McBeath v. Campbell

4 S.W.2d 999
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 1927
DocketNo. 2869.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 999 (McBeath v. Campbell) 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
McBeath v. Campbell, 4 S.W.2d 999 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

T-TAT.T,, c. J.

The appellant filed this suit' against D. D. Campbell, sheriff of Hoard county, and W. Frank Edmonson, sheriff of Wil-barger county, and the sureties upon their respective official bonds, to recover damages for alleged false imprisonment.

No question is raised upon the appeal as to the sufficiency of the .petition. Campbell and the sureties upon his official bond answered by ghneral denial, and specially denied that said sheriff ever arrested or in any way restrained the plaintiff, and that the said sheriff made an investigation of the facts concerning the felony, which the appellant was suspected of having committed; that at the request of the district attorney, he left his office open at the courthouse in Crowell, for the use of the district attorney, and that when he, the said Campbell, returned from a trip to Foard City at night, he found the district attorney and certain peace officers • from Hardeman and Wilbarger counties, together with the plaintiff, in his office at the courthouse and that he did not commit any of the acts complained of in the plaintiff’s petition, nor did he direct or advise the commission , thereof, and was therefore not responsible for any of the alleged wrongs.

Sheriff Edmonson and the New Amsterdam Casualty Company, as surety upon his official bond, answered by general denial, and specially denied that the defendant Edmonson had anything whatever to do with the acts complained of in the plaintiff’s petition; that he did not arrest plaintiff and had nothing to do with the arrest of plaintiff and did not in any manner restrain him of his liberty; that he was not present, if he was restrained, and did not authorize or instruct or acquiesce in any unlawful act of any other person, in connection with such alleged arrest, and that of his deputies, or either of them, participating in such alleged arrest of plaintiff, such acts on the part of said deputies were without the knowledge or authority of defendant Edmon-son, and were done without his instructions, .and that he never at any time acquiesced in or ratified said acts.

At the conclusion of the evidence the court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of all defendants. From the judgment entered in accordance therewith, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The circumstances which gave rise to this action may be briefly stated as follows: A few days prior to the alleged arrest of the appellant, he, together with a neighbor, Sid Phillips, had assisted appellant’s brother, A. D. McBeath, -in loading the brother’s household goods into a railroad car at Crowell, for the purpose of having said goods transported to New Mexico. That appellant and Phillips left the said A. D. McBeath in the car at Crowell in the early morning hours of the 14th of January, 1926. That they were the last persons who saw the said A. D. McBeath on that morning, and thereafter his dead body was discovered in the car when the train reached Chillicothe, Tex., a town situated about twenty miles north of Crowell. January 14, 1926, was Thursday. The deceased, McBeath, was buried at Crowell on Saturday, January 16th, and on that night appellee Campbell called the appellant to the courthouse in Crowell, together with the county attorney of Foard county, and interrogated him concerning the death of A. D. McBeath for about 30 minutes, after which he was allowed to go to his home, several miles in the country. On the following night, being Sunday, January 17th, about 11 o’clock, Bob Thomas, the city marshal of Crowell, in company with one Guy Crews, went to the house of appellant’s father-in-law, where appellant, his wife and baby, were spending the night, and told appellant that Sheriff Campbell wanted him to come to the courthouse at Crowell, and that the sheriff and Mr. Storey, the district attorney, wanted to talk with him. It further appears that at the same time, Sheriff Campbell, in company with Deputy Sheriff McClendon, of Wilbarger county, went to the house of Sid Phillips and required him to come with them to the courthouse at Crowell. After the appellant reached the courthouse, Leveritt, a deputy sheriff from Hardeman county, Storey, the district attorney, Watts and McClendon; deputy sheriffs from Wilbarger county, appellee Campbell, Jack Roden, and detective for the railway company by the name of Thompson, all came to the courthouse. The appellant's version of what occurred afterwards is in part quoted from the statement of facts, as follows:

“They took me into Mr. Campbell’s office. Mr. Campbell was in there part of the time during the conversation that occurred in there. I heard a part of the accusation made against me. * * * Mr. Storey started in about the loading of the car and what time I left‘the car, and what time I got home, and then he told me that I killed my brother with a scoop shovel, and he says, ‘There isn’t a damn bit of use denying it; you know damn well you done it, and we have got straight dope on it, and we don’t have to go very far after it, no further than the jailhouse.’ I told him I didn’t do it. I couldn’t say that Mr. Campbell was present at that time. I had my back turned to the door. Mr. Campbell came in shortly after-wards. And Mr. Storey told me that J didn’t know that there was any officers out at the cemetery, when I was out there, watching me, and that I pretended to take my brother’s death awful hard, and that I pretended to have a handkerchief over my eyes, and that I was tak *1001 ing my brother’s death awful hard and that I was getting awful damn brave, but I wouldn’t be so damn brave when they got through with me. And Mr. Campbell stepped around in front of me and told me that this was getting mighty serious, and that I had better come clean and tell the truth about it, and I says ‘X have told you the truth, all the way through, and you know it.’ That was Mr. Campbell, the sheriff of this county, that I told that. They kept me there something like 1¾⅛ hours. I don’t know exactly what time I got to Vernon that night, bait I heard one of them say it was 4 or a little after, on the road to Vernon. I left out here at 11 o’clock, which was about 5 miles, or 4½, from Crowell. After I left the sheriff’s office down here, they took me straight to Vernon. Mr. Campbell was here when we left for Vernon. As to whether we left out of his office in charge of these other men in Mr. Campbell’s presence, they all went out just a little bit before I went out. After Mr. Campbell had said that they all got up and went out of the room, except Clyde Watts and myself, and were gone probably a minute or maybe a minute and a half, and Mr. Boyd McClendon came back in and said, ‘Well, come and go with us,’ and says, ‘Vou haven’t got no gun on, have you?’ and started to search me, and did search me, and I said, ‘No, sir; I haven’t.’ And they carried me down there and put me in Mr. Storey’s ear, and we turned around the corner, or started to turn the corner, and one said, ‘I forgot my overcoat;’ and Mr. Storey turned around and come to the sidewalk, and Mr. Campbell was about half way from the steps to the street, and Mr. Campbell went back and unlocked the courthouse door, and they went in and got the overcoat and come back out together, and at the end of the steps Mr. Campbell turned to the left and Mr. Boyd McClendon turned to the right, and we went to Vernon. Mr. Campbell was there in the presence and saw me when I left for Vernon. At that time nobody showed me any warrant. They did tell me that they had a warrant.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbeath-v-campbell-texapp-1927.