160 P. 000 | Mont. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
On September 1, 1914, the governor of this state issued a proclamation declaring the county of Silver Bow in a state of insurrection. A portion of the organized militia under command of Major Dan J. Donohue, with Wm. Morse and Wade Gobel, subordinate officers, was -ordered to the scene of the trouble for the declared purpose of restoring peace and good order and rehabilitating the civil authority in that county. Upon taking command of the troops Major Donohue issued an order closing saloons and other places where intoxicating liquors were for sale. This order was thereafter modified so as to permit such places to be open for business from 8 A. M. until 7 P. M. daily. On September 19 Major Donohue ordered Morse, Gobel and certain enlisted men to take from the saloon of Dennis Herlihy the stock of liquors therein and destroy the same, and the order having been executed, this action in trespass was brought to recover actual damages to the amount of the value of the property destroyed, and punitive damage in the sum of $1,000.
The reply admits the official character of each of the defendants; admits that the proclamation, the order and amended order were issued; that the appealing defendants destroyed the property in question, and denies all other facts pleaded by way of defense. After issues were joined, but before trial, Dennis Herlihy died and the executor of his last will was substituted as a party to the action. Upon the trial plaintiff abandoned his
The objection was sustained and the evidence was excluded. The court dismissed the action as to certain other defendants originally joined, and directed a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against these appealing defendants, leaving to the jury for determination the amount of compensatory damages only. From a judgment entered upon a verdict for plaintiff, this appeal is prosecuted. The correctness of the trial court’s ruling in excluding defendants’ offered evidence is the question presented for review.
1. The right of a person to acquire, hold and protect property; to be secure in his possession of it against unreasonable seizure, and to retain it until deprived of it b.y due process of law, is, as among English-speaking people, as old as the common law itself. Its origin antedates by many years the guaranty contained in Magna Charta. The right itself was the inheritance of our people who inhabited the territory acquired from Great Britain at the close of the Revolution, and was adopted by the people of the territory of Montana by its first legislative assembly, and was continued in force thereafter. It is now embodied in the Bill of Rights, Article III of our state Constitution. When, therefore, plaintiff alleged and proved his ownership of the property; its destruction by these defendants without his consent, and his damages consequent upon that act, he made out a prima facie case. Indeed, in the light of the pleadings, little proof was required from plaintiff, for by their admission of
That it is possible for a set of circumstances so to combine as to present a legal justification for the act of a public officer
Let it be conceded in the first instance that the order of
The defense must rest upon the theory that the order was a reasonable and necessary police regulation and the destruction of the property a valid exercise of the state’s police power. The order in question as amended would read as follows:
“5. All saloons and places where intoxicating liquors are sold at retail as a beverage will be closed at once and kept closed [except from 8 A. M. until 7 P. M. daily] until further orders. The stock of liquors of any person or persons violating this rule will be destroyed and all violators severely punished.” By section 5, Article VII, of the Constitution, the supreme executive power is vested in the governor, who is charged with the duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed. Section 6 provides the means available to the executive, when necessary, to execute the power or perform the duty devolved upon him: ‘ ‘ The governor shall be commander-in-chief of the militia forces of the state, * * * and-shall have power to call out any part or the whole of said forces to aid in the execution of the laws, to suppress insurrection or to repel invasion.” When the organized militia was called into the service of the state in 1914, it but performed the function of the strong arm of the executive by which he could aid in executing the law or in suppressing the insurrection. Independently of the executive it had no power or authority, except possibly with reference to its own internal affairs. It acted as an executive agency, subject to the orders of the governor and bound by the authority which he might lawfully exercise. The governor is at all times
It is not alleged that the rioters in Butte were threatening or about to break into Herlihy’s saloon to obtain intoxicating liquors and that destruction of the stock was necessary to prevent the excesses which might reasonably be expected to follow the free access of disorderly disposed persons to the liquors. It is not pretended that the arrest and imprisonment of Herlihy and the closing of his place of business during the insurrection would not have been equally efficacious as a means of preventing drunkenness, disorder or rioting. Under con'stitutional government such ;as ours, the destruction of private property without compensation to the owner must be the last resort, available only in the presence of imminent and overwhelming necessity which brooks no delay. In failing to allege facts sufficient to disclose such necessity, the answer fails to make out a justification for the trespass, and for this reason the offered evidence was properly rejected.
The circumstances under which a subordinate military officer
In the present instance the order for the destruction of the
The judgment against the defendant Donohue is affirmed. The cause is remanded to the district court with directions to enter judgment dismissing the action as against defendants Morse and Gobel. The respondent may recover one-half of his trial court costs and one-half of his costs on appeal from the defendant Donohue. The defendants Morse and G-obel may recover from respondent one-half of the trial court costs incurred by the appealing defendants and one-half of the costs incurred by appellants on appeal.