Gregg v. First State Bank of Bishop

125 S.W.2d 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1938
DocketNo. 4963.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 319 (Gregg v. First State Bank of Bishop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregg v. First State Bank of Bishop, 125 S.W.2d 319 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

FOLLEY, Justice.

This is a suit for alleged damages for false imprisonment filed by the appellant, C. H. Gregg, against Paul Cox as the sheriff of Nueces County, Texas, the Standard Accident Insurance Company, surety on his official bond, and the First State Bank of Bishop, Texas. At the conclusion of the evidence the trial court gave an instructed verdict against the appellant and- in favor of the defendants below, who are the appellees herein. From such directed verdict and judgment based thereon the appellant brings this appeal.

The pleadings in the case are not in issue in this appeal and we deem it unnecessary to restate them here. Suffice it to say that the pleadings are sufficient to raise the issues herein discussed.

The testimony shows that the First State Bank of Bishop is a State banking corporation engaged in the banking business at Bishop, Nueces County, Texas, and was so engaged in April, 1934,, when the acts occurred which gave rise to this suit. The principal stock holders of the bank were Pierce Harlan and William A. Harlan, who were each active directors and operators of the bank. The former was .vice president and the latter cashier. Leon *320 Hagan was assistant cashier, teller and bookkeeper. These three men conducted the business of the bank.

On .Thursday April 5, 1934, about one o’clock P. M., this institution was entered by two men with masks or shaded glasses who attempted to rob the bank with firearms. William A. Harlan and Leon Hag-an were the only two in the bank at this time. These men resisted the attempted robbery and several shots were exchanged between the bandits and the bankers. A number of shots were fired into the floor and portions of the building, breaking part of the marble fixtures and the plate glass window in the bank. Other than this, no injuries were suffered and the bandits fled without accomplishing their obvious purpose. It was either on Friday or Saturday .following that these two felons were apprehended. They immediately made written confessions in which they stated that they were the only two men engaged in the attempted robbery.

Amid the confusion attendant upon such an occurrence there seemed to be some in'timation in the minds of the local citizens if Bishop that three men were engaged in the attempted holdup. The bankers who were subjected to the assault had the impression that one of the two bandits who entered the bank was a large man of considerable height and proportions. Neither of the two men arrested came up to such purported measurements, the testimony showing that the larger of the two was only of ordinary size. The information as to the large man was imparted to the officers.

C. H. Gregg, the appellant, was an unusually large man. At the time of the attempted robbery, and at the time of the trial in September 1937, Gregg was a traveling employee for the Sherwood Music School at Chicago, interviewing music conservatories, music teachers and pupils in various states of the United States. On Sunday evening, April 8, 1934, three days after the attempted robbery, the appellant was arrested in a restaurant in the city of Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas, by the city authorities of Corpus Christi upon information 'received by them from the constable at Bishop. Such information consisted mainly of the fact that the appellant was a large man and was driving an automobile with a Georgia license, however, there is no intimation in the evidence that an automobile with a Georgia license was involved in the attempted robbery. From the restaurant the appellant was carried to the city hall and lodged in the city jail, apparently without receiving any information at that time as to why he was being deprived of his liberty.

Some time that same evening the appel-lee Paul Cox, who was then sheriff of Nueces County, Texas, in company with William A. Harlan, came to the city hall at the request of the city officials. After viewing the appellant, the testimony shows that William A. Harlan stated that Gregg looked like the “big man” who came in the bank. The appellant was then taken to the sheriff’s office in Corpus Christi where he was interrogated about his connection with the attempted robbery. The appellant testified that after considerable examination in the sheriff’s office, in which a great number of people took part, William A. Harlan said: “This is the man. That was the man that pointed the gun at me. Hold hin..” William A. Harlan denied that he made any positive identification of the appellant or that he told the sheriff to hold him. The sheriff corroborated Harlan in the statement that the latter did not tell the sheriff to hold the appellant, however, he admitted that he held Gregg on the identification of William A. Harlan. After the examination in the sheriff’s office the appellant was placed in the county jail, no complaint at this time having been filed against him and no warrant having been issued for his arrest and detention. Prior to his being placed in the county jail the appellant told the sheriff he was in San Antonio at the time of the attempted robbery with a “Judge Matthews,” and gave the sheriff several names of people to call to verify this alibi.

On Monday morning, April 9, 1934, the sheriff, Paul Cox, and the chief of police at Corpus Christi took the appellant out of jail and carried him, over appellant’s protest, to the town of Bishop, some thirty-two miles distant. Before leaving for Bishop the appellant requested the sheriff to take him before a judge urging that he was sure any judge ’ would give him a chance to prove his innocence of the purported charges. Such constitutional right was denied him. During all this time the appellant was vigorously proclaiming his innocence, protesting against his incarceration and asking the sheriff to call several people in San Antonio in regard to his whereabouts on the day of the attempted robbery.

*321 Upon arrival in Bishop, the appellant was taken to the bank, according to his testimony and that of the sheriff, although both William A. Harlan and Pierce Harlan denied that appellant was brought in the bank that morning. The appellant testified that he was confronted in the bank by both of the Plarlans and by Leon Hagan, and that a great throng of people gathered around him. In this he was completely corroborated by the testimony of the sheriff. While in the bank, according to the testimony of the appellant, the sheriff asked what he should do with the appellant; that William A. Harlan was about to speak up when he was interrupted by Pierce Harlan who answered: “Hold him. We will send a man down.”

After being carried to another place in Bishop and to the town of Kingsville, apparently in the hope of further identification, the appellant was returned to jail in . Corpus Christi. That afternoon Leon Hagan went to Corpus Christi and signed a complaint dated April 9, 1934, charging the appellant with the attempted robbery on April 5th. Some time during the day of April 10, 1934, a warrant was issued on this complaint by Honorable Cullen W. Briggs, who was then Justice of the Peace of Precinct No. 1, Nueces County, Texas, but who later became judge of the district court in which this case was tried, he having presided in such trial. The warrant was served upon the appellant about four o’clock P. M. on this same day while the appellant was in jail. Gregg testified that at the time this warrant was read to him he asked to be taken before a magistrate, but that such right was denied him.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Price v. Durdin
207 S.W.2d 228 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1947)
Castillo v. Canavati
152 S.W.2d 785 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregg-v-first-state-bank-of-bishop-texapp-1938.