Ames v. Strain

1956 OK 234, 301 P.2d 641, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 562
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 17, 1956
Docket37016
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1956 OK 234 (Ames v. Strain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Strain, 1956 OK 234, 301 P.2d 641, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 562 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves a damage suit, which, as its issues were finally joined for trial, was for false, or “malicious”, arrest and imprisonment. It was instituted by plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, against defendants in error, as defendants, who were the then Sheriff of Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, and the alleged surety on his official bond. A third defendant, Cities Service Oil Company, is not involved herein because of the action’s dismissal as to it before trial. Our further reference to the parties hereto will be by their trial court designations.

For many years plaintiff has been the owner of royalty under a producing oil and gas lease, apparently near, or adjoining, his home in southeastern Oklahoma City. For twenty years he has believed that one or more oil companies were “stealing” oil through pipe lines to said lease.

Records introduced in this case indicate that on September 17, 1947, certain small buildings known as “meter houses” and “dog houses” of Phillips Petroleum Company, located on land near said City, were broken into and burglarized of meter charts and other personal property. One Larri-son was first arrested for the crime and signed a written statement, on the tenth day after it was committed, confessing to having broken into, and stolen from, some of such places, “reports” on various wells in the general vicinity of plaintiff’s home. In said statement, which was witnessed by the defendant Sheriff’s Deputy, Noah Richmond, among others, Larrison, implicated plaintiff by representing that he had met him about three weeks previously, that plaintiff had asked him to get the reports and promised that he would give Larrison “ * * * part of the money * * * ” they “ * * * made out of it.” Larri-son further disclosed that plaintiff had “ * * * all the rest of the reports * * * ” other than those the officers had recovered from him.

Thereafter, on October 4, 1947, upon presentation to him of a “Preliminary Information” charging plaintiff and Larrison jointly with the crime of “Burglary in the Second Degree”, subscribed and sworn to by Deputy Richmond, Justice of the Peace Evert Crismore issued a warrant for plaintiff’s arrest, and, with said warrant, said deputy arrested him at his residence on the same day. At the preliminary hearing held approximately two months later by another Justice of the Peace, Ellmore Pin-nick, plaintiff was bound over for trial in the District Court on the aforesaid burglary charge. More than a year later, or in February, 1949, the County Attorney of Oklahoma County received a letter from one, W. S. Owen, who apparently had made an investigation of this case and another one for one of the oil companies involved. In said letter, Owen expressed his belief, after such investigation, that the State would be unable to convict plaintiff on the aforesaid charge, and gave his assent to the dismissal of the two cases as to plaintiff. Thereupon, the aforesaid criminal action then pending in the District Court was ordered dismissed as to plaintiff, upon a motion filed by the County Attorney setting forth, as reasons therefor, the request of Mr. Owen, and the belief that the evidence was insufficient.

Thereafter, plaintiff instituted the present action alleging, in his Second Amended Petition, facts showing that the defendant Sheriff, through his deputy, held him a prisoner in jail five hours from 6:00 o’clock to 11:00 o’clock the night of October 4, 1947, “without benefit of bail” before 'he “ * * * was arraigned and permitted to make bail * * He further alleged, in part, that said defendant and his deputies and agents “did not act in good faith” and that his arrest and imprisonment were *643 “* * * made falsely, maliciously, * * ” and not in the discharge of any official duty, but for the purpose of deterring him from prosecuting suit in a controversy he was then having with Cities Service Oil Company “looking to” his recovery “from said company for oil taken from his premises and not accounted for.” The defendant Sheriff answered with a general denial and special denial that he was guilty of any malicious act or omission. He further alleged, in substance, that the criminal action against plaintiff was filed by the County Attorney without malice and upon evidence showing probable cause for so doing; and that, if plaintiff was arrested and placed in jail, same was done in a lawful manner after a justice of the peace had issued a warrant therefor upon reasonable and probable cause for so doing.

Upon the issues joined by these pleadings, and others unnecessary to mention, the cause came on for trial by a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, and without defendants’ introduction of anything but documentary evidence, the trial court sustained both defendants’ separate demurrers to the evidence and discharged the jury on the ground that there was nothing for them to decide, since plaintiff’s evidence had failed to establish either malice or “lack” of probable cause “upon the part of the officer * * * Plaintiff’s present appeal was perfected after entry of said court’s judgment sustaining said demurrers and a subsequent order overruling his motion for a new trial.

Because plaintiff’s brief is overburdened and encumbered with, and consists almost entirely of, rhetorical declamation, it is rather difficult to discern the precise respects in which he thinks the trial court erred. As a preliminary to what he calls his “Argument”, however, he sets forth two quotations. One is from Vol. 34, of American Jurisprudence, and concerns proof of malice. The other is Title 21, O.S.A.(O.S.1951) § 534, which makes it a misdemeanor for a public officer, after having arrested anyone on a criminal charge, to wilfully delay taking him before “a magistrate having jurisdiction to take his examination * * Plaintiff makes no effort to demonstrate in what respects, if any, his arrest by defendant’s deputy, Noah 'Richmond, was unlawful. As hereinbefore indicated the arrest was made with a warrant, which, as far as anyone contends, was duly and regularly issued by a duly elected, qualified and acting justice of the peace. This being true, said deputy’s motive in arresting plaintiff, even if there had been any evidence tending to show said officer had one, other than that of doing his official duty, was immaterial. See 4 Am.Jur., Arrest, sec. 122, Annotations 21 A.L.R.2d 643, 649; 35 C.J.S., False Imprisonment, § 27; Restatement Of The Law, Torts, sec. 122. See also the interesting discussion in Brown v. Chadsey, 39 Barb., N.Y., 253, wherein it is noted that: “The action of trespass for false imprisonment is for having done what upon the statement of it is manifestly illegal; * * * Remembering that the way one of the hereinbefore partially quoted allegations of plaintiff’s petition was phrased, the adverb “maliciously” was used in reference to, or as modifying, the word “arrest”, as well as “imprisonment”, we note in the cited case (following the quoted pronouncement) the court also said: “ * * the ground of the action for a malicious arrest or prosecution is the procuring to be done what upon the face is or may be a legal act, from malicious motives and without probable cause.” (Emphasis ours.) And at page 662 of the above-cited Annotation, the author says:

“If the complaint and supporting evidence contain sufficient facts to present a judicial question to the magistrate as to whether they show a certain criminal offense, and that question is decided by the magistrate in favor of issuing the requested warrant, the prosecuting complainant is protected by the decision.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 234, 301 P.2d 641, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-strain-okla-1956.