Felonicher v. Stingley

76 P. 504, 142 Cal. 630, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 992
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3518.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 P. 504 (Felonicher v. Stingley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Felonicher v. Stingley, 76 P. 504, 142 Cal. 630, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 992 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

Action to recover damages for trespass brought against defendant Stingley, as constable, and the other defendants, sureties on his official bond.

Plaintiff recovered judgment,' from which this appeal is taken on the judgment-roll. The complaint alleges: “That on or about the sixth day of January, 1902, at Sanger, in the county of Fresno, said defendant, Samuel Stingley, acting in his official capacity as such constable as aforesaid, and without authority of law, and without cause and without right, willfully, maliciously, and knowingly did make and cause to be made upon Mrs. Josephine Felonicher, the plaintiff, an assault and trespass in this: That the said defendant, Samuel Stingley, did with force and violence compel said plaintiff, a married woman, to take off her clothes and submit to an examination of her person, and did willfully, maliciously, and knowingly, and without cause and without right, seize, and take away from her person and premises the following described property: Four rings, one chain-bracelet and locket and one knife, all of which caused plaintiff grievous mental suffering and humiliated her in the presence and. minds of her neighbors to her great damage in the sum of one thousand dollars.”

A demurrer was interposed to the complaint upon the ground, among others, that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The demurrer was overruled and defendants answered denying the trespass complained of and denying that any of the alleged acts were done by Stingley in his official capacity.

The court found the facts in the language herein quoted from the complaint, and found no additional facts.

The action is brought upon the bond or obligation set forth in the complaint. The sureties undertook that defendant Stingley would well and faithfully perform all official duties *632 required of him by law. The rule is elementary that sureties are to be held according to the strict terms of their contract, and such contract cannot be extended by implication, so as to make them liable beyond its terms. (Boas v. Maloney, 138 Cal. 106; Murfree on Official Bonds, sec. 302.)

The weight of authority and the rule in this state is, that the officer and his sureties are responsible for every abuse of his official powers. When he has in his hands a valid writ, and under cover of the writ, claiming to act under it, he goes beyond it and commits a trespass, his sureties are liable. If, having a writ of execution or attachment against one person, he seizes and takes the property of another, claiming to act in his official capacity, he acts at his peril in going beyond the authority of the' writ, and hence is not faithfully performing the duties of his office. (Van Pelt v. Littler, 14 Cal. 200; Lammon v. Feusier, 111 U. S. 17; Murfree on Sheriffs, sec. 945.)

The sureties of a sheriff or constable are not liable for trespasses committed by such sheriff or constable not under color of office, nor in the line of official duty. For malfeasance and extra-official acts, the surety is not responsible. (Murfree on Official Bonds, sees. 460, 461, and cases cited; Mechem on Public Office and Officers, sec. 238.) Therefore, in order to charge the sureties in this case, it is necessary to allege and prove that Stingley, while attempting to perform some official act in the general line of his official duties, committed an unlawful trespass upon plaintiff or her property. The complaint does not state any facts which tend to show that Stingley was acting under color of office. It is not alleged that he had any writ of any bind, or any order directing him to do anything. It is stated that he was acting in his official capacity as constable, but such allegation does not state any fact,—only a mere conclusion. If he was acting in his official capacity,—that is, by virtue of his office, and in the discharge of its duties,—it could not be that he was acting at the same time without authority of law. If he was acting in his official capacity, he was faithfully performing the duties of his office, and his sureties would not be responsible. If he was acting by virtue of some writ or order which he had the right to execute as part of the duties of his office, and under color of such process went beyond it and committed % *633 trespass, his sureties would be liable. But the complaint states that acting in his official capacity he acted without authority of law. It is evident that the statement is felo de se. He was not acting in his official capacity if he was acting without authority of law. If the complaint in this case is good, it would be sufficient as against sureties to allege that a sheriff or constable went upon the highway and officially kicked the plaintiff or committed other trespasses upon her.

In Lawton v. Erwin, 9 Wend. 234, it was held that a statement in the complaint in an action upon a constable’s bond, that the constable did not levy the amount of the execution or take the body of defendant, is not good, without averring that the defendant in the execution had property upon which a levy might have been made, or that his body might have been found.

A case similar to this is very ably discussed in Hawkins v. Thomas, 3 Ind. App. 399, where it was held in an action against the sureties on the bond of a United States marshal that the complaint failed to state a cause of action because it was not shown that the injury complained of was the result of any official misconduct, the averment in the complaint being, that the marshal and his deputy were acting illegally but under color of office. It was there said: “It was incumbent on the appellee to allege and prove a breach of some duty imposed by the terms of the bond.” Then, after citing leading cases in which sureties have been held liable, the court said: “These cases are unquestionably in harmony with a large majority of the decisions upon that subject, and in each of them the unauthorized act of the officer is characterized as colore officii. But the officer was acting under a valid writ, and by virtue of the mandate of the law, and the trespass consisted in an abuse of the power vested in him, and not in the performance of an act which the law did not enjoin upon him at all. It was an instance of exceeded rather than usurped power. Such acts are within the express line of the surety’s undertaking—that his principal shall faithfully discharge the duties of his office according to law. But when an officer, though he assumes'to act as such, commits a wrong under circumstances where the law does not impose upon him any duty to act at all, the wrong is not a violation *634 of any official duty, and consequently is not embraced within the sponsorship of the surety.”

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Bluebook (online)
76 P. 504, 142 Cal. 630, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felonicher-v-stingley-cal-1904.