107 Wash. 508 | Wash. | 1919
The respondent, as the widow of one Harvey Coldeen, brought this action against the appellants, Reid, Bradley and the National Surety Company, respectively, sheriff of Spokane county, deputy sheriff of that county, and surety on the sheriff’s official bond, to recover in damages for the alleged wrongful killing of Coldeen by the deputy Bradley. There was a recovery in the court below, and the appeal is from the judgment entered.
The evidence as to the facts surrounding the transaction is strangely in conflict. According to the testimony of a young man who was with Coldeen at the time he was found dead, he met Coldeen at a pool hall, in the city of Spokane, at about half past eleven o ’clock on the evening of the day before Coldeen met his death. They played pool at this place until about mid
The story of the officers is that they were likewise' on the way to Colbert, having been directed to go there by the sheriff because of information of lawless conduct by some of the attendants at a dance held at that place. When the car driven by the former witness overtook them, it was proceeding at a very rapid rate of speed; that, as it approached, they noticed there was no license plate on its front, and when it passed them, they noticed there was none on its rear; that the deputy Bradley then directed the driver of their car to overtake them; that the driver did so, and as their car came alongside of the other, Bradley stood out on the running board, exhibited his badge as a deputy sheriff, flashed his flashlight in front of the occupants of the car and shouted “halt”; that the car, instead of stopping, increased its speed, and as the rear wheel came opposite him he fired into the tire of the wheel; that the car then slacked up, their car passing it and also slowing up and pulling in towards the center of the road; that the other car then again speeded up and passed them on the left, when Bradley again fired at the other rear tire, firing over the hood of the motor of the car in which he was riding; that the car then slowed up and turned toward a by-road leading away from the main highway, but missing it, ran against a bank on the side of the road, where it stopped. The officers then discovered that Ooldeen was dead, and placed the other party under arrest. Seemingly, they then made no particular examination of the body of Ooldeen. They say the lower part of his face was covered with coagulated blood, and that the wound on the back of his head had the appearance
The sheriff, the coroner and an undertaker arrived at the place soon after. It was then discovered that Coldeen died from a bullet wound; that the bullet entered his head a little to the left of the median line at the junction of the occipital and parietal bones, passed through the brain substance in a slightly upward course and lodged on the frontal bone of the head, fracturing it both perpendicularly and transversely. The body of Coldeen was found in a sitting posture, substantially as described by the driver of the automobile. It was removed from the car and, as they testify, a minute and careful examination made of the car by the sheriff, four of his députies who were present, and by the coroner. Each of them testify that it bore no marks of bullets discoverable, save in the tires of the rear wheels, both of which were then deflated and showed punctures such as would be made-by firing into them with a revolver. The rear tires were taken from the wheels at the direction of the sheriff and carried away by him. The car. was then removed to a by-road and left standing for a few hours, when it was removed to a garage at Hilliard by the direction of the sheriff.
The sheriff also testifies that, after hearing the statements of his deputies as to the number of shots that had been fired by them, he examined the revolvers carried by them, and found that none of them had been fired except Bradley’s, and that there were two empty shells only in the revolver carried by him.
The bullet taken from Coldeen’s head was much distorted and battered, and weighed twenty-two grains less than the manufacturer’s statement of the weights
The principal conflict in the testimony is over the condition of the car at the time it was examined by the coroner and the sheriff and his deputies. The back curtain of the car was introduced in evidence. It contains two holes, such as could have been made by bullets. Both are below the isinglass window of the curtain, one some three and one-half inches and the other seven inches to the left of the center of the curtain. The holes are four and one-half inches apart, and, when measured from the bottom of the curtain, one is three inches higher than the other, the one farthest from the center being the higher. The lower one is possibly two inches above the back of the cushioned seat of the automobile, and the other, of course, some five inches above it. They are plainly visible, even at a casual glance, at a point several feet distant. Photographs taken of the car some days after the shooting show them plainly. Pour witnesses testtifying for the respondent say they saw the holes in the curtain while the car was standing at the place where it was left by the sheriff immediately after the shooting, and four others testify that they saw them in the afternoon of the same day, after the car had been removed to the Hilliard garage at the direction of the sheriff. We have called attention to the evidence of the coroner, the sheriff and his deputies as to the condition of the car at the time they left it, after taking Coldeen’s body from it and removing the rear tires. While on the witness stand they emphatically testified that the holes were not in the curtain at that time. The sheriff further testified that the first time he learned of the holes in the curtain was
The respondent offered the testimony, also, of parties living in the vicinity of the highway near where the shooting occurred. Three of these testify that they heard the racing cars and the shots from the revolver. They testify that there were three shots, following each other in reasonably rapid succession, such, the record recites, as one—two—-three. One of them, however, testifies positively that the racing cars were going south, in the opposite direction from the direction these cars were actually traveling. Another, while not so positive, thought they were going south. Still another testifies to but two shots, both fired in rapid succession and at the time of the first meeting of the cars on the hig’hway. The person whose telephone was used by Bradley testified that Bradley, while telephoning to the sheriff immediately after the shooting, made a statement indicating that he had killed one of the occupants of the car. This witness was one of the four witnesses who examined the curtain of the car before it was removed to Hilliard and who testified that it then bore the marks of the bullets. His statement concerning what Bradley said in the telephone conversation is denied by the sheriff.
At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, the defendants interposed a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. The challenge was overruled, whereupon the defendants introduced evidence on their own behalf. At the conclusion of all of the evidence, the challenge was renewed, and after the return of the verdict, a motion for judgment notwithstanding the
The first contention of the appellants is that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict. This question, we think, requires no extended discussion. If the jury believed the evidence of the respondent’s witnesses, they were warranted in finding that the deceased met his death from a shot from the deputy sheriff’s revolver, under circumstances which afforded no legal justification. The jury could have found that the deceased and the person with him in the automobile were committing a misdemeanor only, and that the deputy deliberately fired at them because they refused to stop at his command. It is true that the evidence from which such a conclusion is reached is not entirely consistent with other evidence introduced by the respondent and is directly opposed by the testimony of the sheriff, his deputies, the coroner, and the supporting witnesses of the sheriff; and it is true, also, that such a conclusion cannot be reached without the finding that the sheriff, his deputies and the coroner committed deliberate and willful perjury; but the question was one for the jury nevertheless, and one upon which their findings are conclusive upon the court. It is perhaps unnecessary to add that police officers, in making an arrest, have no warrant to act oppressively, or to wantonly injure the person they attempt to arrest, or to maim or kill a person who attempts to escape from arrest, when the offense committed is a mere misdemeanor.
The second contention of the appellants is that the court erred in the exclusion of evidence. On the trial of the case the deputy sheriff, in answer to questions put to him by the appellants ’ counsel, was proceeding
In rejecting the proffered testimony and in refusing to charge as requested, we think the court was in error. In tMs state, where the common law rule prevails, a police officer is justified in making an arrest when he has reasonable ground to believe, and does believe, that a crime is being committed, and, having the right to make the arrest, he has the right to use that degree of force the circumstances o-f the case warrant ; that is to say, if the crime is a misdemeanor, he may use the force the law permits in making arrests for misdemeanors; and if it be a felony, he may use the force the law permits in making arrests for felony. When, therefore, an officer is called upon to answer for a claimed unlawful arrest, or for excessive use of force in making a lawful arrest, he has the right to show the circumstances surrounding the- transaction, and the impression these circumstances make on his mind, and to have the jury charged on Ms theory of the case; unless, of course, the circumstances were such that there could be no two opiMons concerning it. Here there was sufficient facts to make it a question
We are met, however, with the contention that the appellants have not properly preserved the objection in the record, since no exception was taken either to the court’s ruling rejecting the evidence, or to his refusal to charge as requested. But no formal exception is necessary to the ruling of the court rejecting the evidence (Rem. Code, § 385), and no exception to the refusal to give an instruction upon the question was necessary to preserve the objection. Nelson v. Western Steam Nav. Co., 52 Wash. 177, 100 Pac. 325. Nor was an exception to the instruction actually given necessary for that purpose. These are unobjectionable upon the court’s theory of the case, and after the opposing party had met with one rejection of his own theory, it was not necessary in order to preserve the question to pursue the matter throughout the trial.
We think further that the court might well have granted a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. After the trial, the appellants were able to gather some new evidence directly supporting their theory of the case, and much that supported it inferentially. The trial court seems to have denied the motion because the directly supporting evidence was cumulative, and because the other was in a large measure overcome by the counter affidavits filed. But while the rule applied is appropriate in an ordinary case, this case, we think, presents questions unusual in cases of its character. As we have attempted to show, the evidence introduced by the prevailing party is in a manner self-contradictory and cannot all be true, not
The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.
Main, Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.
Holcomb, O. J., concurs in the result.