40 S.E. 128 | S.C. | 1901
Lead Opinion
November 29, 1901. The first opinion was delivered by
This action was before this Court by appeal from the order of his Honor, Judge Klugh, refusing to hold that an order made by Judge Gary in an action between the same parties relating to the same subject matter should be held as a bar to the present action for damages flowing from a false imprisonment of the plaintiff at the instance of the defendant. This Court sustained the order of Judge Klugh,
"For a second cause of action: 1st. That on the 22d day of January, A.D. 1897, the defendant, without probable cause, charged the plaintiff before T.G. Disher, a magistrate in and for the county and State aforesaid, with having removed property under lien for rent, against the peace and dignity of the State of South Carolina, and procured the said magistrate to grant a warrant for his arrest, and then, without any right or authority, or cause so to do, arrested him and imprisoned him, the plaintiff, and caused him to be imprisoned and brought before the said magistrate, on the 26th day of January, 1897, whereby the said plaintiff was prevented from attending to his business, and injured in his credit, and against his will, restrained of his liberty, and the said defendant there, to wit: on the 26th day of January, 1897, again charged him, the plaintiff, with the said offense. *93 The said magistrate dismissed the said charge, and caused him, the said plaintiff, to be discharged out of custody.
"Wherefore, the plaintiff suffered damage in the amount of $5,000.
"Wherefore, the plaintiff demands judgment in the sum of $10,000 and costs."
Whereupon the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the following oral demurrer:
"II. As to a second cause of action: It alleges that the plaintiff was arrested under a warrant procured to be issued by the defendant, thus alleging that he was arrested under legal process."
After full argument, Judge Buchanan passed the following order: "The defendant, having upon oral demurrer moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the same fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, or causes of action, in that, as to the second cause of action, it alleges that the plaintiff was arrested under warrant procured to be issued by the defendant, thus alleging that he was arrested under legal process. And the plaintiff having withdrawn the first cause of action; after hearing argument of counsel, it is ordered and adjudged, that the demurrer to the second cause of action be, and is hereby, sustained, and the complaint dismissed. O.W. Buchanan, Judge presiding. 5th December, 1900."
The plaintiff then appealed from such judgment on the following grounds:
"First. Because his Honor erred in sustaining the oral demurrer to the complaint on the ground that same fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause or causes of action. The complaint does state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, as said complaint alleges: That `the defendant, without probable cause, charged the plaintiff before T.G. Disher, a magistrate in and for the county and State aforesaid, with having removed property under lien for rent, against the peace and dignity of the State of South Carolina, and procured the said magistrate to grant a warrant for his *94 arrest;' and then, without any right or authority, or cause to do so, arrested him and imprisoned him, the plaintiff, andcaused him to be imprisoned.
"Second. That the complaint does further state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, inasmuch as it charges that the defendant, Lawton, charged the plaintiff with having removed property under lien for rent, the same not being a crime under the laws of South Carolina. Hence the warrant for arrest was void, and the law is that `the persons who procured the issuance by a judicial officer of a void warrant of arrest is liable in damages for false imprisonment.'
"Third. The complaint does further state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, inasmuch as it alleges that the defendant procured the issuance against the plaintiff of a void warrant and caused his arrest thereunder, and a person who procures the issuance of a void warrant and causes an arrest thereunder, is liable in damages for false imprisonment to the party against whom it is issued, and who is arrested under it, `and the procuring of a void warrant isprima facie evidence against him (i. e., the defendant,) that he ordered and directed the arrest.'
"Fourth. And the complaint charges that Lawton `procured' the warrant to be issued, and `caused' him (Whaley) to be imprisoned."
I am impressed with the fact that the questions raised by the appeal relate to a demurrer, and that this is the method furnished under the law whereby a defendant admits as true, for the purposes of the hearing, the material facts as alleged in the complaint. Further, that conclusions of law should not appear in a complaint. While this is true, I have always been impressed with the conviction that a demurrer should not be sustained if it requires a strained construction of the allegations of fact contained in a complaint. Liberty should be shown in a construction of a complaint. Still, if with liberality of construction no cause of action is set out in the complaint, it should be dismissed and that promptly, for it is not proper that our Courts should be a *95 refuge for persons who by their very complaints show that they have no cause of action against those they summon to confront them with an alleged grievance. In studying these grounds of appeal from the order of Judge Buchanan, I have been impressed with them contrary to my first conclusion.
It has seemed to me that this Court has very nearly, if not quite so, decided that the plaintiff has a cause of action against the defendant, for when Chief Justice McIver was passing upon the appeal of the defendant from the order of Judge Klugh, as found in 57 S.C. at page 262, he said: "We are inclined to agree with Judge Gary, that the plaintiff had stated in his original complaint at least one good cause of action, to wit: the first cause of action for false imprisonment." If it was a good cause of action, a demurrer for failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action would not lie. But independent of this, upon principles of law applicable to the allegations of fact set out in this complaint, the plaintiff has set out a good cause of action. Accepting the definition of false imprisonment as set out in 12 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), at page 721: "As any unlawful detention of the person." Our own cases sustain such definition. There was no difficulty in the mind of the Circuit Judge as to this definition. His difficulty arose from the fact that in the plaintiff's complaint it was alleged that the plaintiff, Whaley, "was arrested under a warrant procured to be issued by the defendant, thus alleging that he was arrested under legal process." I think that the position of the Circuit Judge would have been unassailable if it was or had been admitted by the plaintiff "that he was arrested under legal process." I do not so understand the allegations of his complaint to make such an admission; for he alleges that the process for his arrest was void. Such process cannot be legal if it is void. The case of McConnell
v. Kennedy,
For these reasons, I think the Circuit Court judgment should be reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
Being unable to concur in the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Pope, I propose to state, as briefly as practicable, the grounds of my dissent. In the first place, it seems to me to be a mistake to suppose, as has been supposed, "that this Court has very nearly, if not quite so, decided that the plaintiff has a cause of action against the defendant." The language used by the writer of this opinion, in a former appeal in this same case, was used with reference to the case as it was then presented to this Court, and was, in express terms, applied to the first cause of action as it then appeared in the complaint. Now, however, since the first cause of action was "abandoned before trial," as stated in the "Case," the sole question is whether the facts stated in the second cause of action are sufficient to constitute a good cause of action; and surely an expression or intimation of opinion that the facts stated in the first cause of action were sufficient, cannot properly be regarded as an expression or even an intimation of opinion that the facts stated in the second cause of action were sufficient; especially when as it plainly appears that the facts stated in these two causes of action were essentially different. For in stating the first cause of action there was no allegation that the plaintiff had been arrested under a warrant, but, on the contrary, the allegations in stating the first cause of action were that "the defendant, by force, compelled the plaintiff to go with the deputies of the magistrate * * * to the office of the said magistrate * * * and then imprisoned *98 him, and then and there detained him, restrained him of his liberty for the space of two days, without probable cause and without any right or authority so to do, against the will of the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff was damaged,"c. But in the allegation of facts upon which the second cause of action (the only one now before the Court) it is distinctly stated that the defendant, without probable cause, charged the plaintiff before the said magistrate "with having removed property under lien for rent * * * and procured the said magistrate to grant a warrant for his arrest, and then, without any right or authority or cause so to do, arrested him and imprisoned him, the plaintiff, and caused him to be imprisoned and brought before the said magistrate,"c. So that the difference between the facts upon which the first and second causes of action were based, is obvious and, indeed, essential; for in the first, the cause of action was based upon the allegation that the defendant, byforce, compelled the plaintiff to go before the magistrate, and then imprisoned and detained him, restrained him of his liberty for the space of two days, without any allusion whatever to the issuing of any warrant or other legal process or to the plaintiff's arrest thereunder; whereas, the second cause of action is based upon the allegation that the plaintiff was arrested under a warrant obtained from a magistrate by the defendant, in which the plaintiff was charged "with having removed property under lien for rent." In other words, the first cause of action was based upon the allegation that the defendant had, by force, arrested the plaintiff and caused him to be restrained of his liberty, without the semblance of lawful process; whereas, the second cause of action was based upon the allegations that plaintiff was arrested and restrained of his liberty, under a warrant issued by the magistrate at the instance of the defendant. So that even if the language quoted by Mr. Justice Pope from the former opinion could be properly regarded as anything more than a passing remark of the writer of that opinion, and treated as an expression, or at least, an intimation of the opinion of *99 the Court, that the facts alleged in the statement of the first cause of action were sufficient to constitute a good cause of action, it does not, by any means, follow that the Court thought that the facts alleged in the statement of the second cause of action were sufficient to constitute a good cause of action, but rather the contrary; for the language used was expressly confined to the first cause of action; and when it was said that: "We are inclined to agree with Judge Gary, that the plaintiff had stated in his original complaint at leastone good cause of action, to wit: the first cause of action for false imprisonment" — the natural implication would be that the Court did not think that the allegations of the second or any other cause of action would be sufficient (italics mine).
It is, however, due to Mr. Justice Pope that I should frankly and fully concede that I do not understand him as basing his conclusion entirely upon the remark made in a former appeal which I have just been considering, but that independent of and aside from any such remark, he contends that, upon the principles of law applicable to case like this, the facts as alleged in the statement of the second cause of action are sufficient to constitute a good cause of action for false imprisonment. In this I cannot agree with him. In my judgment, the true rule is this: that where a person is arrested under a warrant which is apparently valid on its face, neither the person who sued out the warrant nor the officer who executed it is liable to an action for false imprisonment. To hold as it is proposed to hold in this case (as I understand it), that because the offense charged in the warrant has been subsequently held to be no crime, because no violation of the statute under which the prosecution was commenced, or to hold that a statute under which a given prosecution is commenced is unconstitutional and, therefore, null and void, would, it seems to me, establish a doctrine dangerous to the peace and good order of society. The rule in regard to sheriffs and other executive officers is well settled, that when any legal process, regular on its face, is placed in the hands of such an officer for execution, he is *100
under no obligation and, indeed, has no power to stop to inquire whether the warrant, for example, charges a violation of a statute or, if so, whether such statute is constitutional, for his plain duty is to execute the mandate of the process, and he subjects himself to no responsibility for so doing. As was held in Bragg v. Thompson,
It must be admitted that there is a conflict of authority as to this matter, but I am satisfied that the view which I have adopted is best supported by the weight of reason and authority. In 12 Ency. of Law, 2d edition, at page 754, it is said: "Where a warrant of arrest is voidable for error simply, the person procuring its issuance is not liable in an action for false imprisonment (citing quite a number of cases). That which was legally done at the time, it has been held, cannot be converted into a wrong by relation after the process has by judicial action been set aside. The rule of exemption above referred to is founded in public policy, and is alike applicable to civil and criminal remedies and proceedings, that parties may freely resort to the Courts for the enforcement of their rights without the risk of punishment for their ignorance of the law or for the errors of the Courts and judicial officers" (citing Marks v. Townsend,
Now, in this case, the complaint in stating the several causes of action (the only one which was before the Circuit Judge and the only one before us — the first cause of action having been abandoned before trial) simply charges, practically, the defendant with having procured a warrant from the magistrate, in which the defendant was charged with removing property under a lien for rent, under which the plaintiff was arrested and carried before the magistrate. There is no allegation that the defendant did any other act than simply to sue out the warrant. There is no allegation that the defendant assisted or in any way actively participated in the actual seizure or detention of the plaintiff's person, as seems to be regarded in some of the cases as important. It is true that the appellant in his supplemental argument has attempted by a strained construction of the language of the complaint, to argue that the complaint does in fact charge that the defendant actively participated in making the arrest and did in fact arrest the plaintiff himself. But such a construction of the language of the complaint is, in my opinion, wholly inadmissible, and would never have been thought of but for the exigency of the appellant. It is quite true that the rule in passing upon a demurrer is that the Court should *104 give a liberal construction to the language of the complaint, but the construction contended for passes far beyond the bounds of liberality, and really amounts to a perversion of the language of the complaint. I do not see how it is possible that any fair-minded person in reading this complaint could for a moment suppose that the intention was to charge the defendant with having actively participated in making the arrest. All that the plaintiff intended to charge and all that he did charge the defendant with having done, is simply that he sued out the warrant by going before the magistrate and making the necessary affidavit, just in the same way as every other criminal prosecution is instituted; and that, as I have attempted to show above, constitutes no basis for an action for false imprisonment. The fact that the plaintiff in his complaint alleges that the defendant, "without probable cause," charged the plaintiff before the magistrate "with having removed property under a lien for rent," cannot affect the question, for the allegation that the defendant,without probable cause, instituted the prosecution, is quite appropriate, indeed essential, in a complaint for maliciousprosecution; it is wholly inappropriate to a complaint forfalse imprisonment, and the presence or absence in a complaint for false imprisonment is wholly immaterial.
I am, therefore, of opinion that there was no error on the part of the Circuit Judge in sustaining the demurrer, and hence his judgment should be affirmed. The majority of the Court holding this view, the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
MESSRS. JUSTICES GARY and JONES concur in the dissentingopinion of the Chief Justice. *105