76 Miss. 7 | Miss. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant - had been arrested by the deputy sheriff in a bastardy proceeding, and had escaped from the deputy sheriff, without violence, simply running away from him, and whilst merely running away, was, by the deputy sheriff, shot, on the notion that he had a right to shoot and kill him, if necessary, to prevent the escape at the time. Appellant sustained very serious injuries, and suffered greatly for a long time, and is probably permanently disabled. He brings this suit for damages against the sheriff and the sureties on his bond, on the ground that the deputy was guilty of ‘ ‘ misconduct ’ ’ in shooting him under the circumstances, and that his act was done vivíate officii. Can the action be maintained ?
Our statute, § 1152 of annotated code of 1892, in enumerating the cases in which homicide is justifiable, provides that it shall be so, if committed in (c) “retaking any felon who has been
In United States v. Clark, 31 Fed. Rep., 710, Mr. Justice Brown, now of the United States supreme court, says: “The general rule is well settled by elementary writers upon criminal law, that an officer having a person charged with felony may take his life if it be absolutely necessary to do so to prevent his escape, but he may not do this if he be charged simply with a misdemeanor, the rule of the law being that it is better that a misdemeanant escape than that human life be taken. ’ ’ This - is cited in Thomas v. Kinkhead, supra, and that court then pro
In Reneau v. State, 2 Lea (Tenn.), 720, it is said: “It is considered better to allow one guilty only of a misdemeanor to escape altogether than to take his life. . . . The prisoner doubtless acted under the belief which erroneously prevails as
In Head v. Martin, 85 Ky., p. 480, it is said at page 483: “To permit the life- of one charged with a mere misdemeanor to be taken when fleeing from the officer, would, aside from its inhumanity, be productive of more abuse than good. The law need not go unenforced. The officer can summon his posse and take the offender. The reason for this distinction between killing in the case of a felony and misdemeanor is obvious. The security of person and property is, not endangered by a petty offender being at large, as in the case of a felon. The very being of society and government requires speedy arrest and punishment of the latter.” And, again, at page 485: “So careful, however, is the law as regards human life, that if even the felon can be taken without the taking of life, and he be slain, it is at least manslaughter; even as to him it can be done only of necessity. ’ ’ And this is the doctrine of our court in Jackson v. State, 66 Miss., 95. To the same effect are State v. Sigman, 106 N. C., p. 728; Spencer v. Moore, 2 Devereux & Battle’s Rep., p. 264; State v. Roane, 2 Devereux Rep., p. 62.
Counsel for appellee cites the'text of Mr. Bishop in his work on Grim. Pro. (3d ed.), vol. 1, sec. 161, but it is shown conclusively in Thomas v. Kinkhead, 55 Ark., supra, that the two cases cited by Mr. Bishop (Caldwell v. State, 41 Tex., 86, and Wright v. State, 44 Tex. 645), are not in point. In 1 Bishop on Grim. Pro. (4th ed.), sec. 161, paragraphs 1, 2, notes 1, 4, p. 91, Mr. Bishop reviews and criticizes the cases of Reneau v. State, 2 Lea, and Thomas v. Kinkhead, supra, stating that, in the first case, the court which cited his new criminal law, vol. 2, secs. 648, 649, as supporting its view, failed to note that in these sections he was only speaking of an officer killing a misdemeanant ‘ ‘ flying from arrest ’ ’ originally, and not one 1 ‘ resisting arrest or attempting an escape.” He criticized Thomas v. Kinkhead as unsound, and calls it “ an unfortunate decision. ’ ’
In Mr. Bishop’s new Criminal Law (8th ed., sec. 647, par. 3, note 1), Mr. Bishop cites Jackson v. State, 76 Ga., 473, to the proposition that ‘ ‘ after an arrest, whether for felony or misdemeanor, or during an imprisonment, the life of the prisoner may be taken, if necessary to prevent the escape.” That was the case of a guard killing a convict in the penitentiary, who, he supposed, was trying to escape. It supports the proposition that an officer may kill a convicted felon trying to escape from imprisonment for felony, but it furnishes no support to the doctrine that an officer may kill a misdemeanant who is merely effecting his escape after arrest, or from imprisonment for mere misdemeanor, by simply running away. If Mr. Bishop means merely to say that when a misdemeanant, after arrest, tries to “ break away,” violently resisting or assaulting the officer, the officer may kill him, as in self-defense, to prevent the infliction of a felony upon himself, the doctrine is sound, and not in conflict with the cases he criticizes. But if he means to say, as we understand him, that an officer may kill a misdemeanant whom he has arrested, and who eludes the officer, and gets away from him without resisting the officer, and without employing any force, while such misdemeanant is effecting his escape merely by running away, then such doctrine is not sound, in our judgment, and is unsupported by the authorities. ' 3 Russell on Crimes (6th ed.), p. 132, JHLolroycl, J., saying: “An officer must not kill for an escape, where the party is in custody for a misdemeanor.” McLain, in his Criminal Law (1897), sec. 298, approves Reneau v. State, supra, criticized by
The Kentucky supreme court well says in such a case (Head v. Martin, 85 Ky., p. 486): “He has no more right to kill him [that is, when he is merely running away] than he would have if the offender were to lie down and refuse to go with him.”
Our own court has held, in McDaniel v. State, 8 Smed. & M., p. 14, “that no trespass upon the personal property of another will authorize the killing of a human being, and that any such killing would be murder, if committed with a deadly weapon.” And that even in the case of a fleeing felon, the officer must satisfy the jury “that he tried, in good faith, and with reasonable prudence and caution, to make the arrest, and was unable, because of the flight of the person, to secure him, and that he resorted to the severe means employed when other proper means had failed, and when, as determined by the state of things, as between him and the fleeing felon, the arrest could not be made without a resort to the means employed. ” Jackson v. State, 66 Miss., 95.
It is held in Head v. Martin, supra, that one arrested in a bastardy proceeding is to be regarded as one arrested for a misdemeanor, although the nature of the proceeding is a civil one. It must be clear, from these authorities, and many others cited in the brief of the learned counsel for the appellant, that the deputy sheriff had no right to shoot Brown, and that he was
We turn now to the second branch of the inquiry, whether the sheriff and the sureties on his bond are liable for this ‘ ‘ misconduct,” as having occurred in the line of duty of the deputy sheriff—as having been done virtute officii. The deputy sheriff had a warrant, and under that warrant had arrested Brown, and manifestly he shot him under the notion that, having such warrant and having arrested him, he had the right to shoot him to prevent his escape, when he was merely running away.
The condition of the sheriff’s bond is (code 1892, § 3055), ‘ ‘ that he shall faithfully perform all the duties of said office during his continuance therein.” Sec. lili of the code provides plainly that the sheriff and his sureties shall be liable for “any misconduct” of his deputy, and may have judgment over against the deputy and his sureties for the amount of any judgment awarded against the sheriff and his sureties for such “misconduct” of the deputy. Sec. 1113 provides the same remedy for the sheriff against his deputies and their sureties for ordinary acts and defaults in office which the creditor may have against the sheriff. Section 4111 provides for “ misconduct” of the deputy, and the liability of the sheriff and his sureties therefor. It is well settled that “the deputies are all servants of the sheriff, and, in law, they are considered but one person.” Smith’s Sheriffs, etc., p. 21.
In Murfree on Sheriffs, sec. 60, it is said, quoting from Knowlton v. Bartlett, 1 Pickering, 273: “If the act from which the injury resulted was an official act, the authorities are clear that the sheriff is answerable. If it was not an official, but a personal act, it is equally clear that he is not answerable. But an official act does not mean what a deputy might lawfully do in the
It is not necessary, in this case, to say anything as to what might be the result if the deputy really had no warrant, and simply stated that he had one, and was merely professing to act under color of his office, without being armed with the warrant required by law, since, in this case, it is clear that he did have such warrant, that he arrested Brown under the warrant, and that he shot him when merely running away after arrest, on the idea, clearly, that he had the right to shoot and kill, if necessary to prevent his escape, sought to be effected merely by running away. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the deputy was acting by virtue of his office; that what he did was done as an ■official act, and that the sheriff and his sureties are liable for the damages. Without burdening this opinion with quotations, we cite the following authorities as sustaining this proposition, in addition to Murfree on Sheriffs, cited above: Smith on Sheriffs, p. 21; Thomas v. Kinkhead, supra; Yount v. Carney, 91 Iowa, p. 564, where it is held “ that the arrest by the deputy, being in the line of his official duty, though illegal because in excess of his duty, was nevertheless a breach of the conditions of his bond;" Dishneau v. Newton, 91 Wis., p. 201; Warren v. Boyd, 120 N. C., p. 60; State v. Wolford, 11 Moon, Ind.
In Robertson v. Sichel, 127 U. S., p. 515, the case went upon the idea that the collector of customs was not liable for the tort of a subordinate, committed in the discharge of duties which it would be £ £ utterly impossible for the superior officer to discharge in person.” No such impossibility exists in the case of the sheriff as to the arrest of a person. That case is easily distinguishable from this on its facts, and it is expressly said that the decision there does not interfere with the liability of an officer “for the act of the deputy, performed in the ordinary 'line of his official duty prescribed by law,” and the latter is the case here. Nor is there anything in Brown v. Moseley, 11 Smed. & M., p. 351, or Furlong v. State, 58 Miss., p. 717, at all in conflict with anything herein announced.
On return of the case to the court below, it will be proper to amend, so as to bring suit in the name of the State of Mississippi, for the use of T. J. Brown. No objection was made in the court below on this ground. In this case the suit was brought in the name of the real party in interest, and that distinguishes this case from Nixon v. Dillard, 73 Miss., even viewing that case as looked at by a majority of the court therein.
Judgment is reversed and cause remanded.