Harris v. Sims

124 So. 325, 155 Miss. 207, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 276
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1929
DocketNo. 27961.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 124 So. 325 (Harris v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Sims, 124 So. 325, 155 Miss. 207, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 276 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The state of Mississippi, for the use of Titus Harris, a minor, seventeen years of age, filed a declaration against A. M. Sims, a justice of the peace in Lee county, Mississippi, and the sureties on his official bond, for damages for the false imprisonment, therein alleged, of Titus •Harris by Sims, the justice of the peace.

There was a verdict of the jury for seventy-five dollars and a judgment therefor entered by the circuit court, and the plaintiff filed his motion for a new trial on the ground of the inadequacy of the damages, which being overruled, an appeal is prosecuted to this court by Titus Harris, the plaintiff in the court below. A. M. Sims and the sureties on his bond prosecuted a cross-appeal.

On the night of October 5, 1927, the appellant, Titus Harris, in company with two other young men, relatives of the appellant, and bearing the name of Harris, was attending the fair which was in progress in Tupelo. Sims was a justice of the peace, and he and J. W. Francis, a deputy sheriff, were engaged in policing the grounds. About eleven o’clock of the night in question the officers say that these three men, with locked arms, were taking in the midway, staggering through the crowd, and being thus linked together, were pushing aside the people they met, and testified that the three young men were drunk and disorderly. Whereupon the officers arrested the three young men, Sims taking charge *213 of one, and Francis arresting the other two, and took them to the jail, where they were locked in a cell with six or seven other men. The cell was small, and there were only four bunks on which to sleep. Some of the other parties in the jail were said to be very drunk and boisterous, while some were sick and vomiting*.

About eight o ’clock the next morning these three boys were released on bond. The officers had no warrants, and there was evidence tending to show that the justice of the peace directed the arrest of this man by Francis, or that he procured the appellant in this case to be arrested.

Titus Harris, the plaintiff, testified that he was sober, that he had not drunk anything, and there was much evidence tending to show that he was not drunk, or drinking. A short time before the arrest, he had been in company with young ladies, who testified that he was not drinking, as did other witnesses who observed him at the time, immediately before the arrest, and during* the night.

The officers making the arrest, and other officers, were positive that this young* man was drunk. The testimony of the plaintiff tended to show that several times that night relatives offered to make bond, but that the justice of the peace refused him bond, saying that he would be released to them when he was sober.

The pleadings interposed by the defendants set up the two-fold defense: First, that the officer sued did not arrest the plaintiff or cause him to be arrested; and, second, that the plaintiff was arrested at a time when he was drunk in a public place in the presence of the officer, or that a breach of the peace was threatened, or attempted, in his presence.

On the direct appeal the assignment of error only goes to the one point, that seventy-five dollars in damages is wholly inadequate to compensate for the humiliation, *214 mental pain, and physical discomfort of confinement in a cell under the conditions stated. After the plaintiff . had shown that he was arrested while standing, engaged in conversation with others, doing- nothing but enjoying the gala occasion of a county fair, without being given opportunity to make bond, and, after the officer had testified that he was drunk in a public place, the plaintiff offered a number of witnesses to show that his general reputation for sobriety was good in the community in which he lived.

In a suit for damages based on false imprisonment, the question is one for a jury, whose finding is not to be disturbed, unless the court can now say that the verdict evinces passion or prejudice on the part of the jury. It may be said that the amount awarded by the jury, from the standpoint of the plaintiff’s evidence, was small; it may further be said that the jury accepted the evidence offered by the plaintiff as true — that at the time of his arrest and incarceration he was sober, and not violating any law, or attempting- to do so. On the other hand, in the light of all the facts and circumstances, the jury may have concluded that the officers simply made a mistake, in an honest effort to discharge their duty and enforce the law, and the jury may have thought that the amount of the verdict vindicated the good name and fame of the plaintiff, and that the .good faith of the officers should mitigate the damages to be allowed.

Whatever may have influenced the jury, there are no extrinsic evidences of passion or prejudice, and we do not feel warranted in invading the province of the jury, which saw the witnesses, observed their demeanor on the witness stand, and were fellow citizens, along with the parties to this suit, of the county in which the case was tried.

On the cross-appeal, the counsel for cross-appellant assigns as error:

*215 First, that the court erred in permitting the evidence of witnesses as to plaintiff’s general reputation for sobriety. He being a boy seventeen years of age at the time of his arrest, where the declaration alleged humiliation and damage to reputation, and the officer had testified that he was drunk, we think the testimony on this point was competent. While it is a general rule that parties to a civil suit may not support their position by offering testimony as to their good character or reputation, yet, where a particular trait of an individual is in issue, such evidence is competent. And especially is this true in a false imprisonment case, where damage to the reputation of the particular individual is alleged. And in this case it is shown that the plaintiff had to explain to his neighbors and friends why he spent the night in jail. 25> C. J., p. 544, section 152.

Second, it is insisted that the court erred in not permitting Francis, the deputy sheriff, to testify that he would have arrested the plaintiff if Sims, the justice of the peace, had not been present. We will only say that we do not think the failure to admit this testimony was prejudicial to the defendant, nor could we reverse the case on that ground, for the reason that there was ample evidence offered that the plaintiff was drunk, and the statement of the officer as to what he would have done could not have influenced the jury’s finding in this case.

Third. Instruction No. 4, given for the plaintiff, is criticized and assigned as error. This instruction is as follows: “The court instructs the jury for the plaintiff that if you believe from a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant was the procuring cause of the arrest of plaintiff and directed his arrest or helped in same or that he later held the plaintiff in imprisonment under circumstances, which under the other instructions would be unlawful then he is liable for the arrest and you must find your verdict for the plaintiff.”

*216

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 325, 155 Miss. 207, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-sims-miss-1929.