Cabell v. Arnold

22 L.R.A. 87, 23 S.W. 645, 86 Tex. 102, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 254
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1893
DocketNo. 42.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 22 L.R.A. 87 (Cabell v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabell v. Arnold, 22 L.R.A. 87, 23 S.W. 645, 86 Tex. 102, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 254 (Tex. 1893).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

W. L. Cabell, as United States marshal, held a valid warrant authorizing the arrest of H. D. Arnold on a charge: of felony under the laws of the United States.

*105 That warrant was issued by a commissioner at Dallas, and delivered to Cabell, who remained in Dallas and retained the warrant, but by telegram . directed one of his deputies to go to Palo Pinto County and arrest Arnold and others named in the warrant.

The deputy and a special deputy made the arrest in Palo Pinto County, without any warrant being in their possession authorizing the arrest, and conveyed Arnold from the place where arrested to Dallas, and there delivered him to the marshal. Arnold was confined in jail one night, and then brought before the commissioner, by whom he was admitted to bail until final examination; upon which, after considerable delay, he was discharged.

This action was brought against Cabell and the sureties on his official bond to recover damages for false imprisonment, based on the proposition that the arrest and detention, until Arnold was placed under the control of the marshal, was illegal, because the deputies had not the writ in their possession at the time the arrest was made nor during the journey to Dallas.

The jury was instructed that the arrest and detention by the deputies without having the warrant in their possession was illegal, and that Arnold was entitled to recover for the arrest and detention until he was delivered to the marshal at Dallas, and under this instruction verdict and judgment went in his favor.

On appeal the same ruling was made by the Court of Civil Appeals, and from that decision writ of error is now. prosecuted.

The arrest and detention all occurred within the district in which Ca-bell was marshal, and the material facts transpiring at the time are thus stated by Arnold: “ Sisk (one of the deputies) then told me that they wanted me to go to Dallas, Texas; that General Cabell had telegraphed him to arrest me. They then told me that they would have to carry me. I asked them if they had any papers for my arrest. Sisk said he had none. They did not show me any, but Sisk said there were some at Dallas for me. Grimes (the other deputy) said, later on, that if ordered by Cabell he would arrest me as quick without a warrant as with one. I told them I had to go by home; they carried me by home and I got my clothes. I did not resist arrest. They carried me to Weatherford and carried me to Dallas.”

No facts are shown which would have justified the arrest of Arnold without the issuance of a warrant, and we have the question whether, when a lawful warrant has been issued and placed in the hands of a marshal or sheriff, his deputy may make an arrest without having the warrant in his possession at the time, without subjecting his principal to liability in a civil action brought by the person arrested.

The determination of this question must depend upon the laws in force in this State prescribing the powers and duties of sheriffs and their deputies. U. S. Rev. Stats., sec. 788.

*106 The sufficiency of the warrant that went into the hands of the marshal is not questioned, and the statutes bearing on the question of its proper execution provide, that all reasonable means are permitted to be used to effect it; that no greater force shall be used than is necessary to secure the arrest and detention of the accused; and that “ in executing a warrant of arrest, it shall always be made known to the person accused under what authority the arrest is made, and if requested, the warrant shall be exhibited to him.” Code Crim. Proc., arts. 255, 257.

When the Code of Criminal Procedure fails to provide a rule of procedure in any particular state of case which may arise, the rules of the common law must be applied and govern. Code Crim. Proc., art. 27.

It will not be questioned that the deputies had the same power to arrest as had the marshal, under the same circumstances.

It has been held in England and in some of the courts of this country, that a person may use' necessary force to resist arrest, in a case in which a warrant is necessary to authorize it, unless the officer at place and time he attempts to make the arrest has the warrant in his possession, and that such violence towards the officer will not constitute a battery or other like offense; and further, that the absence of the warrant may affect the grade of offense committed by violent resistance resulting in the death of the officer. Galliard v. Laxton, 9 Cox C. C., 127; Codd v. Cabe, 1 Exch. D., 352; Reg. v. Chapman, 12 Cox C. C., 4; People v. McLean, 36 N. W. Rep., 231; Webb v. The State, 17 Atl. Rep., 113.

In these cases warrants existed which would have authorized an arrest.

In crimes such as assault, battery, or homicide the animus with which the act is done becomes an element of the offense, and it may very properly be held,‘when the arrest of a person is attempted without warrant, in a case in which warrant is necessary, resistance was under the belief that the act was an unauthorized interference with the right to personal liberty, which every person has the right to resist by the use of such force as is necessary.

In such cases the existence of the writ, if not present, ought not to deprive the person resisting arrest of right to act and base his belief upon the facts as they then appeared to him, and to have his intent when charged with crime determined thereby.

The cases referred to in general terms declare arrest illegal, in cases in which warrant is necessary, unless the warrant be in the possession of the officer at the time and place of arrest; but they were all criminal cases, in which the animus of the party resisting was a vital question. It ought not to be denied that the law contemplates that the warrant directing the arrest of a person charged with crime will be in the possession of the officer when he makes an arrest under it; for he is required to exhibit it if called upon to do so; and this is based on a wise public policy, one purpose of which is, that the officer may have to exhibit such evidence of his author *107 ity to make the arrest as will be deemed sufficient to take from the person whose arrest is commanded all right to question the authority of the officer.

Does it, however, follow from this that the absence of the warrant at the time and place of arrest, if in fact a valid warrant was in possession of the officer commanding him to make the arrest, will entitle the person arrested to maintain a civil action as for tresspass or false imprisonment ?

The correct answer to this must depend upon a determination of the facts which confer authority on an officer to arrest a person charged with crime; for if the authority exists, an irregular exercise of it can not give cause for civil action, unless that irregularity or mode of execution be of character to work loss or deprivation of freedom of action to the person arrested which would not have followed arrest in every respect regular.

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Bluebook (online)
22 L.R.A. 87, 23 S.W. 645, 86 Tex. 102, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabell-v-arnold-tex-1893.