Merchant v. Bothwell

60 Mo. App. 341 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895

Gíill, J.

Under the charter of Rockville, a city of the fourth class, the board of aldermen were authorized to levy and collect a license tax for the conduct of a meat market. Although there appears some claim to the contrary, it is conclusively shown by this record that at the time of the plaintiff’s arrest, and for years prior thereto, there existed an ordinance prohibiting the running of a meat market in said town without a license; and it is equally clear that the plaintiff was. pursuing that business in entire disregard of this, ordinance.

There was no police judge in said town of Rock-ville; and as provided by its charter, the mayor had jurisdiction to issue warrants and to hear and determine cases for the violation of city ordinances. In the absence of the mayor the statute devolved this duty on the president of the board of aldermen. R. S. 1889, secs. 1582 and 1617.

On the seventh day of August, 1893, plaintiff Merchant was arrested by defendant Gamm, town marshal of Rockville, on the charge of conducting a meat market without first procuring a city license therefor as required by ordinance. The warrant was issued by defendant Bothwell, president of the board of aldermen, in the alleged absence of defendant Fisher, the mayor; but when brought into court the mayor was present. The plaintiff, when so arraigned, stated that he was not ready for trial, but refused to *347give bond for his subsequent appearance, and the marshal thereupon incarcerated him in the calaboose, where he was held until the next day. The prosecution was subsequently dismissed.

The petition charges the arrest and imprisonment to have been without legal warrant or authority, and that the same was brought about in the execution of a conspiracy between Marshal Camm, Mayor Fisher,.Both-well, president of the board of aldermen, and the other defendants, who were members of said board. This alleged conspiracy was denied, and the defendants in addition justified the arrest under the warrant issued by Bothwell, the president of the boa’rd. At the conclusion of the testimony the court decided that no ease was made as to defendants Ferguson, Doyle and Hartman, and in obedience to instructions, the jury returned a verdict in their favor. But, under other instructions relating to the issues in the case, there was a verdict and judgment against defendants Bothwell, Camm, Fisher and Fie^d in the sum of $500, and they have appealed.

I. The disposition of this appeal turns upon the propriety of the following instruction given by the trial court of its own motion: “If you believe from the evidence that the document in evidence, designated as ordinance number 7 is a copy of a document destroyed by fire, and that the defendant Camm, when he arrested and imprisoned the plaintiff, was acting under the warrant offered in evidence, and that when said warrant was issued by defendant Bothwell, the mayor, defendant Fisher, was not in the city of Rock-ville, and that defendant Camm, at the time he arrested plaintiff, informed him of the warrant or read it to him, you will find for all the defendants. But, if you fail to find any of the above facts from the evidence, then the arrest and imprisonment of plaintiff was illegal and you will find against defendant Camm, *348and any of the defendants, Field, Bothwell or Fisher that you may believe from the evidence advised or directed such arrest or imprisonment. Provided, you believe from the evidence, that said Bothwell or Fisher was not when so directing or advising, acting officially as mayor or president of the board of aldermen of said city in passing upon some part of a charge against plaintiff for an offense against said city.”

It will be observed that this instruction treats Camm, the marshal, as the principal offender, and Fisher, Bothwell and Field, accessories. Under certain conditions, then, the jury were told to find Camm guilty of an unlawful' arrest and responsible to plaintiff for a false imprisonment; and, if the other defendants advised or directed such arrest, then they too were liable. If the instruction was erroneous as to Camm, the alleged principal, it was likewise faulty as to defendants Fisher, Bothwell and Field.

If we now recall the principles of law applicable to cases of this nature, the errors embodied in the foregoing instruction are manifest. Defendant Camm was a mere ministerial officer, clothed with the duties of serving process as it came from the mayor’s office. His duties were ministerial, not judicial. His province was to execute the process regularly delivered to him for service, and not to sit in judgment on the regularity of the proceedings upon which it was obtained. “Where process, fair upon its face, is put into the officer’s hands for service, it is his duty to proceed to execute it according to its command. Out of this duty arises the necessity of protection, and the rule is well settled that for the proper service of such process the officer incurs no liability, however disastrous may be the effects upon the defendant, or however unlawful may have been the proceedings which preceded it. Mechem’s Public Officers, secs. 745, 768. Judge Oooley, *349in his valuable work on Torts, page 460, uses this language: “The process that shall protect an officer must be fair on its fase. By this is not meant that it shall appear to be perfectly regular and in all respects in accord with proper practice, and after the most approved form; but what is intended is that it shall apparently be process lawfully issued and such as the officer might lawfully serve. More precisely, that process may be said to be fair on its face which proceeds from a court, magistrate or body having authority of law to issue process of that nature, and which is legal in form and on its face contains nothing to notify or fairly apprise the officer that it is issued without authority. When such appears to be the process, the officer is protected in making service, and he is. not concerned with any illegalities that may exist back of it.”

The same rule of protection to the officer applies, whether the process issue from a court of general or inferior jurisdiction. Cooley on Torts, 464; Savacool v. Boughton, 5 Wend. 170. In Watson v. Watson (9 Conn. 140), a leading and well considered case, the court says: “Obedience to all precepts committed to him, to be served, is the first, second and third part of his duty; and hence if they issue from competent authority, and with legal regularity, and so appear on their face, he is justified for every action of his, within the scope of their command. ‘It is incomprehensible/ said Lord Kenyon, ‘to say that a person shall be considered a trespasser who acts under the process of the court.’ ”

So in Peery v. Gill (36 Mo. App. 685), we decided, that, when an order of the county court directing a road overseer to open a new road is regular in form, it will protect the overseer in its execution notwithstanding the irregularity of the proceedings of judg*350ment on which it was issued. The court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and its process will protect the officer unless the failure to acquire jurisdiction of the person appears on the face of the process, in his hands. See cases cited in opinion at page 687. Also Turner v. Franklin, 29 Mo. 285; Barr v. Boyles, 96 Pa. St. 31-36; Marks v. Sullivan, 33 Pac. Rep. 224.

Now, in the light of these well settled principles, the lower court very clearly misdirected the jury. There was evidence at the trial relating to the destruction by fire of the original manuscript ordinance which required a license tax to be paid by those following the meat market business in Rockville, still the testimony was abundant, if not conclusive, that the ordinance had been registered and preserved by the city clerk and it was introduced at the trial. There was also some evidence that when the president of the board of aider-men assumed to issue the warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff Merchant, the mayor was, at the time, within the town limits, though the testimony of the best informed witnesses tended to show the contrary and that the mayor was at the time fishing at a lake outside such limits.

However this may be, the circuit court, by the foregoing instruction, told the jury, that the warrant delivered to marshal Camm — though regular on its face and emanating from a court having jurisdiction over the subject-matter — was no justification to the officer, unless the oidinance (for the violation of which the warrant was issued) had been correctly copied into the city records and unless the mayor was at the time out of the city. This rule, if established, would impose it on a ministerial officer required to serve process, first at his peril to advise himself as to whether or not the law or ordinance had been regularly adopted and correctly transcribed into the proper records. And *351more than this where the law authorized one officer to act in a judicial capacity in the absence of another, 'such rule would require the ministerial officer at his peril to determine the exact whereabouts óf the alleged absentee. The fact that the mayor was not present at the business office and that his legal substitute was there in good faith performing the duties, with the understanding that the mayor was absent from the city, would be no protection to the marshal, serving process, if it should in fact subsequently appear that the mayor was not absent. The absurdity of this position is its own refutation.

Again, it was the duty of Bothwell the president of the board of aldermen, before assuming the duties of mayor, first to determine the fact upon which his jurisdiction attached, to wit, the absence of the mayor, Eisher. And, having so determined, its correctness can not be disputed in this collateral action. “It is a well settled principle, that when the jurisdiction of an inferior court depends upon a fact which said court is required to ascertain and settle by its decision, its decision is conclusive as against a collateral attack.” Lingo v. Burford, 112 Mo. 155.

Judgment reversed and the cause remanded. ■

All concur.
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