65 Mo. App. 431 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This is an action for false imprisonment. The defendant is the mayor of the city of Cape £»irardeau, a city of the third class. The charge in the petition is that the plaintiff was unlawfully arrested by
We are of the opinion that under the evidence the judgment ought to have been for the defendant; hence, other questions presented in the briefs need not be discussed.
The facts out of which the litigation has arisen are these: The plaintiff is the owner of a lot on one of the business streets of the city of Cape Girardeau. He determined to build a new sidewalk, and to put in new curbing in front of his premises. He removed the old curbstones, and placed them on the street some eight or ten feet' from the line of the curb. Acting under the orders of the municipal authorities, the street commissioner attempted to remove the stones with the ultimate intention of using them in the construction of another street. The plaintiff refused to let him remove them, and drove him away. The marshal of the city also undertook to haul them away, and he in turn was driven off. In the afternoon of the same day the marshal, acting under the orders of the defendant as mayor of the city, summoned the entire police force of the city for the purpose of removing the stones. When the police officers reached the place, the plaintiff was standing on the stones, and he refused to get off, and did not get off until he was placed under arrest and removed by the marshal. The defendant was present, and ordered the arrest to be made. The stones were then loaded into drays, when the defendant ordered the
If the arrest of the plaintiff was lawful, an action for false arrest will not lie, and it can make no difference at whose instigation it was made or what the motive was. This must be so in reason, for there can be no trespass where the arrest is by warrant of law. Burns v. Erben, 1 Robt. 555; O’Conner v. Bucklin, 59 N. H. 589; Davis v. Burgess, 54 Mich. 514; Taaffe v. Slevin, 11 Mo. App. 507; Lark v. Bande, 4 Mo. App. 186; Waterman on Trespass, section 367, note.
An ordinance of the city makes it a misdemeanor for any person to disturb the peace by loud or unusual noise or by profane language which is calculated to provoke a breach of the peace, or by threatening, challenging, assaulting, striking, or fighting another.
The contention that the action is for malicious arrest is not well founded. That action is only authorized where the plaintiff has been maliciously and without probable cause taken into custody for debt, or where there has been a malicious holding of a party to bail. Ahern v. Collins, 39 Mo. 145. As imprisonment for debt has been abolished in this state, the action may be considered practically obsolete.