53 N.J.L. 197 | N.J. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action for false imprisonment. The defendant was, at the time in question, the receiver of taxes in the city of Newark, and he justifies the alleged wrong on the ground that it was lawful for him
At the trial the judge ruled that, under such circumstances, the arrest was legal. ,
The only question that it is now .necessary to decide is, whether an officer can lawfully make an arrest by virtue of process which he has not with him at the time ?
We think the authorities are adverse to the affirmative of this proposition. They are all to the effect that the officer making the arrest- must be in a situation to show, if required, the authority under which he is acting. It is the legal right of the citizen when arrested that such shall be the situation, and, therefore, when such situation does not exist, the arrest is a legal wrong. I find no countenance whatever, either in the decisions or in legal theory, that- such proceedings are legal until the person taken has demanded an inspection of the warrant; the true doctrine is, that the proceeding is wrongful ab initio.’'
One of the cases cited in the well considered brief of the counsel of the plaintiff in error is that of Codel v. Cabe, reported in 1 Exch. Div. 352, and which is, in all respects,, in point. The proceeding was by information charging the defendant with assaulting one of the constables, &c., in the execution of his duty. The defendant had been charged with a trespass in the day time, in search of conies, and as he-had failed to appear to answer such charge, a warrant had been issued for his apprehension, addressed to the constables-of the parish, &c., of whom the prosecutor was one. The case states that there was no evidence that the defendant made
The case was cited with approval by the Supreme Court in the decision in Webb v. State, 22 Vroom 189, and in which latter case the same principle was applied to a similar state of' facts.
As there appears to be a concensus of judicial opinion upon the subject, it is deemed superfluous to look through the authorities in detail. The investigator will find the relevant decisions copiously collected and excellently digested in volume 7 of the American & English Encyclopedia, tit. “False Imprisonment,
Let the judgment be reversed.
■ For affirmance—None.
For reversal—The Chief Justice,.Garrison, Mague, Reed, Scudder, Van Syckel, Brown, Clement, Smith, Whitaker. 10.