Bean v. Best

93 N.W.2d 403, 77 S.D. 433, 1958 S.D. LEXIS 36
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1958
DocketFile 9690
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 93 N.W.2d 403 (Bean v. Best) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bean v. Best, 93 N.W.2d 403, 77 S.D. 433, 1958 S.D. LEXIS 36 (S.D. 1958).

Opinions

SMITH, J.

Plaintiff complains of false arrest and imprisonment at the hands of the defendants, and prays for her resulting compensatory damages. The jury awarded her damages in the sum of $1,000. Asserting she had been denied a fair trial, she moved for a new trial which was denied. She has appealed.

The defendant, Glenn Best, was the sheriff of Pennington County, South Dakota, during 1955. The defendant Steele was then an owner and executive of a rental business at Rapid City in that county. On June 12, 1955, a woman who signed her name as Helen Baker, and gave her address as 417 Skyline Drive, Lead, rented a 1954 Chevrolet from Steele’s company. In the course of that transaction she exhibited a driver’s license issued to Helen Baker at Deadwood. When the car was not returned in a week as promised, Steele made an investigation at Lead and Deadwood. Information gained during that investigation and examination of a photograph caused him to believe the person to whom he had delivered the Chevrolet was the plaintiff, Zelda Bean, of Deadwood, who had deserted her husband and children on or about June 13, 1955. There[436]*436upon, he swore to a complaint charging Helen Baker with embezzlement, and predicated on his complaint, a warrant was issued and delivered .to the defendant sheriff directing the arrest of Helen Baker. Investigation and search were made on the theory that it was Zelda Bean who had rented the automobile. Several months later plaintiff was located at a boarding house in Omaha, Nebraska, where she was living and known as Mrs J. J. Coates. Acting under the warrant commanding the arrest of Helen Baker, Sheriff Best instructed officers at Omaha to arrest plaintiff. On November 19, 1955, those officers went to the boarding house, read the warrant to plaintiff and placed her under arrest. She protested that she was not Helen Baker, told him her name was Zelda Bean, and asserted her innocence of the charge of embezzlement. She was thereafter held by the sheriff and imprisoned at Omaha and Valentine, Nebraska, and in the county jail at Rapid City until the 13th day of December 1955.Throughout the period of her imprisonment she repeated her protest of innocenc'e on many occasions. That she was telling the truth was indicated by a lie detector test made on December 5th. The record details her experiences in being booked, finger printed, and questioned and in court appearances, and describes the three jails in which she was held. She also described the many extreme discomforts she suffered and the distress of mind and illness of body occasioned by her arrest and incarceration. On December 13, 1955, word came to the sheriff that one Norma Jean Cooper, alias Helen Baker, had been apprehended at St. Joseph, Missouri, and the missing Chevrolet had been traced at another point. Thereupon plaintiff was released. A preliminary hearing was never held. It was conceded at the trial, that so far as known, plaintiff never had used the name of Helen Baker, and no evidence that she had ever been known by that name was introduced. After hearing the evidence the trial court instructed the jury that plaintiff had been falsely arrested and imprisoned and directed a verdict for plaintiff and against the defendants for such compensatory damages as the jury should find proximately resulted from such arrest and imprisonment. As indicated the jury re[437]*437turned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. Other matters revealed by the record will be mentioned in connection with our discussion of particular propositions argued by plaintiff.

The plaintiff asserts she suffered prejudice at the trial by reason of the failure of the trial court to grant her motions .to strike the affirmative defense of the sheriff.

By the assailed defense the sheriff sought to justify the arrest because of his official position, the issuance of the warrant by the municipal court, the delivery thereof to him, the receipt by him of information from a reliable source which he had reason to believe and did believe that plaintiff was person intended to be named as defendant in said warrant, the arrest of plaintiff and her release as soon as he learned of the error. Before and at the trial plaintiff moved .to strike this defense. Her motions were denied. Plaintiff asserts that these rulings by the court induced the belief on the part of her counsel that the trial court was of the view that pleaded facts could be established in justification of the arrest or in mitigation of actual damages. Hence as the trial advanced they did not object when the defendants’ counsel inquired of prospective jurors if they would consider the fact that the sheriff acted in good faith and with probable cause, and when testimony was introduced in support of the allegations of the described defense.

Before the case was submitted to the jury the trial court became convinced that the facts alleged in the affirmative defense of the sheriff could neither be considered in justification of the arrest and imprisonment nor in mitigation of plaintiff’s actual damages. Accordingly, by its instructions the jury was told that plaintiff had been falsely arrested and imprisoned and it was only to determine the amount of her compensatory damages. The jury was also admonished in words as follows:

“In the examination of the jury, defendant Best’s attorney inquired of some of you as to whether you would consider the fact that the defendant Best acted in good faith and with prob[438]*438able cause, some of you stated in answer to this question that you would. However, you are instructed that it is the law that good faith and probable cause on the part of both or either of the defendants is not a defense to this action. The good faith and probable cause of the defendants or absence thereof in arresting the plaintiff is not to be considered by you for any purpose whatsoever and such good faith cannot tend to reduce the compensation (sic) damages to which the plaintiff is entitled.”

On the one hand, plaintiff complains that much of the trial was guided by the court’s original view to the effect "that the facts alleged in the sheriff’s affirmative defense could be considered both in justification of his acts, and in mitigation of damages, and during this period such an impression had become fixed in the minds of the jurors as to render them incapable of completely complying with the admonition of the trial court. On the other hand, we understand counsel for defendants to say that the original view of the court was sound, and in any event if it erred in its original rulings, those errors were cured by its instructions.

It is our holding that the conclusion of the trial court as reflected by its instructions is well grounded. The fact that the sheriff acted in all good faith and with probable cause may not be taken into account in determining the damages which will compensate plaintiff. Cullen v. Dickinson, 33 S.D. 27, 144 N.W. 656, 50 L.R.A., N.S., 987, Ann.Cas.1916B, 115. In 22 Am.Jur., False Imprisonment, § 109, it is written,

“* * * Although there exists what may be construed as a conflict of authority upon the question whether compensatory damages may be mitigated by proof of good faith, mistake, probable cause for arrest, or lack of malice, this results from a failure of the courts, in some instances, to state the entire rule where it is not essential to the particular decision, rather than from the absence [439]*439of uniformity in view.

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Bean v. Best
93 N.W.2d 403 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 N.W.2d 403, 77 S.D. 433, 1958 S.D. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-v-best-sd-1958.