Smith v. Donelly

66 Ill. 464 | Ill. | 1873

Mr. Chief Justice Lawrence

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action for false imprisonment, in which the plaintiff recovered judgment.

It appears that the defendant’s horse and. carriage were left by him on the street, in the city of Alton, in the evening, the horse being securely tied to a post by a halter. Soon after nine o’clock the defendant returned to the place where he had left them and found the horse and carriage gone.' He went home, called his servant and started in pursuit, supposing the property had been stolen. Shortly before eleven o’clock he met the horse and buggy on the street, the horse sweating profusely, although the night was very cold, and having marks of furious driving. The defendant took the boys home with him, tied their hands and feet, placed them on mats in a warm room, and kept them there all night. The next morning he took them to the calaboose and made complaint before a justice. They were examined during the day and discharged towards evening.

On the trial of this suit, these boys testified that one of them found the horse and carriage moving along the street. Discovering that no one was in the carriage, he got in himself, and taking up the other boys, one after another, they drove about for several hours, professing to be looking for the owner. On this state of facts, the court gave to the jury the following instructions, being the first and second in the series:

“If a private person arrest another on suspicion of a felony or crime, he does it at his peril, and unless he can establish the guilt of the person arrested he is liable to an action for false imprisonment. And in this case, although the jury may believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff was found in the possession of said horse and carriage after the same had been missedJ,by,the plaintiff, yet, if they further believe that-the plaintiff committed the trespass and false imprisonment complained of, they must find for the plaintiff, unless they further believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff committed the crime of stealing said horse and carriage.
“If the jury further believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff came into the possession of said horse and carriage innocently, and with no intention of committing a crime by stealing the same, then the jury must find for the plaintiff, if they believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff committed the trespass and false imprisonment complained of.”

Our criminal code makes the unlawful taking of a horse from the place where it may be left by the owner, a high misdemeanor, and subjects a person guilty thereof to fine or imprisonment. If the plaintiff, with the other boys or by himself, took the horse and carriage from the post where they had be.en left by the owner, he was guilty of a high misdemeanor under this statute, and the defendant had a right to arrest him without suing out a warrant or calling an officer. While there is no probability that these boys intended to steal this property, there is a good deal of reason to think that they did unlawfully take it, and both of these instructions should have told the jury that the defendant had the right to arrest if the boys were guilty of either of these offenses, instead of confining the right to the case of stealing. The judgment must therefore be reversed.

Judgment reversed.

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