Gardner v. Bain

5 Lans. 256
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Lans. 256 (Gardner v. Bain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Bain, 5 Lans. 256 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1871).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This action is for false imprisonment and was commenced May 28th, 1866. The defence is justification under legal process. The jury found a verdict of fifty dollars for the plaintiff. The case comes up on appeal by the defendant from the judgment, and from an order denying a new trial.

On the 12th of April, 1866, the defendant and others made complaint in writing under oath to William Wright, a justice of the peace, as follows :

“ Columbia County, ss. : Levi Bain, Hiram Miller, Philo Melius, and' John P. Bain, being duly sworn, say: That Samuel E. Gardner of the said county, and keeper of a saloon in the town of Copake, is a disorderly person by allowing drunkenness and gambling in his saloon, by men and boys, [257]*257contrary to the meaning of the statute in such case made and provided. Wherefore the said complainants pray that he may be apprehended and dealt with according to law.”

This complaint was signed and sworn to by the defendant, and the other persons therein named, before the said justice, who thereupon issued a warrant to any constable of said county, commanding him to take the said Gardner and bring him before the said justice for examination as a disorderly person. The warrant recites the accusation in the words of the complaint. The defendant received the warrant from the justice, delivered it to a constable, and told him to arrest Gardner and bring him before the justice, which was done.

Upon the trial of the case at bar when the plaintiff rested, having shown these facts, the defendant moved for a nonsuit upon the grounds, among others :

1st. That the complaint and the warrant are sufficient to protect the parties.

2d. That if not fully sufficient the justice passed upon the same, obtained jurisdiction, and all parties are protected.

The court denied the motion and defendant excepted. I am inclined to think the nonsuit should have been granted.

The statute under which the warrant was issued provides, that “all keepers of houses for the resort of * "x" * drunkards, tipplers or gamesters * * * shall be deemed disorderly persons.” (1 R. 8., 638, 1st ed.)

It is said by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the complaint, does not accuse plaintiff of being such a person as the statute makes a disorderly person, inasmuch as it does not aver that he was the keeper of a house for the resort of drunkards, tipplers or gamesters.

This, it is true, is not distinctly averred; but there are facts stated in the complaint from which the magistrate might, perhaps, conclude that he did keep such a house; facts fairly calling upon him to judge, and which, we may reasonably conclude, in his judgment, amounted to proof of the charge that the accused was a disorderly person.

When it is said in the complaint that he was a disorderly [258]*258person, by allowing drunkenness and gambling by men and boys in his saloon, contrary to the meaning of the statute, it may, I think, be fairly inferred that the magistrate understood that such allowance was habitual, and necessarily involved the habitual resort to the saloon of the persons described, and hence that he was the keeper of a house for the resort of such persons. The facts stated are, at all events, sufficient to call for the judicial consideration of the officer, and such as fairly tend to prove the charge made in the complaint. If tin's is so, the complaint is sufficient to give the justice jurisdiction to issue the warrant, and that constitutes a justification to the defendant for delivering it to the constable and directing him to execute it.

The cases cited by the appellant abundantly sustain the doctrine above referred to. See Stewart v. Hawley (21 Wend., 552), in which the complaint was that the accused was personally engaged in circulating a memorial to the legislature on Sunday, which was, in fact, no offence, and no averment was made that he had committed any offence, except what is contained in that statement, and the court says : “ It cannot be doubted that the justice, by means of the complaint in this case, and the warrant issued thereon, acquired jurisdiction over the subject-matter and the person of the defendant, and that his errror, if any, was an error of judgment. See, also, Harman v. Brotherson (1 Denio, 537, and cases there cited); Matter of Faulkner (4 Hill, 598); Landt v. Hilts (19 Barb., 283); Stanton v. Schell (3 Sandf. S. C. Rep., 328); Von Latham v. Libby (38 Barb., 339); and Skinnion v. Kelley (18 N. Y. R., 355), all of which hold the same doctrine. The cases relied upon by the respondent are not in conflict with that doctrine. In Wait v. Green (5 Park. Cr. R., 185), it was held that the warrant recited no offence, all the statement being that the accused did willfully and maliciously unhook the traces of the harness of a span of horses then hitched to the wagon then owned or in possession of said deponentno offence was alleged, and the fact set forth pointed to none ; so it might well be said that [259]*259the affidavit recited no offence. There was nothing from which an offence could be spelled out; nothing,. as in the case at bar, tending to prove any offence, or which we have any ground for inferring that the officer adjudged sufficient proof that any legal offence had been committed.

Rogers v. Mulliner (6 Wend., 597) was the case of the defendant having obtained from a justice of the peace a civil warrant against the plaintiff, who was a freeholder, without an oath, on which he was arrested; and the question here under consideration was not in the case. Percival v. Jones (2 J. C., 49) was a suit against a justice of the peace for issuing an execution, on which Pereival, the defendant in the execution, was arrested, he not being a freeholder, and having a family, as he informed the justice, and, therefore, being exempt by statute from arrest; and it was held that the justice was liable, which is the whole case.

The appellant’s counsel quotes from the opinion in this case the remark that mere ministerial officers, who, as such, issue or execute process, cannot nor ought not to be responsible, so long as the court from which it issues has general jurisdiction to award such process; but the party who sues out the process does it ad his peril, and he is responsible.” That is undoubtedly true. If the justice had, by direction of the party in that case, issued an execution against the person of the defendant therein, such party would, no doubt, have been liable. The issuing of an execution by the justice was a mere ministerial act, in no respect judicial; so it was held in that ease. In the case at bar the warrant was the result of the judicial act of the justice, who, as we have shown, had jurisdiction to issue it. Its service was, therefore, lawful. The party and the constable were alike protected by it.

From the case of Curry v. Pringle (11 J. R., 444), the learned counsel quotes the statement that “ the rule is strict that on account of special and limited jurisdiction the party becomes a trespasser who extends the power of the court to a case to which it cannot be lawfully extended.” That rule has no application to the question under consideration in the [260]

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Bluebook (online)
5 Lans. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-bain-nysupct-1871.