34 Md. 176 | Md. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action by the appellee, a licensed, nightman in the city of Baltimore, against the appellants, members of the police force in that city, of trespass and false imprisonment.
There being no pretence that there was any malice on the part of the appellants, and the arrest and detention being attended with no circumstances of violence or aggravation, the instruction of the Court, instead of being what it was, should have been, that the appellee, on his own testimony, was not entitled to recover. The question was simply whether the appellee had been arrested in the act of violating the ordinances and legal regulations of the city, for which he was liable to be arrested. That he was, at the time of his arrest, in the act of violating the health regulations, he admitted in his own evidence. Whether what he was doing constituted a nuisance, in the common law sense of that term, was immaterial; for, if his act was unlawful and subjected him to arrest, the appellants, as policemen, were justified in arresting and detaining him for hearing. The appellee was found
And as 'to the power of arrest and detention without warrant, under the circumstances, we think there can be no question. Express power is conferred upon the police force to prevent crime and arrest offenders. It is true, the statute does not say without warrant; but that is necessarily implied in all cases where constables and police officers can make arrests, without first obtaining a warrant at the common law. Such officers, by the common law, have full power to arrest and detain the offender, where the offence is committed in their view, and this, whether the offence be one at the common law, or created by statute or police regulation. Indeed, without such power, it would be impossible to execute the various police regulations of a prohibitory or preventive character/ For it is obvious, if it were necessary before arresting an offender, caught in the act of offending, that a magistrate’s warrant should be obtained, many offences and violations of the police regulations, would be accomplished and the offender, if transient and unknown, would escape altogether. This is not contemplated either by the statute conferring the police power, or the common law. The authorities are abundant and full, not only to establish the right, but which declare it to be the duty of the officer, in such cases, to arrest and detain the party found offending until a proper hearing can be had. 2 Hale, P. Cr., 89, 97; 4 Hawk., P. C., ch. 12, sec. 20; ch. 13, sec. 6; 4 Blk. Com., 292; Lawrence vs. Hedger, 3 Taunt., 14; Rex vs. Bootie, 2 Burr., 865; 1 Chit. General Practice, 617, 618; City Council
There is no doubt of the right of the city authorities to establish and enforce the regulations in question, and that being so, the only effectual way of enforcement was the preventive one of arrest. The right to detain for hearing was the legal and necessary consequence of the right to arrest; and as the party was released without any unnecessary delay, on his own recognizance, we cannot perceive that he has any ground whatever for his action. The judgment must therefore be reversed.
Judgment reversed.