Cochran v. Toher

14 Minn. 385
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 14 Minn. 385 (Cochran v. Toher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochran v. Toher, 14 Minn. 385 (Mich. 1869).

Opinion

By the Court.

MoMillan, J.

This is an action for false imprisonment. The defence set up in the answer by the defendants is, .that they were informed that a felony had been committed in the county of McHenry, and state of Illinois, to-wit: the lai’ceny of a certain horse or horses, and that the person so committing said felony had just prior to the time mentioned in the complaint (13th of July, 1867, the time of the plaintiff’s arrest) escajied from the jail of said county; that the defendants relying upon the information given them by the sheriff of said county of McHenry, and other persons, suspected, and had reason to suspect, that the plaintiff was the identical person who committed said felony, and who escaped from the jail of said county; that thereupon, believing such information to be true, and acting thereon as was their duty to do, defendants arrested said plaintiff, and notified the said sheriff.of McHenry county, and held the plaintiff to await the requisition of [388]*388the Governor of said state of Illinois; and the defendants deny each and every allegation in the complaint.

Upon the trial of the cause, the plaintiff offered as testimony in chief, evidence of his good character, which was objected to by the defendants, and rejected by the court.

The evidence was properly excluded. The plaintiff’s character was not put in issue by the pleadings, and no attempt was made to impeach it on the trial. Under these circumstances, until attacked, the plaintiff must rely upon the general legal presumption of good character. Gregory vs. Thomas, 2 Bibb, 286; 2 Stark. Ev pt. 1, p. 303, N. B. 306, N. 1; 2 Greenl. Ev., Sec. 458; 1 Hilliard on Torts, 402. The evidence by the defendants of threats made to the officer by the brother of the plaintiff after his arrest, was admissible for the purpose of justifying the defendants in putting the plaintiff in irons.

The important questions in the case arise upon certain instructions given by the court to the'jury, and the refusal of the court to instruct in accordance with certain requests submitted by the plaintiff.

The court charged the jury oralty, ‘‘that the question whether the plaintiff was kept an unreasonable time without taking him before a magistrate, or whether the defendants had reasonable cause for making the arrest, were questions for the jury to determine ; the question as to what was reasonable time, or reasonable cause, being in either case a question of fact for the jury, but that if the defendants without any necessity put the plaintiff in irons, they would be liable; and the question as to whether such necessity existed, was for the jury.”

The court also refused to charge, “ That detaining a person by an officer without a warrant under arrest for five days, without taking him before a magistrate,, a magistrate [389]*389being accessible, and there being nothing to prevent his being taken at once before a magistrate, is detaining such person an unreasonable time, and renders the defendants liable.” It is a familiar rule, that all questions of law are to be determined by the court, and questions of fact are within the exclusive province of the jury. Ordinarily there is but little difficulty in ascertaining what questions are for the court, and what for the jury; but there are cases in which it is somewhat difficult to determine whether the conclusion is one of fact or of law. This difficulty frequently arises, when the inquiry is as to questions of reasonable time, reasonable cause, due diligence, probable cause, and others of a like character. Abstractly, these are questions of law, just as the terms larceny, robbery, and assault and battery are, for “ it is a question of legal judgment and discretion, to pronounce whether the facts, as found by a jury, do or do not satisfy the legal expression.” But the latter terms, and others of the same class, are absolutely defined and determined in the law by general rules applicable to all cases ; so that upon the finding by the jury of the specific facts in each particular case, the law draws the conclusion that they do or. do not constitute the particular offense charged. In all such cases, therefore, it is for the court to determine as a question of law, the sufficiency or insufficiency of the facts to constitute the offense; so, in some cases, the law determines what shall or shall not be reasonable time, or cause, and the like. As in the case of a bill of exchange, where the law requires notice of dishonor to be given within a reasonable time, if it appears on the facts proved in evidence, that the case is one falling within a rule by which the law itself prescribes and defines what shall be considered to be reasonable time, the question is a mere question of law, for the law itself, from the mere res [390]*390gestae, makes the inference that the time was reasonable. 1 Stark. JEJv., 516. But in other instances questions of this character depend on such an infinite variety of circumstances, that by reason of the impracticability of prescribing any general rule applicable to the facts of each particular case, the inference in law follows the inference in fact, and in such cases, the time will be reasonable, or the cause probable in point of law, according as the one or the other is reasonable or probable in point of fact. “ Hence it follows that the test for deciding whether such general inference as to reasonable time, probable cause, &c., be one of law or of fact is this ; if the court in the particular case can draw the conclusion by the application of any legal rules or principles, the conclusion is a legal one. * * * But if, on the other hand, the circumstances be so numerous and complicated as to exclude the application of any. general principle, or definite rule of law, the further inference is necessarily one of mere fact, to be made by the jury. In other words, the rules of ordinary practice and convenience, become the legal measure and standard of right.” 1 Stark. Ev., 514, 516, n. i. 517.

Applying this rule to the case at bar, we find as to the question whether the defendants had reasonable cause to believe that a felony had been committed, and that the plaintiff had committed it, depends upon whether certain representations were made to them by the person representing himself as a sheriff in Wisconsin; whether they had reason to believe that this person was such officer, and that such representations were true ; whether the communication from the sheriff of McHenry county, Illinois, was received by the defendants, conveying information of the escape of prisoners from the jail in that place ; whether the description of one of the escaped prisoners contained in the hand[391]*391bill answered to the plaintiff; whether the photograph of the escaped prisoner bore such a resemblance to the plaintiff as would reasonably induce the belief that the latter was such prisoner, and a great variety of other circumstances, to which we need not advert. The inquiry in this case is not as to whether a felony was actually committed in Illinois, and that the plaintiff actually committed it, and escaped from the jail in that State, but whether the defendants had reasonable ground to believe that such were facts.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Minn. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-toher-minn-1869.