56 Mich. 144 | Mich. | 1885
Plaintiff sued defendants for false imprisonment in arresting and causing him to be imprisoned without authority of law, and averred the various kinds of damage which arise to person, feelings and repute in such cases. Defendants at first did not put in any plea but the general issue. On the trial they were allowed to amend and justify under proceedings by virtue of the Fraudulent Debtor Act. The form of the plea is not set out in the printed record. The case was tried on the merits, and it was held by the court that no legal arrest was made out. The jury found a verdict for $1000.
The court below charged the jury that defendants were not liable for any aggravation of the imprisonment caused by the discomfort of the prisons or the conduct of the jailer and officers. The whole case depends on the validity of the arrest, and the position of defendants and their conduct in regard to it. Most of the questions concerning evidence are waived except those which have a connection with the legal responsibility of the parties.
The first question presented relates to the affidavit and its sufficiency to found an arrest upon. The statute requires the facts and circumstances to be such as to establish one or more of the grounds of complaint designated. The grounds of the affidavit are fraudulent concealment of property, and fraudulent disposal of it. It has been held by this Court that such facts and circumstances as are relied on must appear affirmatively to be within affiant’s knowledge. Proctor v. Prout 17 Mich. 473; Brown v. Kelley 20 Mich. 27; Badger v. Reade 39 Mich. 771; Sheridan v. Briggs 52 Mich. 569. The only facts alleged as showing fraud are that plaintiff admitted that he had sold his stock and would pay
The affidavit is entirely insufficient under pur decisions, and upon the trial itself there was no such knowledge or facts made out as would have made any more conclusive' •showing. But the affidavit itself was bad.
It may be remarked here that the case does not show that any suit was pending before the justice in which such an application could be made. There is no indication that such a suit was referred to in the notice of justification or proved on the trial. These proceedings can only be had before the justice who has a civil action pending before him. The plaintiff’s testimony negatived any such proceeding. We refer to this because a judgment cannot be- reversed unless error appears. The case was chiefly argued on the affidavit.
We find no testimony objected to which was not very clearly connected with the conduct of Delamater and Bassett, and bearing upon the character and motives of their action. All of the circumstances tending to explain this conduct were admissible to show its quality. If plaintiff’s testimony was true, the case was one of very aggravated malice. The time of night, and the fact of the arrest being made near'midnight and on the eve of Sunday would necessarily aggravate the grievance to a man who had no accessible means of relief, counsel or deliverance at hand. Most of the worst facts were in immediate connection with the preparation and issue of the commitment itself.
So the anomalous position of Bassett as at once counsel and judge was proper to be shown not only to show malice but to show want of jurisdiction. West v. Wheeler 49 Mich. 505. A justice cannot act both as magistrate and counsel. It would be very absurd to hold, as is urged, that in such an action as this the justice’s own entries are conclusive in his favor, and that the surrounding facts must be shut out.
So far as the charge of the court is concerned the only complaint assigned as error is the reference to the impropriety of Bassett’s acting as attorney, if the jury found he did so act. The charge
The verdict [$1000] was not large enough to indicate that the jury found anything in the charge to inflame their minds. We find no error in the record, and
The judgment must be affirmed.
The charge was as follows:
‘ ‘ One has a right to go to a justice of the peace and ascertain if he is an officer and the proper officer to bring his suit before, and the mere fact that they had talked together to that transaction, would not be sufficient evidence for you to find that Mr. Bassett was employed as such attorney, but if he acted as the attorney for Delamater, it was then highly improper that he should act as the justice in the case, and that would be one of the circumstances for you to consider in connection with the element of punitory damages.”