Plaintiff’s name is Linnie McCollan. His brother, whose real name is Leonard McCol-lan, somehow procured a duplicate of plaintiff’s driver’s license, identical to plaintiff’s except that Leonard’s picture graced it instead of Linnie’s. Leonard was arrested on a narcotics charge and since he was carrying the doctored driver’s license, he was booked under the name of Linnie C. McCol-lan.
Leonard was released on bond. His bondsman received an order allowing him to surrender his principal and a warrant issued for the arrest of Leonard. Since Leonard had been using his brother’s name, the warrant was in the name of Linnie C. McCollan. Linnie (the real Linnie) was arrested on the warrant in Dallas County on December 26, 1972. He was kept in a Dallas jail until December 30, when deputies from Potter County, where the warrant had issued, took custody of him. He was kept in the Potter County Jail until January 2, 1973, when the error was noticed and he was released.
Linnie subsequently brought this action in federal court claiming violation of his rights under the fourteenth amendment and section 1983. The trial judge directed a verdict for Potter County Sheriff T. L. Baker and his surety, defendant Transamerica Insurance Company. Plaintiff’s claims against all other defendants were dismissed with prejudice. Only the directed verdict as to Baker and Transamerica is before this court on appeal. Having originally postponed decision in this case pending the Supreme Court’s disposition of
Procunier v. Navarette,
-U.S. -,
The facts as developed at trial are largely undisputed, and to the extent there is conflict we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, in this case the plaintiff.
See Boeing Co. v. Shipman,
When the Dallas police notified the Potter County Sheriff’s Department that they had arrested “Linnie C. McCollan,” the identification of plaintiff as the man wanted under the warrant was verified by his birthdate as shown on his license. Unfortunately, the written information on both Linnie C. McCollan’s and Leonard (alias Linnie C.) McCollan’s driver’s licenses was identical. So this verification failed to reveal the error. The Potter County Sheriff’s Department did not send the mugshots and fingerprints of Leonard McCollan which it had in its files. Nor did the sheriff’s deputies who drove to Dallas to pick up the plaintiff take this identifying material with them. When the deputies brought plaintiff to the Potter County Jail on December 30, no one was on duty in the Identification Department, and no one compared plaintiff with the photographs and fingerprints on file. Had the photographs and fingerprints been sent or carried to Dallas or had the identifying information in the file at the sheriff’s office been checked, the mistake would have been evident. Although plaintiff is Leonard’s brother, he does not resemble Leonard in appearance.
The leading case in the Fifth Circuit on a sheriff’s liability for false imprisonment un
*512
der section 1983 is
Bryan v. Jones,
Bryan
made clear that in a section 1983 false imprisonment action the reasonable good faith of the sheriff comes into play only as a defense. To make out a prima facie case, a plaintiff need show only: (1) intent to confine; (2) acts resulting in confinement; and (3) consciousness of the victim of confinement or resulting harm.
The only real question in this case is whether the sheriff’s failure to introduce a policy of sending photographs and fingerprints or his failure to have someone on *513 duty to check plaintiff’s identity upon his arrival or during his stay at Potter County Jail was unreasonable. 4 Since plaintiff in no way challenges the subjective good faith of the sheriff, his qualified immunity hangs on the reasonableness of his action or inaction. The sheriff himself testified that it was a standard practice in most sheriff’s departments the size of his to send such identifying material. Certainly the jury could have found that he behaved unreasonably in failing to institute a similar policy. Alternatively, the jury might have concluded that comparing the date of birth, as listed in the sheriff’s files, with the date of birth on plaintiff’s driver’s license when he was arrested in Dallas was a sufficient safeguard against arresting and detaining the wrong person and that it was reasonable for the sheriff not to require his deputies to take the additional precaution of sending the photographs and fingerprints.
Defendant contends that the existence of the warrant for the arrest of a person named Linnie C. McCollan created a duty in him to arrest and detain the plaintiff. He relies on
Perry v. Jones,
Defendant misperceives his duties. His argument would find a duty in a police officer or sheriff to arrest any person who bears the name in which a warrant was issued. A warrant for John Smith would put a policeman under a duty to arrest the first John Smith, or perhaps all John Smiths, he encountered. Such cannot be the law.
We are not saying that a sheriff is under a duty to make an independent investigation as to the guilt or innocence of a person wanted under a warrant. If a warrant has issued for the arrest of an individual and the individual actually wanted under that warrant is arrested, the arresting officer has fulfilled his duty, and he will not be liable for false arrest or false imprisonment merely because the person arrested is later found to be innocent of the charges against him. Perry v. Jones, supra. We are saying that the sheriff or arresting officer has a duty to exercise due diligence in making sure that the person arrested and detained is actually the person sought under the warrant and not merely someone of the same or a similar name. See Restatement (2d) Torts § 125, comment (d) (1965).
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
.
Procnnier,
which had been argued but not decided at the time of oral argument in this case, presented,
inter alia,
the issue of whether simple negligence on the part of a state official could give rise to § 1983 liability.
See Procunier v.
Navarette,- U.S. -,-,
. Prior § 1983/false imprisonment cases have not dealt squarely with the problem of whether a sheriff must have personal knowledge that a person is being held in his jail in order for him to be liable under § 1983.
See Bryan v. Jones, supra; Whirl v. Kern,
. Section 1983 reads:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress. (Emphasis added).
. Since the sheriff did not take office until after the warrant had issued in the name of “Linnie C. McCollan,” he cannot be held responsible for any conduct by the sheriffs department prior to that time.
