Mangana's Admx. v. Franzoni

75 A.2d 665, 116 Vt. 351
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 3, 1950
Docket1016
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 A.2d 665 (Mangana's Admx. v. Franzoni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mangana's Admx. v. Franzoni, 75 A.2d 665, 116 Vt. 351 (Vt. 1950).

Opinion

Blackmer, J.

This is an action against the sheriff of Rutland County for the escape of a prisoner confined in the Rutland County Jail upon a close jail execution issued pursuant to V. S. 47, § 2246. Trial was by court; findings of fact were filed, and judgment for the plaintiff entered in the sum of $500.00 and costs. Both parties filed bills of exceptions.

The following facts were found. The defendant has been at all material times the sheriff of.Rutland County, and the keeper of the county jail within and for that county. The plaintiff secured a judgment against one Bernard J. Smith, Jr., in an action of tort. An execution issued bearing a close jail certificate. By virtue of that precept Smith was committed to the Rutland County Jail on Feb. 10, 1948. On Feb. 15, 1948, Smith fell while in the jail and sustained an injury. Three licensed and practicing physicians examined Smith in the jail. They recommended to the defendant that Smith ought to be taken to the Rutland City Hospital for treatment, there being no “conveniences” at the county jail for his treatment 'there. The defendant took Smith to the hospital, leaving word with the hospital superintendent to advise the defendant before releasing Smith. On July 19, 1948, two licensed and practicing physicians advised the defendant that Smith would benefit by being a patient at the White River Junction Veterans’ *353 Hospital, and suggested his immediate transfer to that institution. The defendant consented to such transfer, and notified the doctor in charge of the Veterans’ Hospital “to let him know when the said Smith was released.” During the latter part of November, 1948, Smith was released from the Veterans’ Hospital and went to his father’s home in Fair Haven. While at his father’s home, Smith went about in Fair Haven and elsewhere as he desired. During the time Smith was at the Rutland City Hospital, at the Veterans’ Hospital, and at his father’s home he was not in the custody of the defendant, nor of any officer or deputy of the defendant. The plaintiff never consented to Smith’s transfer to the Rutland City Hospital, his removal to the Veterans’ Hospital, his discharge from the latter hospital, or his presence at his father’s home. The Veterans’ Hospital never notified the defendant that Smith was to be or had been discharged from that institution. He first learned that “Smith is out” from the plaintiff “in the early part of 1949.” This suit was brought April 4, 1949. On the same day the defendant left word at Smith’s father’s home that Smith should return to the Rutland County Jail. Smith returned to the Jail on Apr. 6, 1949, and was confined there at all later pertinent times. No court of record or other legal authority ever released Smith from the county jail. “The plaintiff has sustained reasonable damages amounting to $500.00 by reason of the defendant allowing Smith to escape.” At the time Smith was originally committed to' the Rutland County Jail, and at all times thereafter, he had no property with which to pay the execution upon which he was committed, either in whole or in part, except a disabled veteran’s pension of $13.80 each month and the sum of $80.00 received as unemployment insurance. The pension is not assignable, and is exempt from the claims of creditors. Smith has never paid any part of the execution. The amount due thereon is $2938.06.

The defendant’s exceptions present the question whether there was an escape; both the plaintiff’s and the defendant’s exceptions challenge the propriety of the assessment of damages at $500.00.

The keeper of a jail is required to safely keep a prisoner committed to his custody until discharged from imprisonment, and shall be liable for escapes made from such jail. V. S. 47, §§ 2236 and 2237, which so enact, are declaratory of the common law.

The books are full of cases holding that every liberty given to a prisoner, not authorized by law, is a voluntary escape, *354 or that the slightest violation by a sheriff of his duty renders him liable to the judgment creditor for a voluntary escape of the prisoner. Lo wrey v. Barney & Read, 2 D Chip 11; Day v. Sweetser, 2 Tyler 283, 287; Wait v. Dana, Brayt 37; Leonard v. Hoyt, Brayt 73 (Case 2); Ward v. Barnard, 1 Aiken 121; Jameson v. Isaacs, 12 Vt. 611, 614; Servis v. Marsh, 38 Fed 794, 796; Colby v. Sampson, 5 Mass 310, 312; De Grand v. Hunnewell, 11 Mass 160, 161; Richardson, Exr. of Browning v. Rittenhouse, 40 NJL 230, 235; Chase’s Blackstone 2nd Ed. 815; Boynton’s Case, 3 Co. Rep 43 a; Benton v. Sutton, 1 B. & P. 24, 26; 50 CJ Prisons § 57. Yet most of this law is, under the new and enlightened systems of the present day, outmoded if not practically obsolete. Comer v. Huston, 55 Ill App 153, 157. Confinement in close jail serves the manifestly useful purpose of compelling the debtor to make compensation for tortious injuries arising from his “wilful and malicious act or neglect,” to quote V. S. 47, § 2246. And see Day v. Sweetser, 2 Tyler 283, 287. Although a sheriff may not, as an indulgence or privilege, relax the strictness of close jail confinement, it cannot in this generation be properly said that he is to be held conclusively liable as for an escape upon proof that he has taken or allowed the prisioner to be out of jail in the custody of the sheriff or his deputy. If the absence of the prisoner from the jail is but temporary and for justifiable and good cause, and the control of the sheriff is at all times maintained, either personally or through the agency of a deputy, there is no escape. But if such absence is a mere indulgence or privilege granted the prisoner, then there is a voluntary escape, for which the sheriff is liable in damages. Comer v. Huston, supra, 158; The Case of Sir Miles Hobert and William Stroud, Esq., Cro Car 209, 210, 79 Reprint 784; Wool v. Turner, 10 Johns 420. And see Riley v. Whittaker, 49 NH 145, 147, 148, 6 Am Rep 474. Sanderson v. Town of Rutland, 43 Vt 385, cited by the defendant, may incline the same way, but its authority is largely vitiated because the court’s ruling that there was no voluntary escape was placed squarely upon a concession of counsel to that effect.

It is implicit in the findings that hospital treatment for the prisoner as advised by the physicians was reasonably necessary, both in the Rutland City Hospital and at the Veterans’ Hospital. We hold that hospital treatment, when reasonably necessary, is a justifiable and good cause for the removal of a prisoner to such an institution. But the supervision and control of the authorities at *355 such hospitals is a far cry from that “salva et arcta custodia”— safe and strict or close custody (Day v. Sweetser, -supra, 287)— which the law requires.

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75 A.2d 665, 116 Vt. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manganas-admx-v-franzoni-vt-1950.