Reynolds v. Griffith

30 S.E.2d 81, 126 W. Va. 766, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 42
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1944
Docket9543
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 30 S.E.2d 81 (Reynolds v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Griffith, 30 S.E.2d 81, 126 W. Va. 766, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 42 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Moore M. Reynolds, Sheriff of Harrison County, West Virginia, for the use and benefit and at the relation of Olice Jenkins, brought this action in debt in the Circuit Court of Harrison County against Arthur J. Griffith and The Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York, upon the official bond in the sum of five thousand dollars of Griffith, a deputy sheriff of said county, charging that he “did not faithfully perform the condition of said bond”. Defendants prosecute this writ of error to a judgment against them entered upon-a. jury verdict of twenty-five hundred dollars in plaintiff’s favor, and assert that the jury verdict is contrary to the weight of evidence, and that the trial court erred in excluding from the jury an *768 instrument identified as “Bond Application and Indemnifying Agreement”, and in, refusing to give defendants’ instruction No. 3-A.

Arthur J. Griffith was the duly appointed and acting Deputy Sheriff of Harrison County, and as such had furnished an official bond conditioned upon the faithful performance of his duties as deputy. The bond, executed by him, as principal, and The Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York, as surety, was in full force and effect on July 22, 1939, in the evening of which Griffith and several other deputy sheriffs planned to raid the rooms of Charles Murray located in the Noon Shoe Shop Building on North Third Street, in the City of Clarksburg. Six days prior thereto there had been a raid on the same premises, participated in by state police, Griffith and other county officers, on which occasion' the raiding officers had found but one negro man therein, but found some whiskey, gin, and an automatic revolver and a quart of shells. One witness testified that he had seen the place “raided quite often”. Between eleven o’clock p. m. and midnight of Saturday, July 22, 1939, Griffith, wearing his deputy’s uniform with a seersucker suit over it, and possessing search warrants issued by a justice of the peace commanding, respectively, the seizure of gambling apparatus and liquor and arrest of persons found in the premises described therein, left the sheriff’s office and walked to the Noon Building. It was the plan of the raiding officers that Griffith, disguised as he was, should gain entrance to the premises to obtain evidence of unlawful conduct of those persons who were therein. The other officers who were to participate in the raid proceeded by automobile. Griffith testified that he walked up the steps of the building, through a hallway to a closed door leading into a room, which door he opened, and walked into the room where there were twelve or fifteen negro men, about eight of whom were seated around a table playing cards, in the center of which table there were two or three dollars in change; that he opened his coat and told them it *769 was a raid, and started to pick up the money when, “some fellow struck me in the mouth and from that time on they grabbed me from behind and started hitting me every place they could”. Plaintiff’s witnesses testified that Griffith came into the room “in a stooped position bent over like that slow, it seemed on tiptoes, and moved at the table and jumped on top of the fellow’s back, reaching over”, and that when he did so, “the commotion started then and everybody started running out of the place”. Olice Jenkins testified that he was merely sitting in the room talking to “the other boys”, and that while he did not see Griffith enter the room, he knew him after he came in; that Griffith made no statement that he was an officer but reached for the money on the table; and, thinking that it was a robbery, Jenkins says he “broke to run, and when I got down the hallway within a foot or two, practically to the door, I was shot”. The shot had been fired by Griffith during the scuffle between him and several of the occupants of the raided room. Griffith testified, “I fired the shot to get them off of me and to let the other boys know to hurry up”. According to Griffith, when the shot was fired three or four persons were striking at him; that he did not fire the shot at any one of them; and that after the shot was fired “they threw me out the door and locked it”. Following the shooting, the other officers appeared. Griffith contends that those seated ' around the table were engaged in the game of stud poker. Some of plaintiff’s witnesses deny that there was any card playing, while one of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the men were playing a game of bridge. After Griffith and the other raiding officers returned to the room in which the scuffle had occurred, they then found about thirty-six cents lying on the table. According to testimony introduced on behalf of plaintiff, this sum of money had been placed there by the men in the room for the purpose of purchasing beer.

The bullet struck Jenkins’ left thigh and fractured the bone. At the time of the trial the bone had mended, and *770 he had perfect use of his left leg, but a partial paralysis of his right side developed while plaintiff was in the hospital. There is divergent medical testimony whether the paralysis resulted from the gun shot wound or venereal disease.

Defendants predicate their contention that the jury verdict is contrary to the weight of the evidence on the ground that Griffith was reasonably within his right in firing his gun in self-defense and characterize as significant the fact that plaintiff’s own evidence does not negative the assault upon Griffith before he fired the shot. There is a variance of testimony whether he made known that his presence there was in the capacity of a raiding officer, possessed of proper legal process for that purpose. Plaintiff’s evidence is a denial that Griffith announced the reason for his presence prior to the time that assault was made upon him, and, believing the testimony offered by plaintiff on this factual question, the jury could readily have justified the assault made upon Griffith by those seated about the table, if they had no knowledge of his official identity. In other words, if Griffith’s purpose was to obtain the material he alleged was upon the table, as evidence of gambling, and he. reached for it without making known his identity and purpose, the attack upon him was a natural sequence. In State v. Stockton, 97 W. Va. 46, 52, 124 S. E. 509, this Court stated that:

“An officer in the performance of his duties * * * is a minister of justice, and entitled to the peculiar protections of the law. Without submission to his authority there is no security; and anarchy reigns supreme. He must of necessity be the aggressor, and the law affords him special protection. * *

It is also well settled that officers, in making arrests, may not legally do more than is necessary to bring the person sought to be arrested within the officer’s control. Anderson on Sheriffs, Coroners and Constables (1941), Vol. 1, page 133. Defendants’ position is that Griffith fired in *771 self-defense. The record does show that he suffered bodily injury in the affray. The necessity for wounding in self-defense presents a question for jury determination. State v. Cain, 20 W. Va. 679; State v. McCallister, 111 W. Va. 440, 162 S. E. 484.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E.2d 81, 126 W. Va. 766, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-griffith-wva-1944.