90 P. 800 | Kan. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A. B. Hinsdell sued the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company for false imprisonment. The court instructed the jury that the evidence conclusively established the commission of the tort, and that the only question left for their determination was the amount of damages. They returned a verdict for $500, upon which judgment was rendered, from which the defendant prosecutes error.
The evidence tended to show these facts, among others: Hinsdell delivered to the railway company at Ralston, Okla., for transportation to St. Joseph, Mo., what was called an “emigrant’s outfit,” including some
We think the trial court erred in holding that the liability of the defendant was conclusively established. There was sufficient evidence to support a finding, not only of the existence of probable cause to believe the plaintiff guilty of grand larceny, but of his actual guilt. In either case the absence of a warrant was unimportant. (Garnier v. Squires, 62 Kan. 321, 62 Pac. 1005; 3 Cyc. 878; 19 Cyc. 351.) If the arrest was lawful the motive for it was immaterial. (12 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 726, note 2; 19 Cyc. 319, 320, note 9; Mullen v. Brown, 138 Mass. 114; Bierwith v. Pieronnet, 65 Mo. App. 431.) The question whether the detention, if originally rightful, became subsequently unlawful depends upon the circumstances — chiefly upon whether it was prolonged for an unreasonable time without a warrant’s being obtained or the prisoner’s-being taken before a judicial officer. (12 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 745, 746.) And it cannot be said as a matter of law that there was an unreasonable delay in this respect in the present instance, in view of the
It is familiar law that larceny may be committed by the wrongful taking of property, by its general owner from the possession of one who has a lien upon it. (18 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 499.) This principle is not disputed, but it is claimed that the railway company in this' case had no lien upon the goods because they were’ accepted under a written contract which made no reference to the matter and included this provision:
“It is distinctly understood and agreed -that all prior understandings or agreements concerning the furnishing of cars or facilities for said shipment or concerning the transportation of said stock, goods and articles, or said shipment, are hereby completely merged and contained in this written agreement, and this written agreement contaihs all the terms, conditions and provisions relating in any manner to the shipment or transportation of said stock, goods or articles.”
It is of course competent for the parties to make an agreement waiving the carrier’s lien, “but a waiver of the lien is not to be readily presumed, and the party insisting upon the waiver must show clearly that the provisions of the special contract are so inconsistent with the existence of the lien as to indicate clearly a waiver of the latter.” (5 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 416.) “No special agreement as to the carriage and delivery, which does not expressly or by clear implication amount to a waiver of the lien, will have that effect.” (2 Hutch. Carr., 3d ed., § 875.) We discover nothing in the provision quoted or in any other part of the contract that is inconsistent with the existence of a lien or that shows a purpose to do away with it.
A rule which if followed here would result in affirming the judgment is thus stated in volume 12 of the American and English Encyclopædia of Law, at page 747:
“As it is the duty of an'officer arresting to present the person for trial without delay, so if the prisoner is*78 released without presentment before a magistrate the officer will be held a trespasser ab initio.”
This rule originated in Massachusetts, by treating the abandonment of a criminal prosecution between the arrest of the defendant and his presentation before a magistrate as analogous to the failure of an officer who has seized property in a civil proceeding to make due return of his writ and applying the doctrine that acts otherwise unlawful cannot be justified by legal process the requirements of which have not been fully complied with. (Tubbs v. Tukey & another, 57 Mass. 438, 50 Am. Dec. 744; Brock v. Stimson, 108 Mass. 520, 11 Am. Rep. 390.) It has been followed in Stewart v. Feeley, 118 Iowa, 524, 92 N. W. 670, and in Pastor v. Regan, 30 N. Y. Supp. 657. In other cases growing out of similar facts, however, the question involved is stated to be whether there was an unreasonable delay in bringing the prisoner before a court, the discharge without such presentation being apparently not regarded as determinative. (See, for example, Leger et al. v. Warren, 62 Ohio St. 500, 57 N. E. 506, 51 L. R. A. 193, 78 Am. St. Rep. 738; Harness v. Steele, 159 Ind. 286, 64 N. E. 875; Cochran v. Toher et al., 15 Minn. 385.) In Mulberry, Appellant, v. Fuellhart, 203 Pa. St. 573, 53 Atl. 504, the rule referred to was invoked, but the court refused to follow it, saying:
“Undoubtedly there are cases where an act in the first instance lawful becomes afterward a trespass ab initio. For instance, where a lawful levy is made but goods are sold without the notice required by the statute. Or where goods are distrained upon for rent and sold without having been appraised and advertised in accordance with the act of assembly. But in such cases, as we understand the line of distinction, when the action taken is lawful, it cannot be made illegal ab initio, unless by some positive act incompatible with the exercise of the legal right to do the first act. The propriety of the arrest in this case is not questioned. Neither was the detention malicious nor wilful; it resulted rather from the clemency of the officer. If the sheriff instead of relenting had proceeded to prosecute*79 the plaintiff . . . there would have been no reasonable ground for complaint. . . . His mistake or his fault, then, lay, not in the arrest, nor in the detention for what under the circumstances was not an unreasonable time. It consisted merely in his failure to prosecute. This was at most an omission or a neglect to do what the plaintiff, after the arrest was once made, had perhaps a right to demand of him. But it has been well said that ‘not doing a thing cannot make a party a trespasser ab initio, because not doing is no trespass.’ . . . The failure, therefore, of the sheriff to proceed with the prosecution was not a direct and positive act, such as is required to convert a legal into an unlawful action, and thus make him a trespasser ab initio.” (Page 578.)
Of the same question, considerad in the light of the practical effect upon the substantial rights of the person arrested of a discharge without a formal hearing, it was said in Mayer v. Vaughan, Q. R. 11 K. B. 340:
“Upon the question of a release without a formal complaint there is more scope for argument. Plaintiff complains that by this course he was deprived of his right to a formal acquittal — a certifícate of which would have been a valid answer to any future reflection against him, based on the fact that he had been under arrest upon a charge of stealing a post-letter. It is plain from the text-books upon the duties of constables that it is their duty to take all arrested persons with the least possible delay before a magistrate. But this must be intended to apply to cases in which the charge against the prisoner is persisted in, and clearly should not apply to cases in which the charge for any reason is dropped. Suppose the case of a constable having made a mistake in his instructions and arrested the wrong man: it seems absurd to suppose that the charge may not be dropped and the person released. ' Such would be the procedure, it appears to me, if the evidence expected to be secured proves to be wanting, as in the case of the supposed pickpocket or counterfeiter, or of the accused letter-carrier. Of course, if the person thus arrested will not accept his release, and demands to be taken before a magistrate, his wish should be respected, but in the absence of any such demand the simple act of a constable in thus releasing a person against whom he finds no evidence of guilt would not*80 of itself suffice, in my opinion, as the basis of a claim for damages.”
We cannot regard the failure to follow dp an arrest with further steps for the prosecution of the person arrested as having any retroactive effect. We see no reason why the matter should be. absolutely controlled by the analogy to civil process. In practical operation.' the rule stated might give anomalous results. For instance, a person suspected of crime may be taken intó custody by an officer without a warrant, the arrest being entirely justifiable because of the existence of probable cause to believe him guilty. Before he can be taken before a magistrate it may happen that circumstances develop showing his innocence. There can be no doubt that on all accounts he ought to be at once discharged. As was said in Harness v. Steele, 159 Ind. 286, 64 N. E. 875, “an officer who has made an arrest without a warrant may and should, on becoming satisfied thereafter that the accused is not guilty of the offense, release him.” (Page 294.) A rule that such discharge would render the officer a trespasser from the beginning would have a harsh and unfortunate operation upon both parties to the transaction. We see no occasion for holding that the mere act of discharge, in and of itself, changes the essential character of the restraint previously exercised. An arrest lawfully made without a warrant justifies holding the. prisoner long enough to procure a warrant or to present him before a magistrate, and no longer. When without just excuse his detention is prolonged beyond the time reasonably necessary for that purpose it then ceases to be lawful and becomes unlawful, not from the beginning, but from that moment. And if before that change has taken place he is released he has suffered no wrong. His restraint at any instant is either legal or illegal. If it is legal, and those responsible for it, whether through clemency or indifference, see fit to set him at liberty, he is not thereby aggrieved.
The claim is made that the evidence bears no other interpretation than that the arrest of the plaintiff was not intended as a step in a criminal prosecution but was only a device to enable the defendant to collect a debt from him. It is true that there was uncontradicted testimony that the railroad agent, in procuring the arrest of Hinsdell, described the offense charged against him as running away without paying his bill, and the same agent as a witness for the defendant said that all the company wanted out of him was the amount of the freight charges. But it was not important, if a crime had been committed, that those causing the arrest of the offender should describe it with technical accuracy. While the station-agent said upon the stand that he would have released Hinsdell upon the payment of the money due the company, he also said that he would have been governed as to any further prosecution by the advice he might receive from an attorney. The situation presented by the fraudulent taking of goods by their general owner from the possession of one having a special interest in them is unusual, and ignorance of the rights of individuals of the public with reference thereto is not to be taken as evidence of bad faith. The entire testimony, so far as it is binding upon the defendant, is consistent with the idea that the plaintiff unlawfully took his property from the car where the company had a right to retain it until the freight charge was paid — an act which the law calls larceny — in this case a felony; that bn the discovery of the fraud he was rightfully arrested, at the request of the company’s agent; that before he had been detained for an unreasonable time, the stolen goods having been
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance herewith.