83 Mo. App. 301 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
This suit is on the official bond of the sheriff of Stoddard county, for false arrest and imprisonment
The evidence on the part of plaintiff is that he had been employed as a laborer at a stave factory in Stoddard county for about two months prior to his arrest; that he was arrested in the afternoon of July 30, 189J, by defendant Evans, without warrant, and taken to Bloomfield, the county seat, and at about 5 p. m. of the same day was committed to jail and held there for four or five days; that when first arrested he was not informed of the charge against him, but was informed the same afternoon and before he was incarcerated; that when questioned by the sheriff and prosecuting attorney at the latter’s office before being committed to jail, he told these officers that his name was John Hartley; that he had worked at Poplar Bluff before coming to Stoddard county, was never in Gasconade county, and that he came from the State of Illinois to Missouri; that he was 24 years of age, had never been in jail before, and had never before been accused of crime.
On the part of the defense the evidence is that the defendant, before making the arrest, saw and read over several times the following advertisement, printed and published in the Universal Detective Agency and Sheriff and Police Record, published at Indianapolis, Indiana, to wit:
“John Hartley.”
“$600. Reward — Will be paid for the arrest and detention in any jail in the United States, until an officer can*304 come for him, of John Hartley, who is wanted, for the murder of ¥m. Clark, at Mt. Sterling, Missouri, September 27, 1895. Age about 33 years; height 5 feet 10 inches; weight about 140 pounds; complexion dark; hair black, short black mustache; drinks whiskey and chews tobacco. Of the above reward $250 is offered by the Governor of the state of Missouri, $250 by Gasconade county, Missouri, and $100 by Charles Clark. He is supposed to be in Meredith, Georgia, or somewhere in Texas. A man named George Moody left with him. Send all information to
“H. J. Jett, Eeuerville, Missouri.”
Evans the sheriff testified that the plaintiff, except as to age, fitted the description given in the 'above advertisement, and that believing he was the man wanted, he made the arrest, and telegraphed the arrest to II. J. Jett, the day after the arrest; that in answer to his telegram he received the following telegram, to wit:
“Herman, Mo., July 31, 1897.
“To J; A. Evans,
“Is it John Hartley you arrested ? If so, hold him.
“August Meyer, Prosecuting Attorney.”
The following other telegrams were read in evidence.
“Bloomfield, Mo., July 31, 1897.
“To August Meyer, Prosecuting Attorney, Herman, Mo.
“Tes, it is John Hartley, don’t deny his name — -but denies the charge — fills description O. K. Come at once. Can’t hold long.
“James A. Evans, Sheriff, Stoddard Co.”
“Herman, Mo., August. 1, 1897.
“J. A. Evans, Bloomfield, Mo.
“The sheriff is on his way to Bloomfield, Mo.
“August Meyer.”
The deputy sheriff of Gasconade county, in company ■with another party, went to Bloomfield, and on seeing the
“Instruction No. 1.
“You are instructed that if you find for plaintiff you will assess his damages at such sum as from the testimony he is entitled by reason of his arrest and imprisonment and the consequent disgrace and humiliation sustained by plaintiff on account thereof,, if you believe he was, in fact, arrested and imprisoned and thereby humiliated and disgraced, and the amount of your finding will not in any event exceed the amount claimed in the petition, to wit, the sum of $5,000.”
“Instruction No. 2.
“You are, instructed that if you find from the evidence that plaintiff was arrested by defendant as alleged in his petition, and that said arrest and imprisonment was without probable cause therefor, as defined in instruction No. 1, then you will find for plaintiff.”
“Instruction No. 3.
“The court instructs you that the defendant in this case, Jas. A. Evans, is bound to know the law, and if you find from the evidence that on or about the thirtieth day of July, 1891, he, as sheriff of Stoddard county, Missouri, arrested plaintiff and committed him to jail, as alleged in his petition, under the belief that plaintiff was guilty of the crime of murder*306 in Gasconade county, Missouri, you will find for plaintiff unless you further find that in making said arrest he (Evans) had reasonable grounds therefor, and by reasonable grounds is meant the possession of such facts and circumstances in relation to the guilt and identity of the plaintiff of said charge of murder by Evans as to reasonably induce such belief in a person of ordinary prudence in the same situation.”
The court refused the following instruction asked by defendant:
“The court instructs you that J. A. Evans was the legally acting sheriff of Stoddard county, Missouri, at the' time of the arrest of plaintiff. And if you believe from the evidence that said sheriff had seen in a public print that a man had been killed ip Gasconade county by one John Hartley and a reward had been offered for the arrest and return of said John Hartley to said county for trial for the commission of said crime, and if you further believe from the evidence that defendant had a reasonable suspicion that plaintiff was the party who had committed said homicide, then defendant was justified in arresting plaintiff without a warrant and committing him to jail and detaining him for a reasonable time to investigate said charge. Although you should believe that said plaintiff had committed no felony or that no felony had been committed by anyone, and if you so believe your verdict must be for the defendants.”
The court of its own motion gave the following instruction:
“The court instructs the jury that a sheriff has the right to arrest without warrant, when he has good reason to believe and does believe that a felony has been committed, and that the person arrested has been guilty of the felony. By felony is meant any crime for which a person may suffer death or be sent to the penitentiary. If, therefore, Evans, from all the information he had at the time, was justified in*307 believing a felony had been committed in Gasconade county, and that the plaintiff Hartley, was guilty of the same, then Evans had the right to arrest Hartley and hold him a reasonable time, even though it should turn out that no felony had been committed or that plaintiff was guilty of no felony.”
To all of which appellants duly excepted.
I. Appellants contend that pecuniary loss or physical injury are the only elements of damages in this kind of an action, and that it was error for the court to tell the jury to take into consideration the disgrace and humiliation sustained by reason of the imprisonment. The law does not limit the damages for restraint of personal liberty upon such narrow grounds as contended for by-appellants; nor does it enumerate all the elements of the damages to be assessed by a jury for an unlawful restraint of that liberty, but leaves the damages entirely to the jury. Loss of time, or physical injury, when proved, properly enter into the computation of damages, but can never be the sole and only elements of the damages. The indignity, the humiliation, the shame, the mental suffering and disgrace caused by an unlawful arrest and imprisonment, are the chief elements of the damages, and it is not error to tell the jury to have regard to these in assessing the damages. 1 Sedgwick on Damages [8 Ed.], p. 70. The injured party in such cases (says Sutherland), even though the act complained of be done without malice, “is entitled to recover the expenses reasonably incurred to procure his discharge from the restraint, for loss of time, interruption of his business, and for suffering bodily and mentally which the wrong may have occasioned.” In Hewlett v. George, 13 L. R. A.-682, where the plaintiff had been wrongfully confined in an insane asylum, it was held that “the damages were not confined to the expense of procuring a release and the time lost, but extended to mental suffering, humiliation, shame, disgrace and injury to reputation suffered thereby.”
II. The court gave an instruction limiting the right of a sheriff to arrest without warrant, when he has good reason to believe and does believe that a felony has been committed, and the person arrested has been guilty of the felony; and refused to instruct that if they believed a felony had been committed and the sheriff had a reasonable suspicion that the plaintiff was the party who committed the felony, then the sheriff was justified in making the arrest without warrant. “A private person has a right to arrest on suspicion of a felony'without warrant, but to justify the arrest he must be prepared to show that a felony had been committed, and that the circumstances under which he acted, were such that any reasonable person acting without passion or prejudice would fairly suspect that the person arrested committed or was implicated in the crime,” says the supreme court of Michigan in Malinemi v. Gronlund, 92 Mich. 22. The distinction in past felony or treason, between officers and private persons arresting without' warrant, is this, says Mr. Bishop: “Should