Pike v. Eubank

90 S.E.2d 821, 197 Va. 692, 1956 Va. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1956
DocketRecord 4456
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 90 S.E.2d 821 (Pike v. Eubank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pike v. Eubank, 90 S.E.2d 821, 197 Va. 692, 1956 Va. LEXIS 141 (Va. 1956).

Opinions

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 16, 1954, about one o’clock a. m., while under arrest for a misdemeanor, George Lester Pike received painful lacerations, wounds and abrasions upon his head and face. He was at the first police station in the city of Richmond in the custody of police officers Walter E. Eubank and Walter S. Scott when he received the injuries. In his action for damages .filed against the officers, he charged them with assault and battery and alleged that the injuries had been wrongfully inflicted upon him by the defendants.

In their written answer and grounds of defense, both officers denied the charge and alleged that Pike was accidentally hurt as a direct result of his own misconduct.

The trial was had before a jury. At the conclusion of all the testimony, the court struck the evidence as to defendant Eubank but allowed the jury to consider the evidence as it pertained to defendant Scott. A verdict was returned in favor of both defendants, and to the judgment entered thereon, we granted writ of error.

Summarized, the assignments of error are that the court erred (a) when it struck the evidence as to Eubank; (b) in the admission and rejection of evidence; and (c) in the giving and refusal of certain instructions upon submission of the case to the jury as to Scott’s liability.

The first question to be decided is: Did the evidence justify submission of the case to the jury on the issue of whether or not defendant Eubank was liable? A determination of this question requires that the pertinent evidence be stated in detail.

On the evening of January 15, 1954, a party and dance for em[694]*694ployees of a local manufacturing company was held at Tantilla Gardens in the city of Richmond where a ball room and amusement center are maintained. It was attended by several hundred employees, their consorts and friends. Pike, his wife and four other couples made up a group seated at one of the tables around the dance floor. During the evening Pike and others partook of intoxicants and about midnight an altercation arose between him and other men. Two off-duty police officers, employed by the company to keep order, observed Pike’s conduct and concluded that he was drunk. He was arrested by these officers, escorted from the building, and taken to first police station by two other on-duty officers. Upon arrival at the station he was turned over to Scott whose duties were to receive, search and finger print prisoners, and aid in their incarceration. Some money was removed from Pike’s pocket by Scott and placed on the desk in front of Sergeant Childress, who was then booking Pike on the charge of drunkenness.

Also present at the station was Walter E. Eubank, who was assisting Sergeant Childress in the booking and incarceration of prisoners.

In his testimony Pike said that he did not remember all that happened during that evening and night but he did remember being removed from the Tantilla ball room by two officers. Though he could not recall being transported to the station in the police wagon or being taken into the station, yet he said that he did remember “what happened when he got in there.” He gave this account of how he was injured:

“A. The only thing I can remember that happened at the police station is that the man got my arms behind me and I remember glancing up and out of the comer of my eye I saw him coming down on my head with the butt of the pistol, and the only other thing I remember is someone said, ‘Hit the damn rascal again,’ and another thing I was picked up off the floor and I came to enough to notice that blood had flowed all around me and that is all I remember about it.”

When cross-examined about the identity of the man who was holding his arms when he was struck and as to who actually hit him with the pistol, Pike testified as follows:

“Q. I believe, Mr. Pike, you have described to the best of your recollection what occurred at the police station. Do you recall or can you describe the appearance of the man who was holding you or [695]*695the person whom you said came down on your head with a pistol butt?
“A. Well, I couldn’t describe the man that had my arms behind me, but the man that hit me with a pistol was a short, gray-haired man that wore glasses.
“Q. I point to this man right over here wearing glasses (indicating the defendant Scott) and ask you if that is the gentleman to whom you are referring?
“A. Yes, sir, it looks like him.
Mr. Merhige: May I ask the witness to repeat the answer? I didn’t catch it.
“A. (Continued) I said, yes.
* # # # * # #
“A. One man was behind me, had my arms behind me, and I don’t remember anything about him. Who he was, I don’t know.
“Q. He had both hands on you, did he not?
“A. I don’t know how many hands he had on me, but he had both of my arms behind me.
“Q. He did not strike you but was holding you?
“A. He was holding me. I don’t know who said, ‘Hit the damn rascal again.’ ”

Eubank was called as an adverse witness. He denied that he or Scott struck Pike, but admitted that he was behind Pike holding his arms when he was injured and that the prisoner was in his and Scott’s custody and control and being escorted to a cell when he received his wounds. He further said that when the prisoner was brought into the station, he was turned over to Scott, and after Scott had searched Pike, he, Eubank, found it necessary to come from behind the desk and grab Pike’s arms from behind. He was taking him to the cell when he suddenly “broke away and fell, hit his head on the doorway.” Pictures thereafter taken of the door on the corridor leading to the cell block show it standing open, and he explained that when Pike jerked loose, he fell forward and struck his head on the edge of the door and the facing where the door is hinged to the wall. He said that Pike’s head hit there “only once” and the one blow against the door accounted for all the injuries sustained.

Scott denied striking Pike. He described Pike as being drunk, belligerent and profane, and testified that he searched Pike, removed some money from his jacket and put it on the desk before which the [696]*696prisoner was standing to be booked. Pike grabbed for it, “got the money before officer Eubank did,” tore it, “and threw it on the floor.” During the altercation he said Pike applied to him a vile epithet indicative of canine parentage, cursed him and Eubank, and struck at him. He stepped back and Eubank “grabbed the man from the back and started to the lock-up, cell room.”

He described what then happened as follows:

“A. Mr. Pike when he started out, just about time he got to the door he jerked his right arm away from Mr. Eubank and he got overbalanced. He fell and the sharp end of that door doesn’t come off smooth-like, and he hit the comer of that door and slit his head open and I said, ‘Lord ha’ mercy, the man will kill himself.’ ” He further stated that after Pike was put in the cell, he “was cursing and beating his head back and forth on the cement and the ambulance was called * * * ”

Officer Bernard P.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E.2d 821, 197 Va. 692, 1956 Va. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-v-eubank-va-1956.