delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant brought a suit in tort in the Superior Court of Baltimore City against the appellee, a sergeant of the Baltimore City Police Department, for assault and battery and false imрrisonment. A jury trial was waived and the case was tried before the Court without a jury. Substantial damages were claimed, but there was no proof of pecuniary loss to the appellant. The triаl judge took the view that no actual damage to the plaintiff was established and that any wrong done him was at most a technical wrong; and sitting without a jury, the judge then found a verdict for the defendant uрon which judgment was entered. This appeal is from that judgment.
Early in January, 1953, there were a number of serious crimes in Baltimore City, including hold-ups and similar offenses committed by persons armed with deadly weapons, such as pistols or knives. To combat this lawlessness, the Commissioner of Police of Baltimore City issued a general order that the police: “Search for possession of dangerоus weapons on all persons coming under police suspicion.” The Captain in command of the Northwestern District, to which District the appellee was *485 attached, issued a written ordеr to his subordinates to carry out the Commissioner’s order. As a result, during the months of January and February, 1953, one hundred and twenty-nine taverns in that District were entered by the police and the male patrons wеre “frisked” or (as euphemistically described) “patted down” in a search for concealed weapons. One of the taverns was a night club known as the Club Tiajuana, on Pennsylvania Avenue. The appellee, in company with several other police officers, entered it at about 1:30 A. M. on Sunday, February 15, 1953. They first informed the manager of what they were going to do, and it was then annоunced that the male patrons would be “frisked” for concealed weapons.
The appellant, who is an attorney, was seated at a table with four of his friends, two men and two women. An officer came to their table and searched or “patted down” the other two men without apparent objection on their part, but the appellant refused to submit to the “frisking”. The officer then called appellee, Sergeant Wrightson, who was in charge of the police squad, and informed him of the appellant’s unwillingness to be searched. Sergeant Wrightson then told the аppellant to stand up and be searched. Appellant arose from his chair, but informed Sergeant Wrightson that he did not consent to be searched because there was no legal bаsis for the search. The appellant also informed the Sergeant that he was an attorney and knew most of the people present and saw no need to search them for cоncealed weapons. The appellant was then searched by Sergeant Wrightson without his consent.
The testimony shows that there was no disorder in the Club Tiajuana, that no crime had ever been committed there, that there had never been any occasion in the history of this establishment requiring the assistance of the police, and that no concealed weapons were found on any of the patrons of the Club at this time.
Appellant contends that he was humiliated and that he has been damaged as a result of an illegal search.
*486 The first question for decision is whethеr the search of his person for concealed weapons was in derogation of his rights.
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits unreasonable searches and sеizures, is not applicable here since it is a limitation upon the Federal government and not upon the State government.
Griffin v. State,
Article 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights provides: “That all wаrrants, without oath or affirmation, to search suspected places, or to seize any person or property, are grievous and oppressive; and all general warrants to search suspected places, or to apprehend suspected persons, without naming or describing the place, or the person in special, are illegal, and ought not to bе granted.”
It may be conceded that this Article has no direct application in this case because the officers who conducted the search had no warrant at all, but this does not hеlp the appellee’s position. Certainly the general order of the Police Commissioner was not a search warrant. As was said in
Miller v. State,
An officer may make an arrest without a warrant when a misdemeanor is committed in his presence,
Heyward v. State,
When a peace officer goes beyond the scope of the law he may become liablе civilly and is not shielded by the immunity of the law.
Roddy v. Finnegan,
The Bouse Act, Code (1951), Article 35, Section 5, now permits the use of evidence obtained through an
*488
illegal search or seizure in the prosecution of any person for- unlawfully carrying a concealed weapon, and does not thereby violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution by admission of such evidence.
Salsburg v. State,
Though the officers, under Code (1951), Article 2B, Seсtion 179, had authority, to enter the Club Tiajuana and conduct a search of the premises without a warrant, this Act did not authorize, or purport to authorize, police officers to search the patrons found therein.
There was sojne suggestion in a colloquy in the lower court that there should be some relinquishment of constitutional guarantees and. submission to police search in оrder to aid in such a campaign against major crime as the police were then conducting. Whatever merit there may be to such a suggestion, it must rely for its efficacy upon voluntary , conduct. To deny recovery in a case such as this to one who refuses to waive his right of immunity from unwarranted search would be to take the first step down the path leading to the destruction of the right.
Thе remaining question is whether the appellant is entitled to recover any damages, and if so, how much. It would be very difficult, if not impossible, to estimate the appellant’s damages on a pecuniary basis, and there was no proof thereof. Though there are exceptions to this rule, as in conspiracy cases, where damage is the gist of the action or an essential еlement of the tort
(Horn v. Seth,
For these reasons the judgment below should be reversed and judgment rendered for the plaintiff for nominal damages and costs.
Judgment reversed; judgment for the plaintiff for one cent damages and costs.
