14 P.2d 177 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1932
This action was brought by plaintiff against defendants for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. The complaint contains two counts, the first *29 count being for false imprisonment, and the second count being for malicious prosecution. The second count was dismissed by plaintiff, and a trial was had on the first count. Judgment was rendered in favor of defendants Zelzah Warehouse Company and Fred Cooper and against defendant G.A. Gray, for damages in the sum of $100, and from this judgment the said Gray has appealed.
On the twenty-seventh day of October, 1924, appellant was a police officer in the city of Los Angeles, and on that day between the hours of 7:30 o'clock A.M. and 9 o'clock A.M. he arrested respondent, without a warrant authorizing him so to do. After making said arrest appellant took respondent to the Van Nuys Police Station in said city, and had him imprisoned. He did nothing further until shortly before noon of the next day, when he went to the office of the district attorney and had a complaint filed charging respondent with a misdemeanor.
According to the evidence appellant was informed by defendant Cooper, who was the manager of the Zelzah Warehouse Company, that the warehouse of said company, located in the city of Los Angeles, had been entered by a burglar and several sacks of grain were stolen therefrom. That upon investigation appellant found a trail of grain leading from the said warehouse to the vicinity of a residence where respondent was boarding, and upon examining said premises found grain sacks and grain corresponding to that taken from the warehouse.
It appears that the residence, to the vicinity of which the trail of grain led, was owned by a Mrs. Roe, and that respondent and two other men were boarding with her. Respondent was arraigned upon said charge at 2 o'clock P.M. on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1924, and thereafter was tried and acquitted.
The court found that after he had arrested respondent, appellant took him to the Van Nuys Police Station in the city of Los Angeles, and there booked him for a felony, to wit, grand larceny, and that appellant was wrongfully and unlawfully imprisoned and confined therein for a period of about thirty-two hours without a legal or any warrant for respondent's arrest, or any legal process whatever.
[1] Appellant contends that when he booked respondent at the said police station his liability for the confinement *30 thereupon ceased. He bases this contention upon the rules and regulations of the police department of the city of Los Angeles, but no rules or regulations of the said city were produced in evidence, and none are contained in the record.
In the case of Korkman v. Hanlon Dry Dock etc. Co.,
[2] Appellant testified that he took respondent to the Van Nuys Police Station after his arrest and left him there in jail, and that the next day he and defendant Cooper called at the office of the city prosecutor to get a complaint against respondent, which was secured about 11 o'clock A.M. of the twenty-eighth day of October, 1924. Section
In the case of Vernon v. Plumas Lumber Co.,
There is no evidence that any efforts were made by appellant to comply with the requirements of said section
It has been held that a delay of from one and a half to four hours in failing to take a prisoner before the magistrate, arrested by an officer without a warrant, constitutes false imprisonment. (Vernon v. Plumas Lumber Co., supra; Gomez v.Scanlan,
In the instant case respondent was imprisoned for more than thirty hours prior to any charge being preferred against him, with no opportunity of being released on bail or otherwise procuring his release. This, according to the authorities, was manifestly an unnecessary delay. Nor was there any evidence offered by appellant tending to justify this delay. Respondent was confined in jail for an unreasonable length of time as the result of his arrest by appellant. The arrest was made without a warrant, and appellant failed to take respondent before a magistrate for upwards of thirty hours after the arrest had been made. This was a plain violation of law and constitutes false imprisonment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Preston, P.J., and Plummer, J., concurred. *32