Harris v. Louisville, N. O. & T. R. Co.

35 F. 116, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2425
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 35 F. 116 (Harris v. Louisville, N. O. & T. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Louisville, N. O. & T. R. Co., 35 F. 116, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2425 (uscirct 1888).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

(charging jury.) It is not the least doubtful on the-facts of this case that an enormous outrage has been committed against the plaintiff’s right of personal liberty. That which distinguishes our ■ Anglo-Saxon civilization most of all is its absolute guaranty to every citizen against arbitrary arrest. The only faith which he can have in that. guaranty comes from his reliance on the ministers of the’law to enforce it. His only remedy, short of that individual redress by combat which the-law denies him, is the verdict of a jury against the wrong-doer, and that verdict you cannot withhold, if we have the wrong-doer here: No language of mine can adequately express the just indignation which every English-speaking judge and juror must feel at the recital of such methods as the detective Anthony confesses to have taken about this arrest, even if they had been taken against McCall, the real culprit, whom he was seeking. His audacious expression upon the witness stand of his conviction that “cold iron”—as he called the manacles with which he bound the plaintiff—was the best reliance for producing that “friendliness” of disposition of his victim, of which he boasted as a result of his skill in this case, shows that he is as cruel in his instincts as he is bungling in his work. That he is incompetent and incapable of appreciating the legal rights of those whom he may be called upon to arrest in the course of his employment, and that he is thoroughly reckless of the limitations ■ imposed bylaw upon one engaged in'making arrests, is demonstrated by the facts of this case. Detective bureaus, detective agencies, and-deteefc[119]*119ive agents are useful instrumentalities in the pursuit of criminals, and every citizen may resort to them as occasion may require for that purpose. They deserve and receive at the hands of intelligent courts encouragement in that work, and protection, as fax as need bo, from the natural human predjudice against their craft. But this treatment presupposes intelligence, humane considerations of common fairness of conduct towards accused persons, and, above all, scrupulous care for legal rights as against arbitrary arrest. The wickedness of any other conduct-on their part is always rebuked'by courts and juries. Arbitrariness of method is not challenged as often as it should bo, but, whenever it is, the courts apply the remedy, unless they are themselves recklessly arbitrary and disregardful of the traditional and constitutional rights of men, born into the privileges of our race of freemen.

Now, bow was it here? A freeman was arrested, without complaint according to law, without the warrant of law, or any sort of pretense of legal procedure; was detained without authority of any magistracy; was locked up in a cell, without any commitment or other process, or any pretense of any; and was hurried away to another state, without legal arrest for that purpose, or any purpose, in irons, .to find at the end that he was not the man wanted; that there was no accusation against him, legally preferred or otherwise; and that, so far as this proof shows, the only justification for the arrest was that he had traveled on the same steam-boat upon which the real culprit was supposed to have traveled. The stupid detective had not the excuse of the slightest resemblance of the two men to each other. But, if he had taken the right man, his proceeding was none the less outrageous, and was so arbitrary and illegal that the fact of his being in pursuit- of a felon should hardly mitigate the wrong done to the rights of freemen by a willful disregard of the privilege of exemption from all arrest, except by due process of law, which means an accusation made before a proper tribunal, and a written warrant authorizing the arrest, unless it may be that, under circumstances not pretended here, there may be a temporary detention until a magistrate may be reached. In such cases it is the duty of the arresting party to carry his prisoner immediately before a magistrate of lawful competency for that purpose, to accuse him there according to the forms of law, and obtain the necessary magisterial sanction for any further detention. This temporary proceeding, without previous warrant, can only he resorted to where there is an urgent necessity for proceeding without the delay of procuring the warrant beforehand, and the detention can only last long enough to bring the prisoner before the magistrate for a proper inquiry. There was not the least excuse here for any departure from the regular method of proceeding. If the plaintiff, or the real culprit who was wanted, had been “located,” as this detective thought and reported him to be, nothing was easier than to have gone before the magistrate, made the accusation on oath, and, having procured the warrant, proceeded to the arrest. This not being done, the arrest was unlawful. So if, being otherwise arrested, ho was not immediately taken before a magistrate and accused, that was unlawful. The arresting officer cannot lock up and de[120]*120tain the prisoner to suit h:s convenience for further inquiry; nor by the prisoner’s consent can this be done. He must be taken before a magistrate for his protection there, and only by the sanction of that magistrate can he be detained, either with or without his consent. He is in no condition to consent freely, or to bind himself by a waiver of his rights, except under the protection of the magistrate. He is entitled to that protection, and without it his detention cannot be lawful, if ever he chooses to challenge the legality of the arrest. His consent may mitigate the damages, reduce them to a nominal amount, if he be intelligent and has knowledge of his rights in the premises, but never can it in the least justify the arrest, or make it lawful. Kings and regents, presidents and governors, parliaments and legislatures, are bound by this “law of the land,” and cannot change it if they would. Is it not, then, absurd for a “detective” on the witness stand to say, as Anthony did, that unless “the service,” as he and Newcome, his “manager,” call it, has this power, criminals cannot be apprehended?

But it is argued that policemen can arrest without warrant, arid that the Chicago policeman—another “detective” he was, however—was “licensed” to do this thing. That is a mistake. . Policemen do not possess the power of arbitrary arrest more than other officials do. No man possesses it, or can possess it, under our laws. Policemen may arrest temporarily and carry before the magistrate, as others may, and, owing to tfee necessity for it, they may proceed without warrant under circumstances which would not justify others in doing so. Temporary arrest without warrant previously obtained is an extraordinary procedure, which the facts must justify in any one attempting it. Policemen justify it by the circumstances surrounding their employment, and the necessity for immediate action. But when the circumstances are such, as in this case, that no such necessity exists for immediate action, the arrest with- • out previous warrant cannot be made by a policeman any more than by others. Here was a supposed fugitive from another state pursued into Illinois. He was to be arrested for a crime long since committed in that other state. He had been “located,” according to the detective’s testimony. The state of Illinois'prescribed a special procedure for that kind of arrest, and none was lawful without it. The common “law of the land” prescribes a general and ordinary method in all cases, and that was not pursued. There was no necessity for a temporary arrest without warrant. A trap was laid to arrest a man who could have been arrested upon a warrant without difficulty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 F. 116, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-louisville-n-o-t-r-co-uscirct-1888.