36 A.D. 437 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
- The questions involved in this appeal have the benefit of novelty. On January 9, 1897, the plaintiff’s intestate and son, Charles Plag, was committed to the county jail of Westchester county, to await.
. It appears that at the time of the accident there was a large number of persons in the corridor, and that no keeper, turnkey or warden was present, exce.pt a man named Ferris, who had been committed as a vagrant and had been appointed by the sheriff to some duty, the precise nature of which does not appear. The instrument with which Williams stabbed Plag was a pocket knife which the former owned and used in shaving, and which was sometimes borrowed by other prisoners for the same purpose, there being no barber in the jail.
. The plaintiff sued the defendant, as sheriff, to recover damages. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the court dismissed, the complaint, and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff appeals.
Section 121 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “the sheriff of each county shall have the custody of the jail or jails of his county, and of the prisoners in the same.”
■ 1 Revised Statutes (9th ed.), section 92, page 623, reads in part as follows: “ .Custody and control of prisoners. — Each sheriff shall receive and safely keep in the county jails of his county, every per-'
Section 183 (Id. p. 643): “ Custody of jails. — Each sheriff shall have the custody of the jails of his county and the prisoners therein, and such jails shall be kept by him, or by keepers appointed by him, for whose acts he shall be responsible.”
The appellant’s counsel contends that the words “ receive and safely keep ” in section 92 imposed upon the sheriff something more than the duty of safely detaining Flag to await the action of the law, and that the sheriff was thereby bound to afford him protection against the violence of other prisoners. In the view which we take of the case it is not necessary to decide that question. It may well be that where a prisoner is committed to the custody of the sheriff, a corelative duty is imposed upon the latter to exercise reasonable care and diligence to protect his prisoner from dangers known to, or which might reasonably be apprehended by him, but this responsibility does not necessarily arise from the statute. The responsibility of the defendant in this action, if any, is predicated upon his negligence. • The complaint alleges that this negligence consisted in failing to cause a search of Williams to be made; in permitting him to have a knife in his possession; in not causing a sufficient guard and watch over. him, and in permitting him, without- being properly watched, to go into the corridor where the deceased was.
This being an action for damages resulting from negligence, the decedent must be shown to have been free from contributory négligence. -It was not the failure of the sheriff to search Williams, or to have a guard in the jail, or the access of Flag and Williams to each other, that was the cause of the assault. Under ordinary circumstances, Flag, like the other prisoners, would not have been assaulted, and there is no evidence of any previous disturbances in
It will be observed that the question involved is not whether Williams was justified in his attack upon Flag, nor whether he would have been responsible to-the plaintiff in an action at law for damages. The principle upon which we decide' this aj>peal is that the sheriff was not bound to anticipate such- an affray between the parties. ■ Williams was confined as a vagrant and not for any crime indicating violence of disposition, or qualities which rendered his ' presence, dangerous to other prisoners. N"or can the inference be fairly drawn from the evidence that the stabbing would have occurred except for Flag’s, assault upon Williams. On the contrary, we -think an opposite presumption arises from the evidence.
The' learned counsel for the ajipellant, while conceding that he has been unable to find any precedent in this State for the maintenance of-this action, cites in favor of his contention Hixon v. Cupp (5 Okla. 545). That case is easily distinguishable from the present one. The plaintiff had been committed to the county jail, and while there was tried by the other prisoners in a mock or “ kangaroo ” court and sentenced to pay a fine of fifty cents, and upon his refusal to pay the fine was seized, overpowered and subjected to a penalty of fifty lashes. The action was brought against the sheriff for damages. It appeared in evidence that it had been the custom ■of the prisoners to impose such pretended fine and punishment; that the sheriff was aware of it and took no steps to put a stop to the custom, and that the jailer appointed by the sheriff was present ■at the time of the assault. The court charged that .the sheriff was-.liable in: damages if any injury occurred to any person in the cus.tody of the jailer appointed by the sheriff, if the injury occurred
In Asher v. Cabell (2 U. S. App. 158) the United States Circuit Court of Appeals held that a United States marshal owed to a prisoner in his charge the duty of safe keeping and protection from unlawful injury. The case came up on a petition in which it was alleged that the petitioner was in the custody of the marshal, as a . prisoner; that the marshal knew that there was danger attending his
Both these .cases are based upon a willful. and known neglect of a-duty imposed upon the official. In the Hixon case' it was the failure of the sheriff to prevent a violent, custom w'hich prevailed, among prisoners; in the Asher case it was the intrusting a prisoner to guards and deputies known by the marshal to be in collusion.with a violent and lawless element.
In the present-case the neglect alleged is of .an entirely different character'. The difficulty is that there is no evidence that the
■ The judgment must be affirmed.
All concurred, except Woodward, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.