Bailey v. Wiggins

5 Del. 462
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Del. 462 (Bailey v. Wiggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Wiggins, 5 Del. 462 (Del. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinions

The Court.

We supposed when the case was opened, that the pleadings charged this defendant with an illegal act done by him as a justice of the peace ; but on inspecting the declaration, we find it a simple declaration for an assault and battery, and false imprisonment, with a count for an assault and battery merely. To such a declaration the matter now offered in evidence is designed as a justification, and ought to be so pleaded. The court, (a majority of them) therefore, rule out the evidence, though they have had some hesitation whether it might not be considered in mitigation of damages.

Judge Harrington.

Misled as I was by the introductory remarks of the plaintiff’s counsel, into a supposition that the record in this case disclosed the official character of the defendant, and complained of its illegal exercise, I concurred in admitting proof of acts which are of an official character only. Among this kind of evidence a transcript from this defendant’s docket as a justice of the peace has been admitted; evidence that the plaintiff was held to bail by the defendant as a justice of the peace; proof that he delivered to a constable a paper requiring him to arrest the plaintiff; proof to show that this warrant was issued without a previous complaint against the plaintiff; and further proof that this defect was after-wards sought to be supplied by taking the complaint of Mr. Murphy, after the arrest of the party accused. How, in answer to this evidence, the defendant offers to prove that Murphy’s complaint was made in due form, before any process was issued for the arrest of the party, and that the defendant upon that complaint issued a warrant. That the only participation of the defendant in the plaintiff’s arrest, was in the doing official acts, would seem of necessity to require the proof of those acts by the record, and that opens the whole proof. If the arrest of the plaintiff is the assault complained of, it was no otherwise made by this defendant than in the issuing a warrant, which being proved by the record, the same record will show on whose complaint it was issued; and, if this defendant imprisoned the plaintiff, it was only by a holding to bail, and commitment, both of which are proved by the record. I am of the opinion, then, both *465 as in reply to the plaintiff’s evidence; and, generally, that this evidence la admissible.

The testimony was excluded; and exception prayed and granted. This closed the case on the evidence; and it was argued at length before' the jury by Mr. Rogers, for plaintiff, and Mr. Bates, for the defendant. In the argument Mr. Bates contended that the transcript put in evidence by the plaintiff, of Justice Wiggins’ record, to show the warrant for plaintiff’s arrest, was itself evidence of the justification, and must be considered as evidence for all purposes. Mr. Rogers denied that it could go in justification, unless a justification had been pleaded, but admitting it all, it proved no basis for the warrant of arrest; as it showed no complaint upon oath of probable cause. He read from the Constitution this invaluable protection against illegal arrest; and argued that the Constitution had been violated in the person of his client by this arrest, taking even the whole transcript in evidence.

Mr. Rogers also stated that he made the objection to the evidence under the pleadings in the case, without desiring to exclude evidence of justification; and that he would not have resisted a motion for amending the pleadings, by introducing this plea under the provisions of the Revised Code. He did not seek,—he never sought,—to try a case upon technical issues; and would have yielded to a motion for amendment under the wholesome provisions of the recent act for amendments. He then argued the case on the transcript generally, to show that the offence charged against Bailey was a mere trespass, and did not justify an arrest as for a criminal charge. And he claimed damages by way of warning and example for the great wrong done in this case to an unoffending stranger.

Chief Justice Booth,

in charging the jury, explained the nature of the action and the issue to be tried. Every unlawful restraint of a man’s liberty is an imprisonment; and a false imprisonment includes an assault. The question was, whether the defendant in this case was guilty of the assault and battery and imprisonment of the plaintiff. The plea was not guilty, and under it, the defendant could not justify his acts; the only question to be tried being whether he was guilty or not guilty of doing the act; and not whether he was justified in doing it. He who commands or counsels another to do an act of trespass and imprisonment, becomes a party in the doing it. In regard to the transcript offered in evidence by the plaintiff and admitted, the court would not restrict the jury in its use; but *466 would say to them, that if any part of it was relied upon as evidence, the whole might be considered by them, according to their estimate of its value; they being the judges of all the facts, as well as the credit of witnesses.

The plaintiff had a verdict for $176 75.

And a rule was laid to show cause why a new trial should not be granted, for the exclusion of proper evidence, and because the verdict was against evidence.

Mr. Bates, in support of the rule.—1. As to the rejection of admissible evidence:—The declaration is in the general form of trespass and false imprisonment. It does not show what was the particular form of trespass. That was left to be disclosed at the trial; the plea was not guilty. At the trial, the case attempted to be proved was that defendant, acting as a justice, and as such having a general justification to issue process of arrest, had issued a warrant for the arrest of plaintiff, without a complaint under oath giving jurisdiction in the particular case. The evidence offered by the defendant and rejected by the court, was that the warrant was founded upon a complaint under oath. Was it admissible ? I maintain that it was on three grounds :

1. In bar of the action, under the plea of not guilty; being matter strictly in denial of the plaintiff’s case. It is agreed that the general issue restricts the defendant’s proof to matters which are in denial of the plaintiff’s case; but what maters are in denial of the plaintiff’s case, and therefore within the general issue and the range of proof admitted by it, is always a question depending upon the particular case which the plaintiff seeks to establish. Under the same form of action cases vary in their essential facts, and the general issue as applied to one or another of them, will involve totally distinct questions. Thus, if the trespass proved was a distinct assault by defendant, it is made out by simple proof of such assault; and the general issue applied to such a case raises no other question. If the trespass were an assault by command of defendant, proof of such command as well as the assault, becomes essential to the plaintiff’s case and may, therefore, be disproved by the defendant under the general issue.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Del. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-wiggins-delsuperct-1854.