118 Iowa 524 | Iowa | 1902
Notwithstanding the issues thus plainly made by these pleadings, the trial court instructed with reference to vagrancy, under the general statutory provisions, and also gave the following:
“Fifth. It is provided by the statute law of this state that all persons wandering about, and having no visible ■calling or business to maintain themselves, shall be considered vagrants, and that peace officers, upon finding persons engaged in the violation of this law, may arrest them and take them before a magistrate, to be dealt with as by law provided. It is claimed on the part of the defendant that in the arrest and detention of the plaintiff he was acting under this provision of law, and that he had at the time reasonable grounds to believe that the plaintiff was a violator of the same.”
“Sixth. The defendant sets forth in his answer a certain ordinance of the city of Burlington, under which he claims to have acted in the said arrest of the plaintiff. But you aré instructed in this connection that said ordinance is valid only so far as it states and is consistent with the said statute of the state relating to vagrants, as above explained to you; and so far as the said ordinance may attempt to extend the said law of the state, and impose additional restrictions upon citizens, it is void and has no effect, and will afford the defendant in this case no protection for any act he may have committed in violation of law.”
As defendant did not claim to have acted under the state law, but in virtue of the specific provisions of an
The defendant pleaded that plaintiff was wandering about the thoroughfares of the city, and refused to give satisfactory reasons therefor. In its ninth instruction the trial court said, among other things, “that if defendant had reasonable grounds, under the circumstances, and in the exercise of ordinary prudence and cáution, to believe, as a reasonable man, that the plaintiff was without visible calling or business by which to maintain himself, and acted in good faith upon such belief in making the arrest, you should find that the same was lawful, even-if the defendant had no formal warrant for the same.” No such issue as is here presented was involved in the case,' and the error in the charge is apparent.
The sixth instruction, which we have quoted, was also erroneous, for the reason that it was the duty of the court to tell the jury that the provision of the ordinance on which defendant relied was either valid or invalid, and not to leave it to that body to select out what it conceived, under the instruction, to be good, and reject that which was bad.
As the arrest was made without a warrant, and as defendant claimed that plaintiff was actually violating the ordinance of the city, the court was in error in submitting the question as to reasonable grounds of belief that plaintiff had committed the offense claimed. Nothing but actual damages were asked, and defendant’s plea was that plaintiff was guilty of the offense for which he was arrested. Other instructions along the same line were also erro'neous. Holmes v. Blyler, 80 Iowa, 365.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.