36 F. 168 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1888
(after stating the facts as above.') Being more than ever convinced, after are-examination of the evidence, that the verdict was right, and in accordance with the great preponderance of testimony, the court is not disposed to grant a new trial upon any ground which is merely technical and formal in character. Where the court can see that a proper result lias been reached, that the party has succeeded who ought to succeed, the endeavor should be to preserve the fruits of the trial.. Every doubt should be resolved in favor of affirmance; every exception not affecting the merits should be disregarded. Where a controversy has terminated in a correct ,and honest verdict, it is for the advantage of both parties that litigation should cease.
The question arising on the pleadings is this: The complaint alleges, in substance, that the defendant, by his agents, servants, and employes, arrested the plaintiff on a false charge, without right, authority, or rea
There was no mistake in instructing the jury that they should find for the defendant if they believed his witnesses. To say that the acts of Saunders, as related by him, amounted to an arrest, is surely to view them in-a light superlatively harsh. No force was used. There were no threats. The plaintiff returned voluntarily; she was not compelled to do so by anything which Saunders did. The sidewalk on Sixth avenue was not a proper place to transact btisiness, and his request, or demand even, that she should return, was not inconsistent with a satisfactory arrangement of the difficulty inside the store. That the plaintiff so understood it is quite evident, for she testifies: “I supposed that he was going to take me to- the proprietor of the store, and I turned around and
The third and last assignment of error raises an interesting and novel question: Was the court right in holding that the defendant is not responsible for the acts of Kenney, because he was a police officer? Notwithstanding the able and ingenious argument of plaintiff’s counsel, it is thought that the ruling made at the trial should remain unchanged. Kenney, under the terms of the act, (Laws 1884, c. 180, § 269,) was subject to the orders of the superintendent of police; was required to obey the rules and regulations, general and special, of the police board; to conform to its discipline, and wear its dress or emblem. The act further provides that a patrolman so appointed shall be subject to removal by the board without cause assigned, and “shall possess all the powers and discharge all the duties of the police force applicable to regular patrolmen.” Kenney, therefore, possessed all the common-law and statutory powers of constables, except for the service of civil process. It was made his duty by law at all times of day and night to prevent crime, detect and arrest offenders, protect the rights of persons and property, and, with or without warrant, to arrest all persons guilty of violating the law. He was, it is true, appointed for duty in the defendant’s store, and was paid by the defendant. In all other respects, so far as this controversy is concerned, he was as much a member of the metropolitan force as any patrolman. It was the intent and purpose of the law to invest him with all the rights, powers, privileges, and immunities of a regular policeman. If this were not the object, if the status of the person so appointed remains unchanged, if the relations of master and servant still exist, it is not easy to see why the act was passed. The provision that the person particularly benefited shall pay the salary does not render nugatory the other provisions of the act, and deprive the policeman of the broad authority expressly delegated. Ho is not, in other words, the mere servant of the person who pays him. It is understood that this construction has been placed upon the law by the state courts, and it would seem to be more in accordance with reason and common sense than the opposing theory.
There can be no force in the contention that the defendant is liable for a false imprisonment because the arrest by Kenney was instigated by Saunders. To hold a merchant liable for the acts of a police officer because one of the merchant’s clerks, with no authority from him, in his absence, and without his knowledge, gives information to the officer which induces him to arrest a person who, apparently, has committed a crime in the informant’s presence, would be going far beyond any reported case. Teal v. Fissel, 28 Fed. Rep. 351; Von Latham v. Libby, 38 Barb. 339; Brown v. Chadscy, 39 Barb. 253.
The cause was presented as fairly for the plaintiff as she had a right to expect. Had the trial taken place in a state tribunal, it is altogether probable that it would have been terminated by the court, and not the jury. Mali v. Lord, 39 N. Y. 381; Burns v. Erben, 40 N. Y. 463.