6 Mo. 8 | Mo. | 1839
Opinion of the court delivered by
“In the early part of the year 1J134, Warberton & King obtained a Judgment in the circuit court of Boon county against one Brewster for about the sum of five hundred dollars, and the same remaining unpaid, the plaintiffs in July 1837, by their agent Wm. L. Vaughn, took an execution on the judgment directed to the sheriff of Morgan county, of which county Woods was the sheriff, and Vaughn shortly thereafter went to the sheriff, and put in his hands the execution and went with him to find Brewster, which they did, and the sheriff arrested Brewster, andBrewster escaped from the sheriff. And this action is brought against the sheriff and his securities on the sheriffs bond to recover in debt the amount of the execution. The defendant pleaded nil debet. On this plea the parties went to trial before a jury. It appears, by the testimony of Mr. Vaughn, that in July 1837, he took the execution against Brewster and delivered it to Woods the defendant, who was then sheriff of Morgan county, and that the defendant and himself started there to hunt for Brewster. That on their road to hunt Brewster, Vaughn requested the sheriff to keep the matter a secret, for thati f Brewster should know they were after him he would ce tainly escape. That they found Brewster at the mouth of the creek Gravois, where it empties into the Osage river on the west bank of the same in a rail pen grocery. That the sheriff asked Brewster .for various kinds of property of which Brewster replied that he had none, that the sheriff then gently clapped Brewster on the shoulder, and said to Brewster, you are my prisoner; that in a few minutes Brewster turned to Vaughn, and asked him if he was agent for Warberton & King, to which he replied he was. Brewster then said to Vaughn, he wished to speak to him. They then
Vaughn says, Woods asked him for instruction before the arrest, to which he replied he had none to give, and that they could be found in -the statutes. The defendant introduced one Hix as a witness who substantially swore the same as Vaughn except that witness says he proposed to take the canoe and take Vaughn and Woods over, and Brewster being present said he had to go over aho, and that he would paddle the canoe over, to which it seems neither Vaughn nor Woods made any objection or reply. The foregoing is substantially all the evidence in the cause.
The plaintiff then asked the court to give the jury several instructions, the first of which was, that if they found that Vaughn was present at tne arrest and at the escape, and that unless they find that Vaughn expressly consented to • the same, then they must find for the plaintiff, which the the court refused, but struck out the word expressly and then gave the instruction. This alteration of the instruc-
The 4th instruction asked and refused is also founded on • the notion that the walk down- the hill was an escape, and as the facts do not amount- in law to an escape — there is no errox-'in refusing that also.
’ The 5th instruction asked by. the plaintiff was given.
The 6th instruction. asked and refused was. That if the jury believed Vaughn acted under a--general authority from plaintiffs, this did not authorize him to consent' to an escape. will say but little on this point, as the only escape I can discover in the -case was -that which took place on crossing the creek, and I see no evidence of .any kind to suppose Vaughn consented to that..
The 9th instruction asks the court to say there was no evidence in the cause that W&rberton & King had given Vaughn any authority to consent to the .escape, all these the court refused. The court might, without unjust injury to to the defendants right, have given the 9th instruction, as I cannot see any testimony that the plaintiffs gave any such authority unless such authority arises as matter, of law out of the general authority. If it does, not arise then; if then the' question had been fairly püt on that point no doubt the court would have responded as the matter’stands, I cannot see how t|je plaintiffs were injured by the refusal. As to the 7th and 8th instructions refused, there is error in refusing them but I will take together the whole matter arising, out of this refusal and also the matter arising out of the instructions'given for the defendant the first position assumed by the court in the first instruction given for the defendant is that if the prisoner escaped without the consent of the sheriff, themthe sheriff is not liable. The 2nd instruction regards the going of Brewster under the hill. As this was no escape I will pay no farther attention to it. Then in the 4th place the court instructed the jury, there were two kinds of escapes in law one voluntary and the other negligent, and that the act of assembly only made sheriffs liable for voluntary escapes. There can scarcely be a doubt that Brewsters escape from fhe canoe was a negligent escape in the sheriff The sheriff whose duty it was to take care and keep the, prisoner left him free te act as he pleased and he soon put himself in a position beyond the sheriffs power and control. This was negligence in the she riff and might have been, easily prevented. The escapewas therefore negligent in thehighestdegree. The court refused to instruct the jury, that there wai evidence of a negligent escape. If the statute only .makes a sheriff liable for a voluntary escape then the court did right to refuse these- instructions, and did right in giving those given. This brings us to the consideration of the statute on’ which the action is founded. By the 52. Sec. of the act re
-^11 case sheriff acted most impi udently to put all in the prisoners power and that -too after he had been secretty admonished by Vaughn that there was danger. — As to the question whether this construction is not severe, my opinion is that the law requires all sheriffs >to be vigilant in prisoners. Such is the language of nearly all the books on this point. In this cáse fhe sheriff was passive in doing his duty by which passiveness the prisoner escaped him, I conclude he permitted the escape and therefore he , A is liable on the statute. The 7>th and'8th instructions should have been given and those given for the defendant should ° ° have been withholden. The judgment of the circuit court jg reversec[ aac[ remanded for a new trial.”
Note. — Jupgo Napton, having, been of counsel, did not sit th cause.