Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by , him as will hereinafter appear against the sheriff of Salt Lake county, two of his deputies, and the Maryland Casualty Company as surety on the sheriff’s official bond. After stating the necessary matters of inducement and jurisdictional facts it is alleged in the complaint :
“That on the 2d day of September, A. D. 1923, defendant Benjamin R. Harries, as sheriff of Salt Lake county, and the defendants John W. Harris and Arthur S. Nicholls, as deputy sheriff of Salt Lake county, Utah, acting under the direction and authority of said sheriff, entered upon the premises of plaintiff’s restaurant situated at 579 West Second South street, as aforesaid, and did then and there leave with an employee of the plaintiff pretended search and seizure warrant for intoxicating liquors, issued by Justice George E. Parkin, Justice of the Peace of Salt Lake county, Utah, on September 2, 1923, against John Doe, and that when the said defendants entered said premises plaintiff was proceeding to the rear room of said restaurant for the purpose of changing his clothes which were kept at said premises, and that, as he proceeded, he was followed by the defendants John W. Harris and Arthur S. Nicholls, deputy sheriffs as aforesaid; that plaintiff did not know said deputy sheriffs, nor was he aware of the fact that the said individual defendants intended to make a search of said restaurant under said search and seizure warrant, or of the fact *230 that said officers had said pretended warrant, and the said officers did not impart said information to plaintiff, but said deputy sheriffs John W. Harris and Arthur S. Nicholls nevertheless followed plaintiff to said rear room in the restaurant; that plaintiff, seeing the said defendants following him, being of small stature and slight physique, became alarmed lest the defendants intended to commit a robbery or assault upon him, and that plaintiff thereupon, with intent to avoid said robbery or bodily injury, stepped into a court adjoining said restaurant and then entered from the rear, the neighboring premises, being a confectionery and soft drink store, and then went through said store, through the front door of the same out into West Second South street, and that during all of said time the said defendants continued to follow plaintiff without saying a word, and that plaintiff, being apprehensive of bodily injury to himself, stepped off the sidewalk in front of said prem-iess in West Second South street and started to run across the street, and that thereupon the defendant John W. Harris drew his revolver and fired point-blank at plaintiff at a distance of approximately 15 to 20 feet from plaintiff, and that the bullet from said revolver penetrated plaintiff’s right shoulder, pierced his lungs, and passed out through his chest; that plaintiff continued running, and that the said deputy sheriff John W. Harris continued firing his revolver at plaintiff; that all of said shots were fired by the said John W. Harris in the presence of and with the consent of the defendant Benjamin R. Harries, and that all of the acts herein complained of were performed by the said defendants acting under the color of their offices as sheriff and deputy sheriffs of Salt Lake county, Utah.”
The consequences of the injury and the damages sustained are then set forth in detail. The bond is also set forth in full and made a part of the complaint. Each one of the defendants interposed a general demurrer to the complaint, which demurrers were overruled by the court.
We have set forth certain portions of the complaint in full for the reason that it is strenuously insisted that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The particular objection to the complaint is that it does not appear therefrom that the acts of the sheriff and his deputies, which are complained of, were committed pursuant to legal process or by authority of law. This contention is principally based upon the statement in the complaint that the search and seizure warrant under which the sheriff and his deputies acted was a “pretended search and *231 seizure warrant.” In view of that, it is contended that the warrant was spurious and void conferring no authority.
It is not necessary to analyze the averments of the complaint. It is sufficient to say that, while it is not a model pleading, it, nevertheless, is not so lacking in essential aver-ments as to be vulnerable to a general demurrer. In determining the sufficiency of the allegations of a complaint, and especially of one like the one in question here, one must not have recourse to only certain parts of the complaint, but must determine the effect that should be given to the complaint when considered as a whole. The defendants, however, cite and rely upon the following cases in support of their contention:
People
v.
Pacific Surety Co.,
If the averments in the complaint in the case at bar are considered together, as they must be, there can be no doubt that the acts complained of appear to have been committed by authority of law and pursuant to the search and seizure warrant which had been issued and delivered to the officers, and that they were acting under it, and hence their acts were official acts.
Gomez
v.
Scanlan,
There is, however, another insurmountable obstacle to defendants’ contention. Each of the defendants filed a separate answer. In the answers of the deputy sheriffs as well as in that of the sheriff it is not only expressly admitted that all of the individual defendants entered the premises of the plaintiff pursuant to the search and seizure warrant, but in all of their answers it is affirmatively alleged that they “entered upon the premises mentioned in the complaint on said 2d day of September, 1923, pursuant to a search and seizure warrant duly issued for the purpose of making a search for and seizing intoxicating liquors that might be upon said premises.” Indeed, the character and purpose of the acts of the sheriff and his deputies are fully set forth so that there is and can be no doubt respecting them. Moreover, on the trial of the action, the search warrant was introduced in; evidence by plaintiff without objection by defendants, and they frequently referred to it as justification for their acts, and it was established by undisputed evidence beyond all reasonable doubt that the acts of the sheriff and his deputies who are defendants in this action *233 were done to vindicate tbe law and pursuant to tbe command of tbe search and seizure warrant.
True, tbe defendant surety company did not set forth the foregoing facts in its answer. That is, however, immaterial here .for two reasons: (1) Because tbe complaint did in fact state a cause of action; and (2) for tbe reason that tbe surety company did not present any affirmative defense to tbe action other than that interposed by tbe sheriff, its principal. That is, tbe surety company, at tbe trial, relied, entirely on tbe defense of tbe sheriff, and if that defense failed, it bad no defense.
Tbe defendants, however, insist that, inasmuch as they bad interposed a general demurrer in which they bad timely assailed tbe sufficiency of tbe complaint, and that before entering upon tbe trial they bad also interposed a general objection to tbe introduction of any evidence for tbe reason that tbe complaint failed to state a cause of action, for that reason plaintiff may not avail himself of tbe admissions and affirmative averments contained in their answers. This contention, no doubt, is predicated upon tbe theory that where a defect in a complaint is supplied by averments in tbe answer, such averments at most merely constitute a waiver of tbe defects, and in view that timely objections were made before filing tbe demurrers and again before entering upon tbe trial, there is no waiver in this case. By supplying a defect in a complaint in tbe answer tbe defendant does more than merely conditionally waive such defect. That is to say, be cannot be beard to say that be merely waives it because by the ruling of tbe court be is required to answer, and hence bis answer constitutes a mere conditional waiver. If be desires to insist upon bis objection to the complaint he may test that question by permitting judgment against him and appeal to this court to determine tbe sufficiency of tbe complaint. He, however, cannot have both alternatives, one to insist upon tbe objection and tbe other to supply tbe defect. By supplying tbe defect tbe defendant does what tbe plaintiff should have done, and be is therefore bound by bis acts. Nor does it merely constitute
*234
a waiver, but, as tbe term implies, it meets and supplies the alleged defect. The true doctrine applicable in such circumstances is well and clearly stated in the first headnote to the case of
Massachusetts B. & I. Co.
v.
Cudahy P. Co.,
“Where the omissions of a complaint for negligence of defendant’s truck in breaking a plate glass window were supplied by the answer which covered every question relating to defendant’s negligence and the trial proceeded on the theory that the entire question of defendant’s liability was before the court, the defect was thereby cured.”
To the same effect is
Chesney
v.
Chesney,
“The court must in every stage of an action disregard any error or defect in the pleadings or proceedings, which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties, and no judgment shall be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect.”
The foregoing section was adopted for the express purpose of covering cases where a material defect exists, but by reason of the acts of one or both of the parties to the action the defect is cured or made harmless. True, it was not intended to cover cases where the complaint fails to state a cause of action on account of the omission of some essential averment, where such averment is not supplied in the answer or pleading of the adverse party. The rule in that regard is stated in Chesney v. Chesney, supra. It was, however, intended to apply in a case like the one at bar where the defect in a pleading is supplied in the pleading of the adverse party. If it were held not to apply in such a case, the salutary effect of the statute would be entirely frittered away. Moreover, where, as in this case, the alleged defect is not only supplied by the adverse party himself, but where he has obtained the benefit of a full, fair, and impartial trial in which he was given full opportunity to offer every fact and circumstance tending to exculpate him, it would be a *235 mere travesty of justice to now permit him to try the ease all over again without any sufficient legal cause therefor.
Moreover, the principal just referred to has many times been recognized and enforced by the courts. True, the decisions, as is freqently the case in matters of procedure, are not entirely harmonious. The conflict, however, where such exists, relates more to the effect that the admission or affirmative averment in the adverse pleading has than it does to the conclusion that defects may be supplied and cured by the averments contained in the adverse pleading. In
Mountain Supply Ditch Co.
v.
Lindekugel,
“Alleged defects in the complaint were cured hy the answer which put in issue the very matters which defendant contended should have heen pleaded in the complaint, in order to state a cause of action.”
That is precisely the situation here. Counsel insist that the plaintiff should have stated certain facts in his complaint in order to state a cause of action, but the very matters that they insist should have been stated in the complaint are averred in the answers of the sheriff and all of his deputies and the facts were fully proved on the trial by both sides. The case just referred to, therefore, is precisely in point here since* in that case, as in this, the alleged omissions in the complaint were averred in the answer.
In
Treadgold
v.
Willard,
The writer perhaps has gone into this question more fully than was necessary. It was done, however, to settle the question that omissions in a complaint such as it is insisted the plaintiff omitted from the complaint in this case may be supplied in the answer, and if so supplied the defect is cured, and that such is the general holding of the courts.
In view of the foregoing it is manifest that the judgment in this case cannot be reversed for the reason that the complaint is defective in essential averments as contended by defendants. It is, however, also urged that the judgment should be reversed for the reason that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment. The argument is principally based upon the hypothesis that the evidence is not clear and explicit to the effect .that the sheriff and his deputies acted in violation of law, or that they were “engaged in the execution of a search and seizure warrant” when the plaintiff was shot. We have carefully read the evidence as certified to this court in the original bill of exceptions. We could subserve no good purpose to attempt a statement or synopsis of the evidence. It must suffice to say that after reading the evidence we cannot see how the jury could well have arrived at a different conclusion or result except that under the evidence they could have allowed plaintiff a larger amount as damages. The evidence of defendant is alone sufficient to justify, if it did not require, a finding that the shooting occurred as the result of executing the search and seizure warrant, and in an attempt to vindicate the Prohibition Act of this state. Moreover, the testimony of the individual defendants, including that of the sheriff, is clearly to the effect that all of the defendants participated in the execution of the search and seizure warrant, and that the plaintiff was shot because he attempted to flee from the officers. The writer is quite unable to understand how, under the evidence, it can reasonably be contended that the plaintiff was not shot under the *237 conditions just stated. It might just as reasonably be contended that the plaintiff was not shot and wounded at all as it is to contend that he was not shot and wounded by one of the defendants while they were all engaged in the act of executing a search and seizure warrant which they all admit and allege was duly and lawfully issued, and pursuant to which they acted and were attempting to arrest plaintiff and to search his premises.
It is needless to spend more time upon that phase of the case. Let us here pause to refer briefly to some of the numerous eases which are available, and which throw light upon the legal effect of defendants’ case. In this connection it must be remembered that if the plaintiff was guilty of any crime it was at most a mere misdemeanor, and hence the defendants were not justified in shooting him, although he made or would have made his attempted escape effective. The law in that regard is clearly and correctly stated by the Supreme Court of Mississippi in
Brown
v.
Weaver
(
“An officer has no right to shoot at a person who is merely-running away from him, without committing any violence, when under arrest for a misdemeanor. The wrongful shooting hy a deputy sheriff of a prisoner attempting to escape from arrest for a misdemeanor is an official act which creates a liability on the sheriffs bond.”
In
State
v.
Cunningham,
“A sheriff is liable on his official bond for shooting one guilty of a simple misdemeanor to prevent his escaping arrest, although he merely fired his pistol in his direction to cause him to halt. The statement in a complaint seeking damages because of a sheriff’s negligent performance of his duties in arresting one guilty of a misdemeanor which results in the death of the latter, that the sheriff fired his pistol at and toward the lawbreaker so that the bullet struck and killed him, does not require proof of deliberate aim toward him."
In 24 R. C. L. 965, § 59, in speaking of the test of liability of a surety on a sheriff’s bond, it is said:
*238 "The test should he: Would he have acted in. the particular instance if he were not clothed with his official character, or would he have so acted if he were not an officer? If he assumed té act as an officer — whether under valid or void process, or under no process whatever — the hondsmen should he held, as he is held, for they are the sponsors of his integrity as an dfficer while acting as such.”
In section 60 of the same volume, it is further said:
“On the general theory that sureties are not needed on a sheriff’s bond if they are only to he held when the acts are legal, and because they vouch for the officer’s acts, and bind themselves to make good any damage he may cause to any one while acting under color of his office, the rule is that the unjustifiable killing, by an officer, of a person whom he has arrested is within the provision of his bond by which the surety undertakes that he shall well and truly discharge all the duties of his office. And a sheriff and the sureties on his official bond are liable in a civil action for damages arising from the intentional or negligent shooting of a misdemeanant who flees to avoid arrest, although the officer merely fires his pistol in his direction to cause him to halt.”
See Murfree’s Official Bonds, § 303, p. 218, for a clear statement by Chief Justice Shaw respecting the liability of sheriffs and their bondsmen for wrongful acts. The following cases will also be found directly in point and very illuminative:
Lammon
v.
Feusier,
Many of the cases are there collated in which the doctrine announced in the Mississippi cases to which we have referred is supported and enforced. Many cases could be
*239
added to tbe foregoing, but it is unnecessary to do so. In nearly all of tbe eases cited it is pointed out that the refinement or supposed' distinction between acts that were termed to have been committed
colore officii
or
virtiite of-ficii
is as useless in practice as it is obscure in meaning, and hence it is entirely disregarded, and the only test that is applied is the one we have quoted from the text of
It is, however, also insisted that the district court erred in its insti’uctions to the jury. Especial objections are urged against instructions numbered 10, 11, and 13. "We have carefully examined not only those three but all of the instructions. We have no hesitancy in stating that, in the light of the great weight of authority, the objections urged against the instructions mentioned are not tenable. No legal injury could possibly have resulted to the defendants, or either of them, by anything that is contained in those instructions. Indeed, in our judgment, the instructions correctly reflect the law, and are quite as favorable to the defendants as the law justified. It is next insisted that the court erred in refusing some of defendants’ requests to charge the jury. The contention is without merit and requires no special consideration.
Finally, it is vigorously contended that, in view that the sheriff and his deputies are required to enforce the laws, therefore they should not be condemned for acts of omission or commission unless it is made quite-clear that they have invaded the substantial rights of some citizen. No doubt the officers of the law should receive the protection of the law in so far as their acts justify protection. The citizen is, however, equally entitled to protection. The law knows no favorites, and an officer, when he offends, stands precisely upon the same footing as the citizen. Nor *240 does the law justify the condemnation of a citizen when it would not, under the same state of facts and under the same quantum of evidence, condemn the acts of the officer. In this case the defendants were given the.full protection of the law, and in one or two instances they were given more than the strict enforcement of the law authorizes. No objections having been urged as against these matters, however, we need not consider them, and we mention that only for the purpose of showing that the defendants here have no legal cause for complaint.
In view of what has been said, it follows that the judgment should be and it accordingly is affirmed, with costs.
