State ex rel. Miser v. Hay

328 S.W.2d 672, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 691
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 9, 1959
DocketNo. 47362
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 328 S.W.2d 672 (State ex rel. Miser v. Hay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Miser v. Hay, 328 S.W.2d 672, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 691 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

SAMUEL A. DEW, Special Commissioner.

The plaintiff seeks to recover $10,000 in this action for personal injuries sustained while in the custody of defendant Hay as sheriff of Clay County, Missouri. The defendant Fidelity and Deposit Company is joined as surety on defendant Hay’s official bond. The verdict of the jury was in defendants’ favor. Judgment was entered accordingly, from which plaintiff has appealed.

In Count I of his petition plaintiff alleges breach of duty by defendant Hay as sheriff on April 10, 1957, acting through his deputies, in that Hay arrested plaintiff, who was guilty of no crime, and without an appearance before a magistrate, confined the plaintiff for a period exceeding two and a half hours in the county jail of Clay County, Missouri, while plaintiff was in a condition of “ill health and helpless,” when defendant Hay and his deputies knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that if plaintiff was placed in a cell with common criminals and felons he would be assaulted and injured; that defendant Hay, nevertheless, placed the plaintiff in the “bull pen” of said jail with five common criminals and felons who, by reason of defendant Hay’s failure to take reasonable measures for the plaintiff’s protection, assaulted, bruised, kicked and wounded plaintiff, causing, among other injuries, the loss of one of his eyes. Count II, for false arrest, was dismissed by the plaintiff.

The answer denied the allegations of breach of duty by defendant Hay; admitted the arrest and confinement in the Clay County jail and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff in that he was guilty of disturbing the peace in the presence of the officers, was intoxicated, and if injured it was the result of plaintiff’s own conduct toward other inmates in the jail; that Hay had no other place to confine the plaintiff than the county jail, where the plaintiff promptly abused the other inmates and incited them to assault him, whereupon defendant Hay, in the exercise of ordinary care, removed the plaintiff. The answer avers that defendant Hay had no way of knowing that the plaintiff would incite the other inmates to assault him, and that defendant Hay subsequently arrested the inmate who committed the assault, who was later given a sentence of six months in the county jail for the assault. The answer repeated that plaintiff’s injuries were due to his own willful acts in cursing and abusing other prisoners in the jail.

Upon the plaintiff’s application for change of venue this cause was sent to the Circuit Court of Worth County, Missouri, where the trial was had.

There is very little dispute regarding the essential facts. Plaintiff, aged 30, a railroad clerk, stayed home on April 10, 1957, his day off. He had “some words” with his wife, and toward evening took his rifle and went to the river to shoot cans. Before leaving home he had consumed six cans of beer and drank six more after leaving the home. He later stopped at Elardo’s store, where he bought some “schnapps,” of which he took one drink. Fie said he remembered nothing thereafter until he found himself in the police car on the way to the hospital.

Other witnesses testified that at Elardo’s he was belligerent, sought to pick fights with the other customers, was abusive and profane and was carrying his rifle bolt in his pocket. Plaintiff had been convicted a year previously for driving while intoxicated. Elardo had someone call defendant Hay and asked that he come to his store because plaintiff was “raising a row” in the store and might hurt someone or get hurt.

[674]*674When defendant Hay’s two deputies arrived at Elardo’s store, they approached the plaintiff, asked his name and asked if they could call anyone to come and get him. He replied that his wife was waiting for him in his car. There was no one in his car. They asked him about his rifle bolt in his pocket and told him that such a weapon might kill anyone if hit with 'it, to which he replied: “I aim to kill.” The deputies walked him to their car and took him to the county jail. On the way his hands were not handcuffed. He kept trying to climb over into the front seat where the driver was sitting.

Upon arrival at the jail he was booked as being very drunk and belligerent. He was taken into one of the “bull pens” in the jail and a bed was brought in for his use. Five other inmates were in the cell. They were serving different sentences for their respective offenses, consisting of the theft of a car, issuing had checks, and common assault.

Many other drunken persons had been placed in the “bull pen” with .other prisoners during defendant Hay’s experience but none had ever caused any trouble. There was no other cell available at the time. Two cells were being kept open for women or juveniles. A woman was occupying one of these cells. Much evidence was introduced relative to the location and character of the steel doors intervening between the “bull pen” and the office, and the ability of the sheriff in his office to hear any confusion in the “bull pen.” There was a peephole through which visitors and officials could see the inmates in the “bull pen.”

Upon entering the “bull pen” plaintiff first stood looking at the other inmates, who were playing cards. He raised his foot as if to kick one of them. He was told to go sit on his mattress. This he did, but soon got up and got in the bed of another inmate. Then he insisted that he be allowed to join in the card game. He took the cards that were discarded in the game and threw them all over the floor, stopping the game. He then sat down on the bed of one Collier, pulled out Collier’s cigarettes and started to smoke. He was given some “Bull Durham” tobacco, which he dumped upon the floor. He spit on the floor. He gouged his elbow into the side of another inmate. He then announced that he was going to sleep in Collier’s bed and that Collier could sleep on the floor. Collier by this time was pacing the floor. Plaintiff was approaching him and taking off his coat. Plaintiff took a swing at inmate Hudlemeyer, who struck the plaintiff and knocked him down, whereupon Collier kicked him several times in the face and head. All this happened about the time the lights went out at 9:25 p. m. Several of the inmates called loudly to the defendant Hay’s office and the deputies turned on the lights, came at once and removed the plaintiff to a single, empty cell upstairs and called a doctor. Plaintiff was then taken to the hospital, was treated for his injuries and one eye removed.

During the testimony of the defendant Hay, he referred to two cells which he said he “was supposed” to keep open for women and juveniles and when asked if that was according to a court order, the court, upon further objection, remarked: “That is the law, doesn’t make and difference whether it is the court’s instruction.”

In a memorandum of the court in connection with the overruling of plaintiff’s motion for new trial the court stated that no objection was made to the oral statement of the court at the trial to the effect that it was the law that two cells be kept open for women and juveniles, nor was any objection thereto made at any other time in the trial. The court further stated in the memorandum that defendants’ motion for a directed verdict at the close of the testimony should have been sustained.

Plaintiff’s first point is that the court erred in giving Instruction No. 7, requested by the defendants, because it required of the plaintiff to use the same degree of care [675]*675for his own safety as a sober person. That instruction was as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
328 S.W.2d 672, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-miser-v-hay-mo-1959.