McLendon v. State

21 L.R.A. 738, 92 Tenn. 520
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 21 L.R.A. 738 (McLendon v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLendon v. State, 21 L.R.A. 738, 92 Tenn. 520 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

This is an action of damages for false imprisonment, brought in the name of the State of Tennessee for the use of Henry Kennedy, against A. J. McLendon, Sheriff of Shelby County, and the sureties on his official bond.

Trial before Court and jury resulted in verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff- and against all the defendants for $500. The defendants have appealed in error, and ask a reversal in this Court, upon several grounds.

The principal averments of the declaration are, in substance, that the plaintiff, Henry Kennedy, [522]*522was confined in the work-house of Shelby County under a void judgment of the Criminal Court of that county; that, while so confined, his father sued out a wx’it of habeas corpas in the Circuit Court of Shelby County for his release; that the Judge of the latter Court heard his case upon that writ, adjudged his confinement illegal, and ordered that he be at once discharged; that, in defiance of that action of the Circuit Court, the defendant, A. J. McLendon, Sheriff of Shelby County, immediately re-arrested him and returned him to the workhouse, where he was wrongfully and illegally confined for a period of fourteen days; that in so rearresting and confining plaintiff, the Sheriff had no authority, but acted under a void order of the Judge of the Criminal Court, made upon .the latter’s learning of the pendency of the habeas corpus proceeding.

It is also averred that defendant, A. J. McLen-don, on a certain day executed his official bond as Sheriff of Shelby County, with his co-defendants as sureties thereon, and that the bond was breached by the aforesaid re-arrest and confinement of plaintiff, Henry Kennedy, whereby the defendants became liable for damages to the State of Tennessee, for his use, in the sum of $50,000, that being the. penalty of thte bond.

The defendants, after some preliminary steps had been taken, filed a joint plea of not guilty; and the case was tried upon the issue thereby formed.

Though much evidence, both parol and docu[523]*523mentary, was introduced for the consideration of the Court and jury, the only part of it necessary to he here mentioned is the process under which the alleged wrongful and illegal arrest and confinement were made. - That process was but a copy of an order spread upon .the minutes of the Criminal ■Court. It was in the following words and figures:

“In THE CRIMINAL COURT OR Shelby County.
“SEPTEMBER TERM, A. D., 1890.
“Wednesday, Roy. 26, 1890.
“To A. J. McLendon, Sheriff:
“ You are ordered and directed that, after the •cause of the detention of Henry Kennedy, now in work-house of the county, shall have been inquired into, to the entire satisfaction of His Honor, L. H. Estes, Judge of the Circuit Court, whatever may be his conclusion as to whether such detention be legal or otherwise, you' take the body of said Henry Kennedy and again deliver him to the Superintendent of the Shelby County work-house, there to be confined and not to go hence without the further orders of this Court. You will in nowise omit, etc.
“A true copy from the minutes.
“Attest: “ R. S. Capers, Clerk.
“ W. W. Topscott, L. C.”

On that paper was this indorsement:

“Executed on the sixth day of December, 1890, [524]*524by arresting tbe said Henry Kennedy and placing him in the work-house as is ordered. ■
“ This December 6, 1890.
“A. J. McLendon, Sheriff.
“By L. B. Williams, ff). S.”

The charge of the trial Judge with respect to the foregoing order or process, was, in effect, that it was void upon its face; that it gave the Sheriff no authority for the arrest and confinement complained of; and could, therefore, afford him no protection in this action. _ ,

The instruction was correct. The order in question was utterly void upon its face.

First. — The Judge of the Circuit Court, acting under due forms of law, as he is presumed and shown in this case to have been, had ample power and jurisdiction to conduct the habeas corpas proceedings, and to discharge the plaintiff", Kennedy, from illegal restraint under a void judgment, as he is here alleged and shown to have done. Code, §§ 3720 and 3723; The State v. Taxing District, 16 Lea, 240; The State v. Galloway, 5 Cold., 336; Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall., 163; Ex parte Milligan, 4 Wall., 3; Ex parte Parks, 93 U. S., 18; Tweed v. Liscomb, 60 N. Y., 570.

On the other hand, the Criminal Court was wholly without power and jurisdiction to defeat that result, by causing Kennedy to be re-arrested and recommitted for the same offense, and under the same void judgment, as was the purpose clearly [525]*525disclosed by tbe terms of the order itself. Constitution, Article I., Section 15.

Judged by the facts so disclosed, the order was void upon its face. Being so, it gave the Sheriff, who is presumed to have known the law, no authority for his action, and affords him no protection.

Second. — “All writs and other process shall run in the name of the State of Tennessee, and bear teste and be signed by the respective clerks.” This is the requirement -of the Constitution, as found in Section 12, Article VI., of that instrument.

Clearly, the order here in question, if possessed ■of any virtue at all, was a writ or other process within the meaning of the Constitution. It was intended to serve the purpose of a lorit or other process, and as such it could have been valid, if so otherwise, only when running in the name of the State of Tennessee. It did not so run, and, for that additional reason, it was void upon its face. If it ran in any name at all, it was only in the name of the Criminal Court of Shelby County.

In the case of Mayor and Aldermen v. Pearl, 11 Hum., 250, 251, it was held that' a distress warrant for the collection of taxes, was void because running in the name of the “corporation of Hashville” instead of in the name of the State of Tennessee, as required by the Constitution. In that case, after quoting the words of the Constitution, the Court said: “This requirement applies [526]*526to all process, civil or criminal, issued by any Court or tribunal established by law, having-authority to issue process; to process issued under a valid corporation ordinance or by-law, as much as to process from a Court of record or Justice of the Peace. That construction meets our approval, and controls this ease on the point being considered.

The question as to whether or not the processes-considered in White v. The State, 3 Heis., 338, and Lyle v. Langley, 6 Bax., 286, ran in the name of the State, was not raised in either of those cases. It was decided in the former of those cases that a “venire facias juratores,” and in the latter that an attachment writ, signed by the Judge instead of the Clerk of the Court, was valid.

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Bluebook (online)
21 L.R.A. 738, 92 Tenn. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclendon-v-state-tenn-1893.