154 Ind. 599 | Ind. | 1900
This action was brought by the relator against appellee, Clausmeier, on his official bond, as sheriff, and the other appellees, sureties on said bond, to recover damages for an alleged breach thereof; A demurrer for want of facts was sustained to the complaint, and, the relator refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees.
It is alleged in the complaint that while the relator was confined in the jail of Allen county, and in the custody of said Clausmeier as sheriff, on a charge of forgery, said Clausmeier, on the 1.3th day of November, 1896, “without the consent, and against the wish of said relator, compelled him, by force of commands, and threatening physical compulsion, to come forth out of his cell in said jail into the office of said jail, and then and there, intentionally, wrongfully, unlawfully, and maliciously took the picture 'of said relator, and on the same day, without the consent and against the wish and notwithstanding the protest of relator; said Clausmeier weighed and measured said relator, and by observation of the body of said relator, and by inquiry of. him, and by means of records, obtained a personal description of relator;” that on said 13th day of November, 1896, and thereafter, said Clausmeier “maliciously intending to ruin the relator’s fair name and reputation, and to bring said relator into public infamy, disgrace, and scandal, by holding said relator up to scorn, ridicule, contempt, and execration, and to impair his enjoyment of general society by imputing and implying that said relator had committed a crime and was a rogue and a criminal, by associating the picture of the relator with the pictures of criminals, and representing the said relator as a criminal and as a person whom the police should watch, and whom the officers of the law generally should observe and watch more critically than said officers and said police do mankind generally who are not known as criminals, by placing the picture of said relator on cards which are used for mounting the pictures of
It is the duty of a sheriff to confine in jail and safely keep all persons in his custody awaiting trial on a charge of crime until lawfully discharged, and, if they escape, to pursue and recapture them. A sheriff in making an arrest for a felony on a warrant has the right to exercise a discretion, not only as to the means taken to apprehend the
In Closson v. Morrison, supra, and Holker v. Hennessey, supra, it was held that said officer might not only take any deadly weapon he might find on the'person, but also money or other articles of value found upon the person, though not connected with the crime for which he was arrested and could not be used as evidence on the trial thereof, by means of which, if left in his possession, he might procure his escape, or obtain tools, implements, or weapons with which to effect his escape.
It is evident that the substantial cause of action set forth in the complaint is an alleged libel of the relator by the appellee, Clausmeier, in the publication of said pictures and the writing on the backs thereof, by sending the same to the police department of Et. Wayne, and to the divers persons to the relator unknown. Conceding, without deciding, that if a sheriff commits an assault and battery upon a person in his custody, or fails to use ordinary care to protect him against acts of violence from others, he and his sureties are liable on his official bond to such person therefor, yet it does not follow that' a sheriff - and his sureties are liable on his official bond for libelous Avords published by said sheriff of and concerning a person in his -custody. If a sheriff have a person in his custody on a charge of crime, and orally, or in writing, uses language concerning said person AA-hich is slanderous or libelous per se, while he may -be liable to an action therefor, there is no liability on his official bond on account thereof. A person AA'ho is a sheriff in speaking or writing such language, under such circumstances, is not guilty of any misfeasance, malfeasance, or nonfeasance as such officer. He is neither performing an official duty in a proper or improper manner, nor doing any act whatever as an officer.
It is evident that said Clausmeier, in sending said photographs with the writing on the hacks thereof, was not acting