Osoba v. Wilson

56 S.W.2d 937
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1933
DocketNo. 9786.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 937 (Osoba v. Wilson) 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
Osoba v. Wilson, 56 S.W.2d 937 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LANE, Justice.

On the 23d day of January, 1929, at or about the hour of 10:30 p. m., L. Glenn Wilson was arrested at a hotel in Eagle Lake, Tex., by Joe Osoba, city marshal of the city of Eagle Lake, and a deputy sheriff, without a warrant of arrest. He was then taken to Columbus, the county site of Colorado county, Tex., and delivered to the sheriff of said county about 12 o’clock midnight, who put him in jail, where he remainded for about two days, at which time he was released.

L. Glenn Wilson, hereinafter referred to as Wilson, brought this suit against Joe Osoba and others, whose names are unnecessary to be mentioned as they are not parties to this appeal, to recover compensatory damages in the sum of $5,000 upon his allegation that he was illegally and unlawfully arrested by Joe Osoba who had no warrant for his arrest and was by Osob¿ illegally restrained of his liberty, and by the sheriff confined in jail. There was no allegation that he was not taken before a magistrate. Such fact was not alleged as constituting any part of the plaintiff’s cause.

Joe Osoba, after general demurrer and general denial, alleged that he arrested the ap-pellee for unlawfully and willfully using loud, vociferous, and profane language and for swearing and cursing in a manner calculated to disturb the inhabitants of said hotel, a public place visited by people for recreation, business, and pleasure, which unlawful acts were committed by appellee in his presence; that he placed appellee under arrest without warrant and immediately thereafter searched the appellee and found upon his person the sum of $515.98, consisting principally of new $20 bills in United States currency, which sum and the denominations thereof suited the description of a sum of money which he was informed was obtained in a robbery committed at Houston, Tex., on the same day; that, after searching appellee’s grip, he found an automatic .32 caliber pistol, a box of - cartridges, files, punches, chisels, hammer, and a bottle of quicksilver; that on the afternoon of the same day he received information from W. F. Kessler, chief of detectives of Houston, Tex., that one Dr. Reeves had been *938 robbed of approximately said sum of money found upon the person of appellee and of practically the same denominations; that the offender was making his escape in the direction of Eagle Lake, Tex., and directing this appellant to detain and arrest the offender, which information also gave the description of the appellee in clothes, height, weight, approximate age, and personal appearance; that appellant believed that appellee, then under arrest for a breach of peace committed in his presence, was the person who had committed the felony in Harris county and was about to escape; that the said W. P. Kessler was a credible person; and that said information appeared to him as a peace officer satisfactory that appellee was the offender and was about to escape. Appellant admitted in his pleading that after the arrest of ap-pellee he conveyed him to jail at Columbus, and that on the following morning he filed a complaint against appellee for disturbing the peace; that the arrest of appellee was made by him in good faith and upon proper cause for a violation of law, and not to injure, harass, humiliate, or embarrass appel-lee.

Facts.

The plaintiff testified to the facts stated in our preliminary statement. He testified that when he was turned over to the sheriff he was given the privilege of choosing the cell in which he was to be confined, and that he chose what was known as the death cell; that the bed furnished him had the odor of creosote or some disinfectant; that he registered at the hotel in Eagle Lake, placed a long-distance telephone call, retired to his room, and that he was visited by the hotel night clerk several times and then by Joe Osoba; that Joe Osoba conducted him downstairs to the lobby of the ¡hotel, searched him, questioned him at length, cursed, insulted, and heaped indignities upon, him, placed him in an automobile, and conducted him to jail at Columbus, where he was retained for about 57 hours; that at no time did he see a warrant for his arrest, and that no one said anything about a warrant; that he did not appear before a magistrate or justice of the peace; that there was no accusation against him by any one to the effect that he had committed some offense, except that Joe Osoba, after he had found $515 on his person, said, “I think I know you, I think I want you”; that no one accused him of disturbing the peace. In effect, he testified that he was arrested by defendant without a warrant and placed in jail for 57 hours; that, when defendant came to his room, he said, “What do you mean trying to beat a telephone bill”; that defendant stated at that time that he was a deputy sheriff and demanded that he open his door; that, when he started to explain his controversy with the telephone operator and tire cause of his refusal to pay the charges demanded, defendant said, “Get on your clothes and go down stairs and see the Manager of the telephone company who is coming down”; that he dressed and went down with defendant, who had a gun on; that defendant was very rude and insulting to him.

Harigel, a district manager of the telephone company, testified that one of the telephone operators told him that plaintiff had refused to pay a balance due for a phone call, and asked him to attempt to collect such balance; that, after he had tried, through the hotel clerk, to make such collection and had failed, he called the defendant, Osoba, and told him that plaintiff owed an overcharge on a telephone call which he refused to pay; that he called Osoba because he wanted a peace officer, as he heard plaintiff one time using loud vociferous language in the lobby of the hotel; that, when he asked plaintiff about the bill, he said the telephone company was nothing but a “God damn bunch of high-jackers.”

Defendant testified that he was at the time of trial city marshal of Eagle Lake; that he was a deputy sheriff on January 23, 1929, holding the appointment under Jack Hillner, sheriff of Colorado county; that the White House Hotel and Café is a place visited by people for recreation, business, and pleasure, a public place; that the hotel has a lobby in the rear of the building; that he found plaintiff upstairs in his room and invited him to go downstairs to discuss the settlement of the telephone bill; that he introduced plaintiff to Mr. Harigel in the café, where they had a cup of coffee; that plaintiff and Harigel began talking about- the telephone bill; that plaintiff got boisterous and began cursing the telephone company for being high-jackers and stuff like that, and that he cautioned him about that language and not to be loud; that after Mr. Harigel went to the booth plaintiff got to popping off about the God damn bunch of high-j ackers, and he told him not to use profanity and he put him under arrest at that timo; that about 4:30 or 5 o’clock on the day of arrest W. F. Kessler, chief of detectives of the city of Houston, called him over the phonei and told him that there had been a holdup of Dr. Reeves in Houston and for him to be on the lookout for the offender; that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osoba-v-wilson-texapp-1933.