case went to court first????
That's a really complicated question. But the answer is if the person swings first, yes, he goes to jail. Hitting someone is a crime everywhere. If it weren't, you'd see fist fights constantly.
In most of the states I've live, however, assualt means threatening violence. If you carry through and hit someone, that's assault with battery. The person who has been hit, however, does have to press charges. The police will ask them, and if they say yes, the person goes to jail. If they say no, he doesn't. There's also assualt with intent to commit bodily harm, which where I live basically means you swing but miss. There's also aggravated assault, which means you used a weapon. There's also assault with battery CAUSING grave bodily harm, which means you really messed the guy up and caused severe, possibly life-threatenng injuries.
Not only will a person go to jail for punching someone, he will also likely find himself in civil court. He'll be sued for damages. Depending on the state, civil courts only handle cases where damagaes are from $1,500-$5,000. If that punch breaks the person's jaw, and the medical bills are under whatever the maximum is in that state's civil court, then once the criminal case is over, the civil case takes over. If damages are above the state civil limit, the person can be sued in Superior court, and pain and siffering is added in, sometimes bring the suit into the millions.
Exceptions to the victim presing charges are in domestic violence. In most states the victim now doesn;t have to press charges, and if there's any evidence at all, such as a fresh bruise or cut, the police are required by law to make an arrest. This came about because of wives getting beaten by their husbands, but refusing to press charges.
A simple punch is usually a misdemeanor, so no jail time is served except for the brief wait to arrange a small bail, unless it causes grave harm. Most such cases never actually go to court because charges in such cases are frequently dropped. A punch can kill, it can disable, it can cripple, it can blind. This raises the level of both criminal and civil action in every state.
If a heated argument is going on, and no serious bobily harm has been done, police are likely to either tell both people to go home, or arrest both parties for disorderly conduct.
But it's always against the law to hit someone, unless it's done in self-defense, or in defense of others. And even this can be tricky. Most states expect you to walk away from a potential fight, not stand there are argue until the situation gets out of hand.
And, rightly or wrongly, a lot depends on just who gets hit, and who does the hitting.