Rischer v. Meham

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 416, 11 Ohio C.C. 403
CourtColumbiana Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 416 (Rischer v. Meham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Columbiana Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rischer v. Meham, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 416, 11 Ohio C.C. 403 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Eaubie, J.

This is a proceeding in error brought to reverse the judgment of the court below in sustaining a demurrer to the amended petition, and in rendering judgment of dismissal.

[417]*417The question presented is as to the right of the plaintiff to hold the Sureties on the official bond of the marshal of the city of Wellsville for a trespass to his person, committed by the marshal while attempting to capture the plaintiff, who was in the act of escaping from the custody of the officer.

The petition alleges that the marshal, William Meehan, “ in .the performance of his duty as marshal in the city of Wellsville, arrested plaintiff on charge of committing misdemeanors, to-wit, fighting on the streets of said city, and carrying concealed weapons: that on said day in said city the plaintiff escaped from the custody of said marshal, and was fleeing from him; and that said marshal, Meehan, attempted to rearrest him, and in attempting to rearrest him, and for the purpose of accomplishing the rearrest of the plaintiff, he unlawfully, maliciously and without cause, pointed and aimed a certain pistol, loaded with powder and ball, at plaintiff, and with the same did unlawfully shoot plaintiff the ball from said pistol shot and discharged by defendant Meehan as aforesaid, struck plaintiff and passed through his right hip.”

The marshal’s official bond is set out in full in the petition, signed by the other defendants as sureties, which recites his election to the office of marshal, his acceptance thereof, and conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties as such marshal. The attempt in the case to hold the bondsmen responsible for this alleged illegal act is for the reason, as we are informed, that the marshal himself is pecuniarily irresponsible.

To this amended petition a general demurrer was filed and sustained, and plaintiff not desiring to plead further or amend, judgment was entered in favor of the defendants, and the petition was dismissed. The court held that the bondsmen were not responsible, and on that ground dismissed the action.

This is somewhat of a ’ novel question in this state, and in a large majority of the states of this country, although this court, in a case to which I will refer hereafter, has heretofore expressed an opinion upon it in harmony with the holding of the court below, but which, upon mature consideration, we are not able to uphold.

The books generally have been searched for cases upon all fours with this, where the illegal act was a trespass to the person, and it is possible that between the researches of counsel and of ourselves we have now before us about all-of the cases that can be found in the state reports upon this precise question.

So far as the illegality of the act is concerned, it is conceded that the officer had no right to shoot the plaintiff, in attempting to re-capture him, where the offenses committed by him were mere misdemeanors.

In Kentucky in three cases, Jewell v. Mills, 3 Bush, 62; Calvert v. Stone, 10, B. Mon., 152; and Murrell v. Smith, 3 Dana, 463; and in Utah, in the case of Clinton v. Nelson, 2 Utah, 284, the negative of this proposition has been decided. That is, that the sureties on the official bond of the officer are not responsible for his acts of violence to the person, for trespass to the person, although done in the attempted discharge of an official duty. But in the last case stress seems to be laid by the court upon the proposition that it was an action “ in form ex contractu, but in effect ex delicto. It charges upon contract, and claims damages for a tort,” and that such an action cannot be maintained.

Another case has been cited, State v. Brown, 11 Ired Law (Nor. Car.), 141, as also sustaining this doctrine, but it is not a case of trespass to [418]*418the person, but a levy upon or seizure of, property. The point there decided was—

“A sheriff, knowing that certain goods had been manufactured in the state, and that no license fee was required for them, seized the goods, as he would have been authorized to do if they had been manufactured out of the state, but which he had no authority to do' as the facts were. Held, the sureties on his official bond were not liable for his acts in making such seizure.”

It has also been held that where an officer wrongfully and unlawfully ■ arrests a person, upon a warrant void upon its face, or without any warrant at all, the sureties on his bond are not liable:

McLendon v. State, 21 L. R. Ann. (Tenn.), 738; State v. McDonough, 9 Mo. App., 63.

But in McLendon v. State, supra, the court distinguishes that case from a case where the officer having a valid writ against A., misuses it by seizing the property (and from the tenor of the opinion, the person) of a stranger to his process.

In State v. Beckner, 123 Ind., 371, s. c. 32 Am. S. R., 263, the facts were similar to the facts- in Jewell v. Mills, supra. A constable, with a writ of replevin for a sewing machine belonging to the plaintiff’s daughter, and which was in the house of the plaintiff, to obtain the machine, made an unlawful entry in the house, and committed acts of violence to the person of plaintiff, and injured her, and the court held that the sureties on the bond of the constable were responsible for such acts and injuries.

In Huffman v. Koppelkom, 8 Neb., 344, 12 Neb., 98, it was held:

“The sureties on a sheriff’s bond are not liable for acts done colore officii, but are liable where the sheriff having a warrant against A., arrests B., and in arresting him unlawfully shoots and wounds him.”

In Cash v. The People, 32 Ill. Court of Appeals, 250, a constable arrested the plaintiff for a misdemeanor, and, instead of taking him before a justice, as was his duty, took him to the lockup, and in doing so, as was alleged, unlawfully, brutally and' wilfully beat and assaulted him. The court held, that it was an act of official misconduct, done in the attempted discharge of an official duty, and that the sureties were responsible.

In Clancy v. Kenworthy, 74 Iowa, 740, it was held, that sureties on a constable’s bond, “ are liable for acts of the constable, in unlawfully, and abusively arresting and imprisoning and prosecuting a party, and they cannot escape liability by the fact that the acts complained of were instigated by malice.”

None of the cases heretofore referred to in this opinion, holding the opposite doctrine, was before the court in that case; and the opinion was based upon the holding in the Kentucky cases, supra, and the apparent approval thereof in some of the text books.

These are the only cases that we are able to find squarely upon the proposition.

We are, however, cited to-the case of Farrier’s Adm’r. v. Cook et al., in circuit court of Mahoning county, decided some years ago, which, it is claimed, upholds the doctrine of the court below. And it is true that the court at that time was inclined to uphold, and did express, the opinion that the doctrine as declared in the Kentucky cases was correct. But it is doubtful if the case required a decision of the question.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 416, 11 Ohio C.C. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rischer-v-meham-ohcirctcolumbia-1896.