112 Kan. 388 | Kan. | 1922
The opinion of the court was delivered by
John A. Hanger brought an action against J. R. Woodward, as the sheriff of Douglas county, asking damages by reason of the defendant, as such officer, having seized and held an automobile belonging to tlie plaintiff, under a claim that it was taken while being used in violation of the prohibitory law. An in
The material facts, as shown by the undisputed evidence and admissions, may be thus summarized: On November 10, 1919, the defendant, while looking for a stolen automobile, entered the barn of the plaintiff in the south part of Lawrence and found some intoxicating liquor in his car under the back seat — according to the record in the case cited below, four quarts of whisky. He took possession of the liquor and the car, arrested the plaintiff, went to the county attorney’s office and procured a warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff on the charge of having intoxicating liquor in his possession, and a warrant for the seizure of the car as having been used for the transportation of liquor. The plaintiff was convicted, and the conviction was affirmed on appeal. (The State v. Hanger, 108 Kan. 115, 193 Pac. 1052.) On the trial of the question whether the car had been used for the transportation of liquor the court found that it had not been so used and ordered it restored to the owner, the present plaintiff. The state appealed from this decision, and the appeal was dismissed for want of prosecution November 5, 1920. The car was returned to the plaintiff on that day.
The plaintiff contends that the original seizure of the car was wrongful; that the subsequent obtaining of the warrant against it did not render the sheriff’s possession lawful; that if the court should hold to the contrary on the latter proposition, at all events the sheriff had no right to retain the car after the decision by the district court that the charge of its having been used in the transportation of liquor was not sustained; and that the action of the sheriff showed malice, oppression and abuse of process.
1. The trial court held that the sheriff had no right to take the car without a warrant, but after obtaining the warrant his possession became lawful and continued so until the dismissal of the state’s appeal. The plaintiff, upon the announcement of this view, stated that he did not care to take up time in proving damages for the wrongful detention of the car'for the hour or so prior to the obtaining of the warrant, but would test the correctness of the court’s ruling with regard to the defendant’s right to hold the car from that time on. ' The question - of the validity of the original seizure is therefore not before us except as it might affect the legality of the subsequent holding. Assuming for the purposes of the case that the sheriff had no right to take the car without a warrant, this did not
2. The decision by the district court against the state in the proceeding for the condemnation of the car did not render the sheriff’s possession unlawful, or alter the previous situation in that regard, for the taking of the appeal stayed the execution of the judgment. (Laws 1919, ch. 217, § 5.) '
3. In this state the official prosecuting attorney is, upon grounds of public policy, exempt from liability for malicious prosecution. (Smith v. Parman, 101 Kan. 115, 165 Pac. 663.) In view of the diligence required of sheriffs in the enforcement of the prohibitory law it might well be argued that the same immunity should extend to them. It is not necessary now to go that far. We discover nothing in the evidence to indicate either malice or want of probable cause in the bringing of the proceeding against the automobile, notwithstanding the result of the investigation was to restore it to the plaintiff.
The judgment is affirmed.