82 W. Va. 692 | W. Va. | 1918
The principal inquiries arising upon this writ 'of error to a judgment for $1,000.00, obtained in an action for damages for an alleged false arrest and malicious prosecution, are, (1), whether the evidence tends to prove such facts and circumstances as legally justified the jury in finding the plaintiff had been arrested; and, (2), if so, whether the acts and conduct of the defendant’s station agent were of such character as to make out a case of participation on the part of the defendant, in the arrest, or of instigation thereof.
The controversy had its origin in the accidental .breaking of a quart bottle filled with whiskey, in one of the plaintiff’s two suit cases delivered to the defendant at its station at the city of Williamson, Mingo County, and there checked by it, as personal baggage of the plaintiff to be carried to another station known as Davy, McDowell County, from which point she intended to go on a visit to her mother in Wyoming County. A train manifest delivered with the baggage to the station agent at Davy, by the baggage-man and signed by the baggage-master at Williamson, said: “This suit case' fell from the top of a trunk and whiskey run out of same as if though it was full of whiskey.” On her arrival at Davy,
Chinault denies that he threatened to arrest the plaintiff, that he had any intention to arrest her, that he told her she would have to go to Welch, that he took her suit case with him to Welch and that he m'ade any complaint. Boyd denies that he called Chinault of his own volition, protests that lie called him at the request of the plaintiff and insists that he did not, in any manner, direct her to be arrested. Hufford says he. does not know whether Chinault brought the suit case to his office or not. The plaintiff says he did, Boyd says he took it from the station and plaintiff’s attorney says it was at the office of the justice and taken from that place to his office. The justice issued a warrant in Chinault’s presence, reciting that it was issued upon complaint made by him. Of course, the questions of varacity involved here and the facts were for jury determination.
In all cases in which there is no manual touching or seizure, nor any resistance, the intentions of the parties to the transaction are very important. There must have been intent on the part of one of them to arrest the other, and intent on the part of such other to submit, under the belief and impression that submission was necessary. Searles v. Viets, 2 Thompson & C. (N. Y.), 224; Lowry v. Chase, 100 Mass., 79; Horner v. Patten, Bullars N. P. 62b; Pocock v. Moore, R. &
When the intention with which an act was done depends upon inferences arising from conduct, it is manifestly a question of fact, falling within the province of the jury for determination, and the intention of the parties, as an element or factor in an issue of arrest or no arrest, constitutes no exception to the rule. Jones v. Jones, 13 Ired. (N. C.), 448; Dunlevy v. Wolferman, 106 Mo. App. 46. The jury could have found from the evidence that Chinault told the plaintiff he would arrest her and made her believe she was under arrest, although he did not say so; that she believed she was under arrest; that Chinault made a complaint on which a warrant was issued for her arrest; that he took the evidence of her supposed guilt to the office of the justice; that she believed he accompanied her to Welch, as her custodian, although he says he did not and she admits he did remain near her on the train; and that he considered her under arrest, notwithstanding the permission he gave her to go on her contemplated visit, for this permit was accompanied by the statement or intimation that she would have to undergo a trial on her return. He denies' having said anything to her at the station on the morning of the trip to Welch. -If he did not, the case is much stronger against him, for he was there boarding the train with her suit case and going in the direction of the office of the justice to which he had told her he would take her. The leave granted for the visit did not nullify the arrest, if there was one. It was a mere offer of a parole which she was not bound to accept. Although the officer does not accompany the prisoner to the magistrates office, there may be a constructive arrest and imprisonment within the meaning of the law. Searl v. Viets, 2 Thomp. & C. (N. Y.), 224; Herring v. State, 3 Tex. App. 108; Martin v. Houck, 141 N. C. 317. She knew Chinault ivas an officer and that he and the justice of the peace deemed her guilty of an offense. In our opinion, the admitted facts and those
Nothing in the statute, as it then was, made the plaintiff’s act unlawful. Under the statute then in force, she could lawfully carry as much as two quarts of liquor for her personal use, without a label on the container. Common carriers could not transport liquors for hire, but nothing in the statute made the act of checking personal baggage' containing liquors not in excess of two quarts, criminal. Besides, the act had not been committed in the presence of the officer and he had no warrant foh her arrest. It is not pretended in argument, that there was any legal justification of the arrest.
The evidence affords an ample basis for the finding that the defendant’s agent instigated or caused the arrest. Whatever his motive may have been, he disclosed to the officer the fact constituting the occasion of it. Having no right to withhold the baggage, he not only retained it against the plaintiff’s will but permitted it to go into the hands of the officer, as evidence of right of arrest and means of prosecution. This circumstance tends to prove the plaintiff’s charge of connivance on his part with the officer, or direction to make the arrest. He had been advised that the plaintiff was guilty of an offense and she swears he seemed to be directing Ohinault. To make the defendant liable for his acts in this connection, he must have been acting within the scope of his authority, of course, but the jury were warranted by the evidence, in finding he caused the arrest as a means of retaining his hold upon the baggage. If the arrest was an incident of his wrongful retention of the baggage, under orders of the defendant, it is obviously liable, for the custody and proper handling of the baggage was within his authority, and his wrongs done in the execution of such authority are chargeable to his principal. The plaintiff was rightfully in the station, rightfully demanding her property, in consequence of the agent's wrongful refusal to deliver it. In conferring upon its agent authority to handle baggage, the defendant necessarily empowered him to determine questions of right as to delivery and the means of resisting -what he deemed wrongful demands for delivery; and even though
Although the declaration charges both false imprisonment and malicious prosecution, the trial proceeded for the most part, on the theory of liability on the former charge, in which the doctrine of probable cause usually has no place. None of the instructions given for the plaintiff invoked that doctrine. Two instructions giyen for the defendant mention the other charge, but neither of them sets up the alleged conviction as being conclusive of the existence of probable cause, nor refers to it in any way. Hence, the doctrine enunciated in Haddad v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 77 W. Va. 710, was not invoked in the trial. It does not sustain the defendant’s overruled request for a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, nor the motion for a new trial, because the evidence sustains the charge of false imprisonment of which want of probable cause is not an essential element.
Perceiving no error in the judgment, we will affirm it.
Affirmed.