219 N.W. 877 | Minn. | 1928
1. Olson was informally appointed marshal of the village by the common council. The recorder gave him his star and he took an oath. He was given a pair of handcuffs. He did not furnish a bond and was not required to do so by the council. There is some claim that he was appointed under L. 1927, p. 441, c. 321, providing for the appointment of officers to police dances, and anyway that was his work. But it is not important. He was known to be an officer in the community. He wore a star marked "Village Marshal." He policed the dance hall at the village. The defendants knew that he assumed authority at the dance hall. They seem to have questioned his authority outside the hall. The trouble was in a fair sense at the dance and at a place where Olson could act as an officer. Under the authorities he was a de facto officer. Abbott v. Norman,
2. Effect is given to the acts of de facto officers, for reasons of public policy, in protection of third persons and the general public; and a de facto officer cannot invoke the doctrine in aid of his personal interests. 5 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed.) §§ 8013-8014. The defendants urge that since Olson was no more than a de facto officer he cannot claim any rights. And he does not. The prosecution is by the state and not by Olson. One who assaults a de facto officer in resistance of an arrest is as much liable as if the officer were de jure. Brown v. State,
3. The assault occurred at the close of a dance in the village on October 15, 1927. Defendants asked that the jury be instructed that they might return a verdict of assault in the third degree. Their claim is that the jury might find that there was nothing but a brawl and not an assault in the resistance of an arrest by a public officer. Going over the evidence very carefully, we are of the view that the only offense committed, if any, was an assault of Olson while making an arrest. The jury might have found either way upon this issue, but there was no ground upon which it could find assault in the third degree. The statute definitely makes an assault by one in preventing an arrest, whatever be its nature, an assault in the second degree and not in the third degree. The court was right in denying the requested charge.
Order affirmed.
HILTON, J. took no part. *568