91 Iowa 559 | Iowa | 1894
II. The single contention is whether the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendants. There is no .question but that the defendant Carney, in his capacity as city marshal, did, on the evening of the fourteenth, and again on the evening of the fifteenth of December, 1890, in> the city of Oskaloosa, without a warrant, and without the plaintiff having committed, or attempted to commit, any public offense in his presence, arrest and detain the plaintiff in custody for about two hours at each arrest. If these arrests were authorized and lawful, or if the plaintiff suffered no actual damage thereby, the action of the court is warranted; otherwise it is not. Section 4200 of the Code provides that “a peace officer without a warrant may make an arrest * * * (2) where a public offense has in fact been committed, and he has reasonable ground
7 IY. It is suggested in the argument for appellees that no breach of the conditions of the bond sued upon was shown, and that, therefore, the court properly directed .a verdict for defendants. This contention is fully answered in Clancy v. Kenworthy, 74 Iowa, 743, 35 N. W. Rep. 427, wherein the bond was eonditioned the same as this. It was therein insisted that, as the constable had no lawful authority to arrest the plaintiff, his act was not in the line of his
The judgment of the district .court is reversed, and the case remanded for a retrial. Reversed.