40 Kan. 654 | Kan. | 1889
Opinion by
This is an action for damages for false imprisonment. The demurrer to plaintiff’s petition was sustained, and from that judgment the plaintiff comes to this court as plaintiff in error. The petition, which is a lengthy one, states that the plaintiff was a resident of the city of Lindsborg; that on the 9th day of June, 1884, while he was quietly sitting in front of the Metropolitan hotel in said city of Lindsborg, sober, quiet, and violating no law of the state of Kansas or the city of Lindsborg, the defendant, Ole Amund-son, in his official capacity as marshal, approached plaintiff in a loud, rough, etc., manner, and without any authority of law placed iron handcuffs upon plaintiff’s wrists and fastened them together, and took him to the city prison, where -he was confined, and afterward he was compelled to perform manual labor upon the streets of said city.
We see no reason why the petition does not state a cause of action against Ole Amundson, the marshal. It alleges that without any warrant or authority of law he arrested plaintiff and submitted him to certain indignities, deprived him of his liberty, and compelled him to perform manual labor upon the streets. We believe there are sufficient allegations to render Amundson liable under the petition.
The principal question in this case, and the one upon which the parties have devoted a great portion of their briefs, and which evidently was the matter specially in the mind of the trial court is, whether the city of Lindsborg is liable in this action. The eighth paragraph of the petition is as follows :
“Plaintiff further says that the defendant, the city of
We believe the petition does not state a cause of action against the city. We cannot believe that it is within the power of a city to authorize its officers to perform an illegal act of the nature of the one complained of in this petition; and if the city has no power in the first place to authorize a police officer to commit such an unlawful act, it would have no power to ratify it after it had been performed. (Calwell v. City of Boone, 51 Iowa, 687.)
There is another reason which is of primary and vital importance, and controlling in this action: The police officers of a city are not regarded as the servants or agents of the city; their duties are of a public nature; their appointment is made by the city as a convenient mode of exercising a function of government; their duties are to preserve the good order and provide for the safety of the people of the city, and in these duties they act as the public servants of the state under the law, and not as mere agents of the city. Hence the relation of principal and agent cannot exist between the city and the police force in the matter complained of in plaiut-iff’s petition. We think this rule cannot be seriously questioned. (Calwell v. City of Boone, supra; Buttrick v. City of Lowell, 83 Mass. 172; Town of Odell v. Schroeder, 58 Ill. 353; Worley v. Town of Columbia, 88 Mo. 106.)
Two authorities are cited by plaintiff as exceptions to this rule, and are earnestly pressed upon us for consideration.
For the error in sustaining the demurrer of Ole Amundson, we recommend that the judgment be reversed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.