Sizemore v. Hoskins

235 S.W.2d 1011, 314 Ky. 436, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 669
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 19, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 235 S.W.2d 1011 (Sizemore v. Hoskins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sizemore v. Hoskins, 235 S.W.2d 1011, 314 Ky. 436, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 669 (Ky. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

STANLEY, Commissioner.

In this suit against a policeman of Hazard, Clarence Sizemore and the surety on his bond for false arrest and imprisonment, there' was a verdict for $5,000 in favor of the plaintiff, E. C. Hoskins. While the motion for a new trial was pending, the court accepted the plaintiff’s offer of re-mittitur to $2,500 and judgment was entered against the surety company and the individual defendant jointly for $2,000, the amount of the bond, and $500 additional against Sizemore alone. A reversal is sought upon the grounds of prejudicial error in the instructions and excessive damages.

The plaintiff is a respected citizen of Perry County, 67 years old, a farmer, a member of the fiscal court for eleven years past, and a former deputy sheriff for several terms. He had been a teetotaler for 17 years. At the time of this occurrence, he was assisting the jailer in waiting upon the circuit court. About noon one day in February, 1948, after having waited upon the court, he visited the police judge to' intercede for a boy in trouble. From the police courtroom Hoskins and Morris Dickerson, a deputy sheriff, and two other friends, were threading their way across a street under construction when the defendant, Sizemore, grabbed hold of Squire Hoskins, saying he was going to take him to jail because he was drunk. He and his companions insisted with the officer that he was not drunk but was a sick man and protested the arrest. Nevertheless, Sizemore searched him, took him to jail and there relieved him of his watch and billfold and lodged him with the prisoners. Hoskins had insisted that he be taken to the police court as it was the officer’s duty to take him there. The police courtroom was in the same building, and they passed it on the way to the city jail. The plaintiff was kept in jail about an hour before being discharged without having any charges preferred against him. The plaintiff proved that he had not been drinking at all and that he was a sick man, suffering with heart disease, with a very high blood pressure which caused dizziness and smothering spells. This condition made it difficult for him to walk without some staggering. His companion, Dickerson, had hold of his .arm, helping him across the street, when the policeman arrested him. The police judge, [1013]*1013whose office he had just left, testified that he noticed Squire Hoskins’ condition and that he “acted pretty dopey.” Somewhat in jest he suggested that he better keep off the street as some policeman might pick him up. And that is what quickly happened. The arrest and experience caused extreme nervousness, greatly increased his already high blood pressure, and humiliated the plaintiff. He at once saw 'his doctor, who sent him home and told him to stay there.

The defendant, Sizemore, undertook to justify the arrest by the fact that he saw the plaintiff staggering with a man holding his arm and having all the appearance of being drunk. The reason he did not heed the claim and advice that he was not drunk was “I hear that every day.” He did not take the prisoner to the police judge, who was in his office at the time, because, as he testified, his prisoner did not ask him to do so. His sole defense in this suit was that he 'had acted reasonably on appearances.

The plaintiff offered an instruction predicating his right to recovery if the jury should believe that the defendant had arrested him “wrongfully or without having any reasonable grounds to believe the plaintiff had committed an offense” in his presence. But the court prepared his own instruction, which predicated recovery on the jury’s belief from the evidence that the arrest and confinement in jail were made “at a time when the said E. C. Hoskins was not drunk or intoxicated.” The defendants objected to the instruction and moved the court to modify, it “to conform to the instruction offered by the plaintiff.” It will be observed that the given instruction authorized a verdict for the defendant only if the plaintiff was in fact drunk in a public -place, thereby depriving the defendant of 'his only defen-se, namely, that he had acted reasonably and in good faith. It was the •equivalent of directing a verdict for the ■plaintiff since there was no contention on -the trial that he was in fact intoxicated or ffiad been drinking at all.

Drunkenness in a public place is a •statutory misdemeanor. KRS 244.020(2). It is true that Section 36 of the Criminal •Code of Practice authorizes a police officer to make an arrest without a warrant “when a public offense is committed in his presence, or when he has reasonable grounds for believing that the person arrested has committed a felony.” Prima facie this confines the power of arrest to the actual commission of a misdemeanor in the officer’s presence without the element of good faith belief on his part. Notwithstanding the omission from the statute, beginning at least 46 years ago, the construction of the statute, and its acceptance by the legislature, has been that there is no liability for false arrest if the officer acted in good faith and upon reasonable grounds to believe that the man arrested was drunk, and, accordingly, that instructions omitting that defense are erroneous. Easton v. Commonwealth, 82 S.W. 996, 26 Ky.Law Rep. 960. The cases are reviewed in Goins v. Hudson, 246 Ky. 517, 55 S.W.2d 388. In that case a man visiting a friend in jail was kept locked in by the jailer upon the belief that he was drunk, when, as a matter of fact, he was not intoxicated but suffering extreme pain from toothache and had been using a liniment his dentist had given him. We held the instruction was erroneous because it ommitted the condition that the jailer had reasonable grounds to believe the plaintiff to have been drunk.

In the face of this consistent and clear construction of the statute, the trial court refused to follow it, notwithstanding the efforts of'the lawyers on both sides of the case that he should. The error is manifest. The question arises whether it can be deemed prejudicial to the rights of the defendants. Section 394, Criminal Code of Practice, prescribes the duty of all peace officers to arrest any “drunken person whom they may find at large, and not in the care of some discreet person, and carry him before some magistrate of the county, city or' town in which the arrest is made.” Even though the plaintiff had been in fact drunk, he was in the care of a presumably discreet person, namely a deputy sheriff and was not. subject to arrest. York v. Holliday, 311 Ky. 206, 223 S.W.2d 754. The policeman further violated his duty to him and to the people whose servant he was by putting the man in jail instead of [1014]*1014taking him before the police judge or some other magistrate. We have recognized that under some circumstances and conditions, even during daylight hours, that would not be practical or possible, but that was not the condition here. We have also recognized that where there is proof of some affirmative -act or statement on his part, a prisoner may have waived his right to be taken forthwith before a magistrate. In Satterly v. Thornton, 188 Ky. 553, 222 S.W. 1088, a policeman had -arrested the plaintiff on a warrant but had refused to take him before the police judge, though they passed within eight feet of his office on the way to the jail in which he was immediately placed.

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Related

Hopkins v. Commonwealth
301 S.W.2d 586 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1957)
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252 S.W.2d 421 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W.2d 1011, 314 Ky. 436, 1951 Ky. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sizemore-v-hoskins-kyctapp-1951.