104 So. 260 | Ala. | 1924
The first appeal is reported as Phillips v. Morrow,
There was verdict and judgment for plaintiff, a motion for a new trial was overruled, and due exception reserved.
It should be stated at the outset that the effect of the first decision was that the warrant under which plaintiff was arrested and detained was void, and that the surety on defendant official's bond was not liable for punitive damages.
The fact and the incidents of plaintiff's imprisonment without the confines of Coffee county would have been material evidence under appropriate counts for abuse of process. Wilson v. Orr,
In Wilson v. Orr, supra, this court said that under a count declaring for a malicious arrest without probable cause and the general issue, the defendant could prove "the plaintiff was legally arrested by Wilson, and in doing so he used no unnecessary force." Under the written instructions requested by defendants as to each count of the complaint, we come to a reconsideration of the effect of the former decision, and its effect on the last trial. We have noted that on the former trial the general affirmative charge was not requested by the defendants. Such charges were requested on the last trial as to the several counts.
It has been generally declared that in order that process may afford protection to the executive officer executing the same (1) the issuing court must have had jurisdiction of the subject-matter on which it acted in issuing said process (Edmunds v. State ex rel. Dedge,
The statute, coming to us unchanged from the Code of 1852, § 2284, meant this by the use of the words "is regular on its face and is issued by the competent authority." Wilson v. Sawyer,
Be it understood that, under sections 6 and 143 of the Constitution, and sections 6278, 6694, 7227, 7519, and 7588 of the Code of 1907, as to criminal jurisdiction of the circuit courts the exercise of that jurisdiction and the fixing of the place at which causes must be tried, the provisions of section 6 of the Constitution as to providing for a change of venue, those of section 7140 of the Code of 1907, dispensing with the necessity of allegation of venue and the regulation that on the trial it must be proved that the offense was committed in the county, a distinction exists and is observed as to the jurisdiction (1) of the subject-matter (Ex parte Lancaster,
In the instant case there was no variance between the affidavit and the warrant, each paper correctly charging the crime of burglary in Coffee county. The affidavit and complaint was before an officer having jurisdiction to consider the affidavit and to issue the process thereon. Did the fact that a return thereof was contrary to statute render the issue of the warrant void? The law declared the proper return. Davis v. McCary,
Pertinent to a consideration of this question (whether the warrant was void on its face or merely irregular), it should be observed that the early cases declared that if the court has jurisdiction "of a cause," and merely proceeds erroneously, an action does not lie against the party who sues out the process, or "the officer or minister of the court who executes the precept or process." The Case of Marshalsea, 5 Coke's Rep. 67, 76; Mills v. Martin, 19 Johns. (N.Y.) 7; Reynolds v. Orvis, 7 Cow. (N.Y.) 269; Reynolds v. Corp. of Doglass, 3 Caines (N.Y.) 267, 274. If the court had no jurisdiction of the cause, the whole proceeding was held to be coram non judice; and that an action would lie against the officer executing the process was the holding in Duckworth v. Johnston,
The subject of void and irregular process in criminal cases has often been considered by this court.
In Crosby v. Hawthorn,
The case of Stowers Furniture Co. v. Brake,
In Rhodes v. King,
In Howard v. State,
In the case of Heard v. Harris,
In Broom v. Douglass,
"* * * 'That Henry Broom [the plaintiff here] has threatened to trespass upon and occupy a certain parcel of land situated in this county, and known as the Dick Mitchell or Dick Bouldin place, of which affiant has the past two or three years been in possession under claim of ownership;' that on this affidavit the justice issued a warrant of arrest for said Broom; that Broom was arrested on this warrant and brought before the justice; that on the hearing of the cause the justice adjudged that said Broom should be committed to the county jail for 12 months, unless he gave a bond to keep the peace. * * *"
And the court there said of the affidavit:
"* * * We are of the opinion that the affidavit made before the defendant as a justice of the peace, though wholly insufficient to charge any criminal offense, or to justify the issuance of the warrant of arrest, nevertheless was clearly an attempt to charge a threatened criminal trespass on affiant's land. And, stating facts which were elements of that offense, and of legal significance and value in its proof, a colorable case was presented which fairly invoked the justice's judgment as to their sufficiency for the purpose intended. The issuance of the warrant was therefore a judicial act, involving his inquiry and affirmative conclusion as to his power and authority to do so, for which he cannot be held liable, if he acted in good faith."
In Ferguson v. Starkey,
"Of such administrative regulations as the state live stock sanitary board is authorized to prescribe the courts do not take judicial notice, unless they are of such wide application and established duration as to have become a part of the common knowledge of well-informed persons at least. Georgia Pacific Ry. Co. v. Gaines,
Concluding, the court there said:
"The general designations on the face of these warrants of the offenses for which they *142 have been issued were sufficient to show violations of law if rules and regulations of the state board were operative in Jackson county at the time. Whether such rules and regulations were in effect, and, if so, over what territory effective, and so whether warrants should issue as for violations of the statute, were questions to be determined by the issuing magistrate, and upon his determination the sheriff might safely rely. It follows that the complaint showed on its face no actionable wrong on the part of the sheriff, and that the demurrer to the several counts was properly sustained."
This should suffice to show that the holding on last appeal, that the process issued in this case was "invalid" and "void," was not in accord with the previous announcements of this court as to irregular and void process. If it be necessary to consider the general authorities on the subject, we may note that in his work on Public Officers, Mr. Mechem (sections 745, 768), said that it is the duty of the officer, in the exercise of his ministerial authority, to serve irregular or voidable process, regularly delivered to him for service, and not to sit in judgment upon the regularity of the proceedings upon which it is obtained; and in so doing he is protected by law in executing, according to the tenor of the process which is delivered to him for service, if it is "fair upon its face." The expression, "fair upon its face," is defined (Cooley on Torts, 460), as process "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." (Italics supplied.)
We have sought to show, by the analogy to be found in our cases, that the warrant in question was not void, but merely irregular on its face in the return required to be made. It was issued (upon a verified complaint [Code 1907 § 7584], signed by an official) by the circuit judge having authority (Code 1907, § 7519; Const. § 143) to issue the warrant of arrest for the defendant in another county for the crime of burglary (Code 1907, § 6415), alleged to have been committed therein (Const. § 143; Code 1907, § 6278; Strain v. Irwin,
The irregularity was in respect to the required return, an error of judgment of the circuit judge issuing the same which did not render the warrant void as stated in the former opinion. Phillips v. Morrow,
The affirmative charge, requested in writing by the defendants, as to counts 4, 6, and 9 of the complaint, should have been given — the same declaring for wrongful and unlawful arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff.
It should be said that it is insisted, and was adverted to in the former opinion, that the provisions of the statute, section 5871 of the Code of 1907, related only to justification under process regular on its face, and is the only declared rule of justification in the premises. It should be observed, of that statute, that it was of force and effect during the time of the rendition of most of the authorities we have cited, and at the time of the decision in Ferguson v. Starkey,
The instructions of the court in oral charges, to which due exceptions were reserved, showed the last trial proceeded on the assumption that said process was void and not merely irregular. In this there was error.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, MILLER, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER, J., dissent.