116 Md. 441 | Md. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action for false arrest and imprisonment brought by the appellee, William Waldron, against the appellant, the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad Company. The case was tried before a jury -upo!a\ssues joined on plea of not guilty, and the result was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant has appealed.
There are twelve bills of exceptions in the record; one relates to the ruling of the lower Court on the prayers for instructions to the jury, and the other eleven to the rulings of the Court upon questions of evidence.
The plaintiff offered three prayers, the defendant, four. To the granting of the plaintiff’s prayers the defendant
The defendant’s fourth prayer asks the Court to instruct the jury that under the pleading and evidence in the ease there was no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover; and by the other rejected prayer of the defendant (the third prayer’) the Court was asked to instruct the jury “that there is no evidence legally sufficient to prove that any of the agents or officers of the defendant corporation, the Yew York, Philadelphia and Yorfolk Railroad Company, was ever authorized by said company to do or commit any of the acts complained of by the plaintiff, or that the said defendant company ever adopted or ratified said' acts of said officers or agents, and the verdict of the jury must therefore be for the defendant.”
The plaintiff testified that on Saturday, the 30th day of Yovembor, 1907, while holding a ticket entitling him to passage upon the defendant’s steamer and over its road and its connecting roads from Yorfolk to Philadelphia, he hoarded its steamer at Yorfolk, from whence he went to Cape Charles, at which point he entered the car of the defendant. That after taking a sea therein two young men, strangers to him, but whose names as he afterwards learned were MoDorman and Freeze, entered the car, and after being seated a short while, one of them took from his pocket a bottle of whiskey. They drank from the bottle and then passed it to a number of others in the car, including the witness, who' drank from it. The witness stated, however, that it was the first drink he had taken that clay and would not have taken that only they insisted on it. YcDorman and Freeze then separated, Mc-Rorman taking a seat to himself with his head leaning up against the window. "While in this position Freeze approached
S. Upshur Long, the sheriff of Somerset county, referred to in plaintiff’s testimony, on behalf of the plaintiff, testified, “That he received a message to go to what is called the midnight train that night (the occasion referred to in plaintiff’s testimony) and that he -went there as sheriff somewhere between twelve and one o’clock. That on his way to the depot he met John H. Packard, at that time bailiff of Princess Anne, who was also going out to the depot, he having been asked, as he stated, to go to the station for the same purpose for which the sheriff was going. "When they reached the depot the conductor inquired if the sheriff or police were there, and upon being told that they were they were invited by the conductor aboard the train and were shown “this fellow Freeze that he had a charge against,” also Waldron, the plaintiff, whom the conductor said he wanted to hold as a witness. Thereupon Waldron, the plaintiff, was taken to and in jail by Mr. Packard. That the plaintiff put np fifty dollars as bail for his appearance as a witness when needed.
Packard, who at the time of the occasion referred to in the testimony above stated, was bailiff of Princess Anne, and at the time of the trial of the case below was in the employ
Oscar M. Jones, telegraph operator at the station, testified “That he received a message in reference to said occurrence from Conductor Truitt, and after phoning it up town the message was destroyed, but to the best of his knowledge the message was ‘Have officer arrival of Ho. 50 at Princess Anne.’ ”
William G. Truitt, offered by the defendant, testified that on the 30th day of Hovember, 1907, he was and had been for twenty-six years conductor on defendant’s road. That he remembered the occasion when on the 30th day of Hovember, 1907, there was a disorderlyjoassenger. Freeze, on his train. That he first learned of the misbehavior or misconduct of this passenger when at or near Hassawadox, a station about nineteen miles above Cape Charles. That at the time of the assault made by Freeze on jVIcDorman he was in the Jim Crow car. That when he returned to the car in which Freeze was seated he was pointed out to him by the brakeman. He spoke to Freeze of his misconduct and told him that he would have to put him off the train and that he would also have to pay for the window glass, which he did. He accused many of those in the car of robbing him, but finally quieted down. T^ater, however, he charged the plaintiff with robbing him, about which time he, the conductor, sent a message from Hailwood to the operator, at Princess Anne, in which he said: “Please have officer at train on arrival of Ho. 50.” Fi’eeze continued his disorderly conduct until he got near to Kings Creek, Md., among other
In our opinion, the Court below committed no error in rejecting the third and fourth prayers of the defendant.
There is in this case evidence sufficient to go to the jury tending to show a false arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff procured by the servant of the defendant under circumstances that render the defendant liable therefor to the plaintiff.
“False imprisonment is a wrong akin to the wrong of assault and battery, and consists in imposing by force or threat an unlawful restraint upon a man’s freedom of locomotion.” Cooley on Torts, 196; Gillingham v. Ohio R. R. Co., 35 W. Va. 595. And as was said in Kirie & Bon v. Garrett, 84 Md. 409: “False imprisonment consists in the unlawful detention of one against Ms will.” “It is the unlawful restraint of a man’s liberty by imprisonment or by words and array of force.” Tomlin v. Hildreth, 65 N. J. Law, 438.
The plaintiff, with others, while a passenger upon the train of the defendant, witnessed the disorder produced by the misconduct of another, passenger, a stranger to him, in the car in which the plaintiff was seated. The plaintiff was in no way a party to the disorder, nor was he in any wise responsible therefor. The conductor after deciding to prosecute the party creating the disorder, obtained from the plaintiff his name and address so that he could communicate with him should he be needed as a witness in the prosecution of the offender. The plaintiff expressed Ms willingness to appear as a witness when wanted and notified, but notwithstanding this readiness and willingness on his part to attend the trial and testify against the accused when needed, he was
This Court in the case of Hall v. Somerset County, 82 Md. 620, quoted approvingly from Loud Hall, 2 H. P. C. 282, in which that author, in enumerating the compulsory methods by which witnesses can be brought in to testify, states that “The more ordinary and more effectual means (employed for such purposes), the justices or coroner that take the examination of the person accused, and the information of the witnesses, may at that time, or at any time after, and before the trial, bind over the witnesses to appear at the sessions, and in case of their refusal either to come or to be bound over, may commit them for their contempt on such refusal.”
This Court in that case (Hall v. Somerset County) further stated that section 13 of Article 35 of the Code, which provides for the payment of fees for witnesses committed to prison upon their failure to find security for their appearance to testify against the accused, “clearly recognizes the power of a magistrate to commit a witness in order that his attendance to testify against a person accused of crime may be secured, after the witness fails to give such reasonable security for his appearance as may be demanded of him.”
But whatever may be the power and authority, if any, of an officer under extreme conditions and circumstances, to hold temporary, in restraint of his liberty, a person as.a witness to testify against an accused' person, such authority or power 'does not exist in this case. The nature and character i>f the offence and the conditions and circumstances thereof and the relations existing between the parties do not warrant the arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff, procured as it was by the servant of the defendant, in order to secure his attendance as a witness at the trial of the accused party.
“The illegality of the arrest and the unlawfulness of the detention are indispensable elements in this form of action.” Kirk & Son. v. Garrett, supra. In our opinion, these indispensable elements are found to exist in this case. But by the defendant’s rejected third prayer the Court below was asked to instruct the jury that there was no legally sufficient evidence that the conductor, servant of the defendant company, was ever authorized by the defendant to commit the acts complained of or that such acts were ever adopted or ratified by the defendant company.
We will now consider the ruling of the Court in refusing to grant this instruction. The plaintiff having purchased a ticket from the defendant company entitling him to transportation from Eorfolk, Va., over the lines of the defendant and its connecting lines, to the City of Philadelphia, he became a passenger upon the car of the defendant, and was such a passenger at the time of the acts .complained of in this case. As a passenger he was entitled to all the rights, privileges and protection which the law accords to passengers and subject to the duties and liabilities which the law imposes on
In the case, of Stewart v. Brooklyn and Crosstown R. R. Co., 90 N. Y. 590, the Court there said: “The trial Court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint on the ground that the defendant’s servant in assaulting the plaintiff (a passenger in the car) was not acting within the scope of his employment, but attacked the plaintiff to gratify some wicked and malicious purpose of his own. Had the person assaulted been one to whom the defendant owed no duty, the dismissal of the plaintiff’s complaint would probably have been correct; but the rule which applies in such a case has no application as between a common carrier and his passenger, in such a case a different rule applies. And this Court in the case of Maryland and P. R. Co. v. Tucker, 115 Md. 43, said in the case of Stewart v. Brooklyn and Criosstown R. R., supra, “it was held that a carrier undertakes to protect his passengers while, being conveyed, against- the misconduct- of its own servants while engaged in executing the contract.”
In the case of Haver v. Central R. R. Co., 62 N. J. 282-, which was an action brought against the carrier for the assault made by a brakeman upon a passenger, the Court there said: “The case now before the Court depends not upon the law of liability of a master for the acts of its servant, but upon the duty imposed on the railroad company in the carriage of the plaintiff as a passenger. The duty of a carrier of x^assengers is to safely and securely carry persons who bear to it the relation of passengers. The carrier is under obligations to carry the passenger therein to the end of his route, to protect him against assault and other ill-treatment by those employed by and under the carrier’s control while on the way.”
In the case of The New Jersey Steamboat Company v. Brockett, 121 U. S. 637, Justice Hainan, speaking for the Court, said: “The plaintiff was entitled in virtue of his contract as passenger to protection against the misconduct or
And this Court in the case of the B. and O. R. R. Co. v. Cain, 81 Md. 105, held that, “If the plaintiff had been guilty of no breach of the peace, his arrest at the instance of the conductor was unlawful, and having been made in the defendant’s depot whilst the plaintiff, a passenger, was still entitled to be protected by the defendant against assaults and injuries by the defendant’s own employes, if wrongfully made by or at the request of the defendant’s own servants whilst they were in and about the performance of their prescribed duties, the master would be liable.”
Prom these authorities, it will be seen that the defendant company is liable for the acts of its conductor in ordering and procuring the arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff, which were committed in the course of his employment, even though he was not authorized to do so by the defendant company ; and thus the third and fourth prayers of the defendant, as well as the testimony offered in the ninth exception, were properly rejected.
The only objection urged against the plaintiff’s first prayer is, that it assumes there was no evidence that the conductor wired the agent at Princess Anne to have “officers” meet the train at that point, when, as the defendant contends, the evidence was that he wired the agent to have “officer” meet the train, etc. The conductor testified that the word “officer”
In the second prayer of the plaintiff the jury is instructed that “it is the duty of the defendant to use all reasonable care to protect the plaintiff from personal injury and insult.” This, the defendant contends, is stating an abstract proposition of law based on a state of facts not shown to exist in this case. It contends that no personal injury was done or insult offered the plaintiff by reason of his being held and detained under conditions and circumstances which we hold herein constitute false arrest and imprisonment. We can not adopt this contention of the defendant that no personal injury has been done or personal insult has been offered the plaintiff by his false arrest and imprisonment. Not only was it a personal indignity and insult, but a personal injury as well. “A personal injury includes libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction and malicious prosecution; also an assault, battery, false imprisonment, or other actionable injuries to the person.” Words and Phrases, Yol. 6, page 5341.
The first eight and the tenth and eleventh exceptions found in the record are to the rulings of the Court in permitting the plaintiff to show that he was taken to the j ail and security demanded of him by the officers holding him as a witness under the direction of the defendant’s servant, and the fact that he deposited with said officers, as security for his appearance as a witness, the sum of fifty dollars. The plaintiff in this case was taken info the custody of the officers upon the request of and at the direction of Truitt, the conductor of the defendant company, to hold him as a witness to testify against Breeze, who was at the same time arrested upon the request and direction of Truitt charged with disorderly con
The point is made by the defendant that the judgment in this case is erroneously entered for the reason that interest is allowed thereon from the date of the verdict and not from the date of the rendition of the judgment. This question was not presented to or passed upon by the Circuit Court, but the point is made for the first time in this Court; thus the question is not properly before this Court to be considered by it. Anders v. Devries, 26 Md. 222.
Prom 'what we have said we find no errors in the rulings of the Court below and will therefore affirm its judgment.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to the appellee.