73 Ga. 660 | Ga. | 1885
This record shows that the plaintiff in error brought suit against four defendants, one the sheriff of Rockdale county, and the others policemen of Atlanta, for trespass upon his person in lodging him in the guard-house of the city oi Atlanta among felons and negroes, in a very loathsome and filthy place, without authority of law, or in other words for false imprisonment.
The presiding judge was of the opinion that no case was made out which entitled the plaintiff in error to recover, and after the evidence for both sides was before the jury, he directed a verdict for the defendants. This direction and judgment is assigned for error in this court.
The law of this state is this : “ False imprisonment consists in the unlawful detention of the person of another, for any length of time, whereby he is deprived of his personal liberty.” Code, §2990.
“ If the imprisonment is by virtue of a warrant, neither the party bona fide suing out, nor the officer who in good faith executes the same, is guilty of false imprisonment, though the warrant be defective in form, or be void for want of jurisdiction. In such cases, the good faith must be determined from the circumstances of each case.” Code, §2991. “ In every case of an arrest without warrant, the person arresting shall, without delay, convey the offender
Under the proof disclosed by this record, a citizen was arrested in his shop at work, his employer vouching for him and his fellow-workmen all attesting to his character, without any warrant exhibited, but on a letter; he was not carried before any officer empowered to hear affidavits or issue warrants, but was incarcerated with violators of the city laws of all grades, and kept there in defiance of offers to give any bail desired, and in defiance of an offer to sue out the writ of habeas corpus.
The imprisonment was illegal, and the plaintiff in error had the clear right to go before the jury, under the facts, and let them say what damage he sustained by reason of this unwarranted conduct on the part of the defendants. Of course, some acted differently from others of the defendants, and the position each took and the conduct of each is to be graded and measured severally. But to deny the plaintiffs a hearing, and direct the jury to find for ,all the defendants, is certainly erroneous.
The plaintiff' in error was entitled to bail. If the sheriff arrested him, it was his duty to take bail. If he deputized anybody else, policeman or other officer, to arrest him, the plaintiff in error was still entitled to bail. To deny it and put him in a felon’s cell, is false imprisonment. To defy the authority of the writ of habeas corpus adds aggravation to the offense against the liberty of the citizen for which he is entitled to damages. This is the law, even if the bench warrants had been exhibited and were in possession of the police Avhen the arrest was made, but it is in proof that they said that they had no warrant at all, but made the arrest on a letter. If so, it was their duty to take the party arrested, as soon as possible, to the nearest magistrate, and have affidavit made and warrants issued, and if the offenses were bailable, as they were, to release him on bail given.
The liberty of the citizen is sacred wherever English law and its offspring, American law, prevail. The writ of habeas corpus and the privilege of bail are guaranteed in the constitutions of this state and of the United States. Code, §§5001, 5003, 5268,, 5313. No officer of the law can disregard either with impunity.
In the case at bar, a boy seventeen years old, when at his father’s house in Rockdale, is said to have had two bench warrants issued against him, one for vagrancy and another for carrying concealed weapons. Nine years afterwards, when engaged honestly at work in Atlanta, only two hours’ ride by rail from Rockdale, with the information of his character and steadiness given them by other citizens who knew him and worked with him for five years, on these old bench warrants, not shown anybody, he is arrested, he is denied bail, the writ of habeas corpus is defied, he is imprisoned in an iron-grated cell; the chief of police said it was done on a letter; another said, he is guilty “ of every crime except burning a mill-pond, and he is arrested because there is money in itall the police fail to show any authority for the arrest; he is made to pay for his imprisonment in the loathsome cell, where he was not fed by them or the city, three dollars and a half costs ; and after being admitted to bail, when he goes to Rockdale court to answer, there is no case against him, and he is discharged; and since his residence in Atlanta, he had often visited the county of Rockdale without molestation, and the shop where he worked all the while in Atlanta is at the corner of Peachtree and Broad streets — an open, public thoroughfare.
But it is not remanded for a new trial alone on this misdirection, but because, by the facts which this record discloses, a clear case of false imprisonment is made, and a jury should have been allowed to pass upon it and measure the damages.
Judgment reversed.