87 Md. 529 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit on the bond of George A. Wade, sheriff of Charles County, to recover damages for his alleged neglect in the performance of his duty, whereby the father of the equitable plaintiffs lost his life. After setting out the bond, it is alleged in the narr., that Joseph Cocking, on the 21st May, 1896, was indicted by the grand jury of Charles County for the crime of murdering his wife, Fannie Cocking and her sister (though he'was “innocent” of the same); that thereupon he was delivered to the custody of said sheriff, to safely keep until discharged in due course of law; that owing to intense excitement throughout Charles County, and to the great danger to the said prisoner from mob violence, the said Cocking had been “removed” to the jail in Baltimore City, but on the same day on which the indictment was found, the said sheriff again “removed” him to “ an old dilapidated building, used as the jail of Charles County, at Port Tobacco (which said building was afterwards superseded as a jail of the said county by a strong new building in the town of La Plata, the said new jail being delivered, ready for use, to the said sheriff on or about the 15th day of June, 1896);” that on the 22nd May a change of venue was granted to St. Mary’s County, and this caused increased excitement to prevail throughout Charles County; that the said sheriff had full knowledge thereof, yet he refused to remove the prisoner to the jail in Baltimore City, though he was requested repeatedly so to do by the said prisoner and his counsel, or to the new jail at La Plata; that not only did the said sheriff so refuse, but
The appellee demurred, the Court sustained the demurrer and the appellants appealed ; so that the sufficiency or not, of this narr., is the only question before us.
It may be proper to observe that in a case like this, whatever right of action belongs to the children of the deceased Cocking, must be such only as they may have under the provisions of Article 67 of the Code ; and to entitle them to sue under that article, the death must be caused “ by wrongful act, neglect or default,” such as would have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages, if death had not ensued. It follows from this that the matter first to be determined, is, whether Cocking himself (had not
There is no averment in the narr. that the sheriff has acted with malice, or with evil purpose towards the prisoner, or that he has personally assaulted, or otherwise maltreated him; but it is contended, with force and ability, that he should be held civilly liable, for the acts of the lawless mob, whereby the prisoner lost his life, because with knowledge of the existence of public excitement about the matter, he failed to remove the prisoner from the jail at Port Tobacco to the jail in Baltimore or the new building at La Plata, and having allowed him so to remain at Port Tobacco he removed the guards who had been stationed there to protect the prisoner, and committed the keys to an “old and infirm negro.”
From a very early day the English law has contained provisions defining and regulating the rights and obligations of sheriffs in respect to the custody of persons charged with the commission of crime. As far back as the Statute of 14 Edward III, ch. 10, the right to the custody of the gaols was “rejoined” to the sheriffs of the bailiwicks; and by the 5 Hen. IV, it was ordained-, that none be imprisoned by any justice of the peace, “ but in the common gaol.” In our own State, by statute passed in 1809, and now codified as section 16 of Article 42, no citizen committed to the custody of an officer for a criminal matter shall be removed from thence into the custody of another officer, unless by habeas corpus or other legal writ, except when the prisoner is delivered to a constable, or other inferior officer to be carried to some jail, or shall be removed from one place to another * * in order to his discharge or trial; or in case of sudden fire or infection, or other necessity, or,” &c. Mr. Alexander in his valuable work on the “British Statutes,” remarks of this section that it is “ intended to prevent the vexation and danger of protracted imprisonment which might be occasioned by the removal of the prisoner from
We are not concerned now with a case in which malicious motives are imputed to the sheriff, as for instance like that of Asher v. Cabell, 50 Fed. Rep. 818, where a United States Marshal having taken a person into his custody and shackled him, “ Knowingly delivered him over to incompetent deputies and the known hostility of mobs.’” Such conduct amounted to participation ; it imputed to the marshal the wicked purpose of permitting, if not aiding, the mob in its unlawful designs, and is wholly inconsistent with
But the case made by the narr. goes much farther than the mere safe-keeping of the prisoner. It raises the question how far a sheriff should he held liable for injuries resulting from his failure to preserve the peace from a mob. Stripped of verbiage, the substance of the narr. is that the sheriff is liable in damages for injuries to Cocking, resulting from his failure to preserve the public peace. It is not an escape, for which if it be a criminal matter, he must answer to the public: 1 Blackstone Com. 346, or if it be a civil case to the party injured, as in Slemaker v. Marriott, 5 G & J. 406; but a case where a “body of men,” unknown and ill-disposed, in defiance of law and order, forced themselves into the jail, conveyed the prisoner from thence, and hung him until he w^as dead. The narr. alleges the sheriff was warned by the negro, and was present at the final scene, and offered no resistance, but there is no charge that such passivity was with malicious intent. Such an allegation, we think, was necessary; for if with adequate means to resist the attack, he forebore to employ them, but quietly permitted the mob to have its will, no other conclusion would be possible than that he was a participant. As an officer having the jail in charge, and as a conservator of the peace wielding the executive power of the county for the preservation of the public peace, he cannot stand idly by
For these reasons we are of opinion the narr. does not set out a sufficient cause of action.
We will add, that even if it had been charged in the narr. that the sheriff acted maliciously, the official bond of that officer could not be held liable in a case like this. The liability of the sureties is that of an express contract, that the sheriff shall “ well and truly execute the office of sheriff and in all things thereto appertaining, and should well and truly perform all the duties required by law to be by him performed.” This provision, it seems now to be well settled, “ binds the officer affirmatively to the faithful execution of his office. There is no clause to cover an abuse or usurpation of power—no negative words that he will commit no wrong by color of his office, nor do' anything not authorized by law.” State, use of Vanderworker v. Brown, 54 Md. 325; 22 Am. & Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, pages 556 and 557.
For these reasons, it follows from what we have said the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
delivered the following opinion :
I did not hear the argument in this case; but having been present at the consultation, I approve in all respects of the able opinion which has been delivered. I wish to add a few words in addition to what has been so well said; not, however, as implying that the opinion needs any support.
The deceased came to his death by lynching; and his children have, as equitable plaintiffs, brought an action on the sheriff’s official bond to recover damages for his death. At the threshold of the case, we naturally inquire what is the legal foundation of their claim for damages, and under what circumstances can it be maintained. By the common law no civil action could be maintained for the killing of a freeman. A change was made in this respect by the Act of 1852, which is at present codified as Article 67 of the Code. It was enacted that if any one by his wrongful act, neglect or default should cause the death of another person, he should be liable to an action for damages ; and that this action might be brought in the name of the State for the use of the wife, husband, parent and child of the deceased. A cause of action before unknown was granted to these relatives. It depends entirely on the statute, and it must be prosecuted in the manner therein prescribed and in no other way. It is an action of tort against the individual who did the wrong; and it cannot by any sort of legal transmutation be converted into an action ex contractu. It is for a death caused by tortious means; and it has no reference whatever to a contract, or a bond, or to any responsibilities arising from them. They do not contain any of the elements of the suit authorized by the statute ; and it would be incompetent to set up any such cause of action under its terms. Suppose that the sheriff had executed and delivered to the deceased a bond with sureties, conditioned that he would not kill him ; and he had afterwards slain him with his own hand. Who could have maintained a suit on such a bond ? Most certainly it is not comprehended within the terms of the statute ; and the common law would not give damages in any form of action for the killing. I do not think, therefore, that under any circumstances an action on the sheriff’s official bond could be maintained for the death of the deceased.