Appellant sued the City, its police department and various policemen, invoking 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 and asserting deprivation “of his Constitutional right to freedom from physical abuse and intimidation.” This was done, he asserts, when in the course of arresting and jailing him two policemen hurled him headfirst into the concrete floor and wall of a cell. The court below concluded that the one-year Mississippi limitations provision governing actions for assault and battery applied. Since the action was filed about thirteen months after the incident complained of, appellant suffered summary judgment on this ground. We reverse.
Long ago, the Mississippi Supreme Court determined that the one-year assault and battery statute does not apply to actions such as this. In a suit brought on similar facts, where a deputy sheriff shot an arrestee, it observed
It will be observed that the causes of action set forth in the statute result from breaches of duties which all persons owe to every other person, and do not cover the breach of a duty specially imposed by law on one for the benefit of another.... The declaration sets forth not a mere, assault and battery, or maiming, but a breach of the sheriff’s official duty, the assault and battery, or maiming, being the particular breach thereof; and the cause of action is this breach of the deputy sheriff’s official duties. The statute, therefore, does not apply.
State for the Use of Smith
v.
Smith,
Appellee seeks to distinguish
Smith
and
Shaw,
pointing out that in those cases the bonding company of the policemen sued was also made a party
1
so that the suit might be characterized as one on the bond .for breach of official duty. As we noted in
Shaw,
however, the square holding of the Mississippi court in
Smith
is that the one-year statute governing actions for intentional torts by ordinary citizens does not apply to torts by police.
ORDERED.
