Kittredge v. Frothingham

96 A. 1063, 114 Me. 537, 1916 Me. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 1, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 A. 1063 (Kittredge v. Frothingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kittredge v. Frothingham, 96 A. 1063, 114 Me. 537, 1916 Me. LEXIS 167 (Me. 1916).

Opinion

Haley, J.

An action against the sheriff of Oxford county for the alleged unlawful arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff by his deputy, Everett M. Bessey. The verdict was for the plaintiff, and the defendant brings the case to this court upon exceptions and a motion for a new trial.

The record shows that the last of July, 1914, a laborer known as Barbrick worked in the woods for Mr. Hastings of Auburn, and the foreman gave an order for Mr. Hastings to pay him for his [539]*539labor. Mr. Hastings made a check and gave it to his clerk, and the clerk turned it over to Barbrick. When the check was returned' as paid the first of August it was discovered that it had been raised from $7 to $17. Immediately Mr. Hastings obtained a warrant from a trial justice at Gilead for forgery, and a description of the man Barbrick was given by the foreman under whom he worked in the woods, and the warrant was placed in the hands of a deputy sheriff for service. On the 8th day of August Mr. Hastings was on the train from Gilead to Auburn, and observed the plaintiff leave the train at Bryant’s Pond, and called the attention of Mr. Atketts (Arkett), a deputy sheriff, to him, and stated that he believed he was the man that he wanted apprehended, and related the circumstances of the alleged forgery. As the train pulled out from Bryant’s Pond they both saw the plaintiff take the public conveyance plying between Bryant’s Pond and Rumford. They both thought that the man answered the description of Barbrick which had been given to Mr. Blastings, and Mr. Hastings asked the deputy sheriff to telephone, or have the sheriff telephone, to Rumford to detain the plaintiff until it could be determined if he was the man wanted by the name of Barbrick. Upon the arrival of the plaintiff at Rumford, Mr. Bessey, from an examination, concluded that the plaintiff answered the description that had been telephoned him, and asked him to go to the police station, stating that he had instructions from the sheriff at Bryant’s Pond that he wanted a man of his description. The arrest, or detention, was at about noon on Saturday. The plaintiff was not imprisoned until the latter part of that afternoon. As soon as the plaintiff and the deputy Bessey had taken dinner at a restaurant, Mr. Bessey communicated with Mr. Atketts and also Mr. Hastings, but before he could reach Mr. Hastings he was obliged to telephone to several dfferent places, and when Mr. Blastings was finally located he was at Auburn, and he said he would be there with some one to identify the plaintiff, if he was the man Barbrick, as soon as possible. The next day, between twelve and one o’clock, Mr. Bessey was called away on business, and having ascertained that Mr. Hastings was coming, told the chief of police that he had been in communication with Mr. Hastings, who would be there shortly, and if he did not come before he, Bessey, left, to take charge of the case and if the [540]*540man was not identified as Barbrick, to allow him to go. Mr. Hastings, when informed by telephone that a man was arrested and requested to come to identify him, stated that he could not personally identify him, but that he would get his foreman who hired him, and the clerk in the store, and come to Rumford as soon as he could. He took the 2.30 train from Auburn, went to Gilead, and thence by team to Hastings, and took an auto and found out that the foreman who had hired Mr. Barbrick was on a farm in Masontown some ten miles away. He took the clerk in the store and started for Masontown. On the way he met with an accident to his machine, so that after having obtained the foreman they could not reach Rumford until two or three o’clock in the morning, and so they put up that night and went to Rumford the next forenoon, arriving there between twelve and. one o'clock, and immediately they went to the police station and the foreman and clerk declared that the plaintiff was not the man Barbrick, and he was released. The testimony is that the plaintiff answered the' description given of the man Barbrick, even to the color of his shoes.

The first exception was to allowing the plaintiff to testify to a conversation’ made by Thomas W. Penley, a deputy sheriff, after listening to the plaintiff’s story while he was in the police station, not in' the presence of the sheriff, the nominal defendant, or in the presence of Everett M. Bessey, the real defendant. The plaintiff seeks to justify the admission of the testimony !by the claim that a sheriff’s deputies are his agents, that the law regards the sheriff and his deputies as the same officer. They are the same officer as far as the performing of lawful acts are concerned, and the sheriff is liable for the misconduct or wrongful acts of his deputy while the deputy is performing official business, but they are not agents of each other only as they are authorized and required by law to aid and assist each other in the performance of their official duties. The question at issue was whether or not Mr. Bessey was guilty of any wrongful act in detaining the plaintiff as he did?. That was a question to be settled by the jury from the evidence in the case and the opinion or statement of another deputy sheriff, however, strongly expressed, if not in the presence of Mr. Bessey, was not admissible as tending to prove Mr. Bessey [541]*541guilty of the alleged wrongful acts. Even if Penley had been an agent of the sheriff, he would not have been an agent of Bessey ■with authority to bind Bessey by his statements. The arrest was made by Bessey, and it was for the arrest and detention of the plaintiff that this action is brought, and by no process of reasoning can it be made to appear that Penley’s statements were admissible, even as claimed by the plaintiff, as an agent of the sheriff, or the defendant, because the declarations of the agent to bind the principal must be made by the agent when he himself is engaged as the agent in the transaction of his principal being investigated. Penley was not so engaged, but was a mere spectator. The testimony admitted was not in the presence of the sheriff or Mr. Bessey, so that they might reply or deny or explain the circumstances or conclusions expressed in that conversation. It was the statement by a witness who knew nothing as to the circumstances of the crime or the arrest, except as he had been informed by others than the sheriff or deputy sheriff Bessey. It was not even hearsay evidence, which would not be admissible, but was the opinion of a witness as to the guilt or innocence of the deputy Bessey upon hearsay evidence, and no legal reason can be given for its admission. Exception sustained.

Exceptions 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, to and it all relate to conversations between the plaintiff, his brother Glen Stevens and Thomas W. Penley, the deputy sheriff above referred to, all of which tends to show efforts to have the plaintiff released from arrest before Mr. Hastings could arrive with witnesses to determine whether the plaintiff was the man Barbrick, and to their conversation with said Penley, all of which was in the absence of the sheriff and his deputy Bessey. Some of the evidence being merely to the fact that they were present and heard the conversation of the deputy sheriff and other conversations would be immaterial as they did not state the conversation, if it did not tend to support the inadmissible testimony of the deputy Penley, but as it tended to prove the truth of the inadmissible testimony it is, as frankly stated by counsel in their brief, governed by the same rules that apply to the first exception and must be sustained.

Exception 4 was to the excluding of the question asked deputy sheriff Atketts, “That description, as far as you saw Mr.

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

Related

Meola v. City of New York
31 Misc. 2d 851 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
Gaca v. City of Chicago
103 N.E.2d 617 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1952)
Miles v. Wright
194 P. 88 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A. 1063, 114 Me. 537, 1916 Me. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kittredge-v-frothingham-me-1916.