114 Me. 137 | Me. | 1915
Two actions for false imprisonment of the minor plaintiffs against two police officers of the city of Lewiston, and Frank Martin, Jr., who made a complaint to the other defendants, as police officers of the city of Lewiston, that the plaintiffs had stolen a pig from his pen, whereupon the plaintiffs were arrested in the night time by the defendant officers, and the next forenoon the complainant, claiming that his pig had been put back in the pen, refused to sign a complaint for a warrant, and the parents of the boys being present at the marshal’s office, the plaintiffs were discharged after signing the paper introduced in evidence at the trial. The cases were tried together and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in both cases and assessed nominal damages. The plaintiffs bring the cases to this court upon exceptions.
The first exception relates to the discharge of the plaintiffs by the defendants without bringing them before the court, at their request and with the consent and knowledge of their parents, as claimed by defendants. This exception is urged by the plaintiffs in their brief as follows: “If these boys, plaintiffs, were for any cause wrongfully arrested by the defendants, a right of action accrued in their favor against the party making or causing the arrest to be made. A right of action is a property right. The parents of the minors, as natural guardians, had no authority or legal right to discharge, waive or release any property right of their wards. The boys being minors could not legally discharge, waive or execute and give any valid release, binding against themselves.”
The plaintiffs having testified as to what took place at the time of their release, it was proper for the defendants, as stated by the court, to “show all the circumstances of the release,” and the plaintiffs could not, by their version of what took place, prevent their testimony being given as to the release. The court having ruled upon the admissibility of the evidence, and instructed the jury as the plaintiffs claimed the law, there is no merit in this exception.
The second exception was to the admission of the signed releases offered by the defendants and signed, in the Terriault case by the plaintiff’s father only, and in the Drapeau case by the plaintiff and his mother, which it is claimed released and discharged the officers from all right of action for the injuries suffered and sustained by reason of the arrests. They were not admitted as barring the plaintiffs’ claims for injuries prior to their release, but as bearing upon the question whether the plaintiffs were allowed their liberty with their request or consent? The court instructed the jury: “Now, so far as the releases are concerned, I have this to say. I have admitted them in evidence against objection. They are objectionable in some features, that is to say, they cannot be weighed for
The court having ruled that if the arrests were unlawful, the property rights of the plaintiffs were not affected by the releases, if the jury found that the arrests in the first instance were lawful, then there was the other branch of the case whether the giving of the boys their liberty was with their consent, and for that purpose of course the releases were admissible for what the jury might find them worth under the instructions of the court. But there is a fatal objection to the exception. The releases are not printed in the record,"and we have no knowledge of their contents except that one was signed by one of the plaintiffs and his mother, and the other by the father of the other plaintiff. We have no right to rule upon the admissibility of evidence that is not printed in the record, or the substance of it given so that we can intelligently pass upon its admissibility. The court cannot consider an exception to the admission or exclusion of a writing unless the writing is made a part of the bill of exceptions. Of course formal parts of deeds, executions and duplicates, writings, etc., need not be printed. An admission by counsel in the bill of exceptions, as stated in Dyer v. Tilton, 71 Maine, 413, 414, will preserve the rights of the parties, but this court cannot, by a mere reference to a paper as a deed, bond, release, or any other writing by it’s common name, pass upon its admissibility. As said in Webster v. Folsom, 58 Maine, 233, “Whatever a party expects to have considered as part of the case, must be copied. We have nothing before us to show
The third and last exception was to an instruction to the jury as to the effect of a release from arrest of the plaintiffs without taking them before the court, as contained in the following extract from the Judge’s charge: “And that brings up the second part of this case which has been tried here, whether these boys were let go by the officers under such circumstances as to justify them. They would be so far as the plaintiffs were concerned, the boys, they would be justified in letting them go if the boys asked it, or their parents asked it. Because the parent is the legal custodian of the boy, and is entitled to his custody. Whether they were doing their duty to the State would be another proposition. But so far as the boys are concerned, if the boys or their parents solicited their release, and it was done with their full knowledge and consent, irrespective of the releases which were made and which have been introduced in the case, then the officers can justify. But unless they have either taken the boys into court to be discharged there, if necessary, or have let the boys go at their own request, or the request of their parents, with their knowledge and consent, then they cannot justify, but are liable in such case for the original arrest.”
The plaintiffs contend that it was the duty of the officers, having arrested the plaintiffs, to take them before the court withiirH reasonable time, and that, as they were not taken before the court, and no warrant procured against them for the offense for which they were arrested, the officers are liable for the arrests. This proposition is not sound. If the officers had arrested the plaintiffs-for a misdemeanor, then it would have been their duty to have procured a warrant within a reasonable time for the alleged offense and taken them before the court and placed them on trial, and for a neglect to so do unless the plaintiffs released them from that
In this case, under the instructions of the court, the plaintiffs lost no rights by the officers discharging them without taking them before the court, for, if the arrests were unlawful in the first instance, there was no release of their rights. If it was lawful, up to the time they were released there were no damages, and to have continued to hold them in custody, procured a warrant and taken them before the court for a hearing, after the suspicion of
Exceptions overruled.