56 Ga. App. 746 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
1. On the trial of a suit against a surety on the official bond of arresting officers, to recover damages alleged to have resulted from misconduct of the officers in unlawfully and without any warrant for his arrest, shooting at the plaintiff while he was riding in an automobile along a public road and when he had committed no crime, where the measure of damage as prescribed by statute, and which the plaintiff was seeking to recover, was that when little or no damage is actually sustained by the plaintiff, "and the officer has not acted in good faith, the
3. While the measure of damage in such case is that if little or no damage was actually sustained by the plaintiff, and if the officers did not ac.t in good faith, the plaintiff may recover an amount as “smart money,” it was not prejudicial to the defendant for the court to charge the jury that to authorize a recovery in the case for punitive or exemplary damages the jury must be satisfied that there was some wilful misconduct on the part of the
3. It is not essential to the establishment of the fact that the officers, in causing the damage to the plaintiff, did not act “in good faith,” that the officers5 acts in inflicting the injuries were wanton and malicious and were performed in a reckless manner and in a spirit of mischief towards the plaintiff and with criminal indifference to the plaintiff’s rights. Copeland v. Dunehoo, 36 Ga. App. 817 (3) (138 S. E. 267). The request to charge, in effect, that the plaintiff could not recover unless the acts of the officers were of this character, was properly refused.
4. Whether or not under the circumstances the officers were justified in arresting any person in the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding, it was not error for the court to instruct the jury under what conditions as authorized by the evidence the officers would not be justified in making an arrest of any of the persons in the automobile. Therefore the court did not err in charging the jury that the arresting officers had no right to arrest or attempt to arrest another person merely upon a suspicion of guilt of a misdemeanor, without a warrant, and that an arrest may bé made for a crime by an officer either under a warrant, or without a warrant if the offense is committed in his presence, or if the person is endeavoring to escape, or for other cause there is likely to be a failure of justice for want of an officer to issue a warrant.
5. Whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to, recover damages for fright, such right to recover is not limited to a situation only where there is an actual injury to the person of the plaintiff or physical injury to the plaintiff. There may be a recovery for fright where the other elements authorizing a recovery are present, and where the fright is occasioned, not by some actual physical injury to the person frightened, but by some wilful or wanton conduct on the part of the person causing the fright, or as a result of some assault upon the person frightened. The court did not err in refusing a request to charge that unless the plaintiff has sustained some injury, or is entitled to recover “smart money” where the officers have not acted in good faith, there could
6. The verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $500 can not be said as a matter of law to be excessive or the result of prejudice or bias on the part of the jury.
7. The remaining grounds of the motion for new trial are controlled by the decision in American Surety Co. v. Smith, supra, adversely to the contentions of the plaintiff in error. This was a case by one of the other occupants of the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding, against the same defendant, in which damages were prayed for as arising out of the same alleged conduct of the same officers, and was tried at the same time and under the same evidence as the case now before the court.
8. The evidence authorized the verdict for the plaintiff, and no error appears. See American Surety Co. v. Smallon, 54 Ga. App. 45 (186 S. E. 892).
Judgment affirmed.