Tudor v. Lewis

60 Ky. 378, 3 Met. 378, 1860 Ky. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 25, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 60 Ky. 378 (Tudor v. Lewis) 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
Tudor v. Lewis, 60 Ky. 378, 3 Met. 378, 1860 Ky. LEXIS 97 (Ky. Ct. App. 1860).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE STITES

delivered the opinion op the court :

This suit was brought against a constable and his sureties, for the value of a slave, charged to have been lost to the owner in consequence of the misconduct and negligence of the constable, whilst in the discharge of his official duties.

The petition, after setting out the official bond, proceeds to~^ show a breach thereof in substance as follows :

“That said Lewis, after his appointment and qualification as constable, under some pretended writ issued by Thos. Boone, a justice of the peace for Madison county, forcibly took from the plaintiff her negro slave, Richard, and without her knowledge or consent detained him in his custody about forty hours, said slave being, as she is informed, charged with the crime of stealing.

“That, after the slave was so taken from her possession, said Lewis, by his culpable negligence and gross misconduct, allowed persons to talk and converse with said slave, and threaten him with hanging, and frighten him; and that, afterwards, by his culpable negligence and inattention in failing to have said slave kept and guarded, he suffered said slave to escape and drown himself in the Kentucky river. Wherefore, &c.”

[380]*380The answer admits the execution of the bond, but denies the alleged breach, and goes on, in response to the specific charges, to say:

“They state that on the — day of December, 1858, Thomas Boone, then and still a justice of the peace for Madison county, issued a warrant against the slave Richard, charging him with the commission of a felony; which warrant was placed in the hands of defendant, Lewis, as constable of said eounty, to execute ; that, in compliance with the directions of said warrant, and in discharge of his duty as constable, he did arrest said slave Richard.

“The said slave was not at the time in' plaintiff’s possession, nor was he, so far as they know or believe, her property, nor did said Lewis detain said slave in his custody forty hours.

“They state that said Lewis, in obedience to said warrant, took said slave as soon as he conveniently could after the arrest, before the said justice of the peace, and summoned five citizens of Madison county to assist in guarding said slave. Two of them attended at Boone’s house, in said county., with the constable Lewis, when he took the slave to said justice’s. On defendant Lewis’ taking said slave to Boone’s, he, said Boone, stated that it was necessary to have another justice of the peace to sit with him on the trial of the slave, and, it being necessary for defendant Lewis to summons witnesses, he left the slave with Boone and the two persons summoned as a guard, to take care of said slave, and went off, as it was his duty to do, to summon witnesses to attend the trial; and another person went, or agreed to go, to get another justice to assist on the trial.

“That, during the period the defendant Lewis was so necessarily absent, and before he returned to Boone’s, the said slave escaped. In what manner he escaped, or how he came to his death, they do not know.”

The answer then proceeds to deny specifically the charges of misconduct and culpable negligence of the officer in any way, and also controverts any liability for the conversations and threats of others, &c. It also denies that the death of the [381]*381slave, or his loss, was the immediate or proximate result of any of the acts or omissions of the constable.

Upon the issues thus presented the parties went to trial, and a verdict and judgment having been rendered for the defendant, the plaintiff has brought the case up — complaining, mainly, of error of the court in allowing and refusing instructions.

The evidence conduced to show that the slave was charged with some public offense — whether a felony, or mere larcency, punishable with stripes, does not appear, as the warrant is not contained in the bill of exceptions. That he was arrested and taken to Boone’s on the same day. That he was kept there all night, and, on the next morning, about 10 o’clock, made his escape, going towards the Kentucky river, which was only a short distance off. That his body was soon afterwards found in the river, near the crossing place, where it was supposed he was drowned. No one saw him drowned, and it did not appear whether the death was accidental or intentional.

There was some evidence of carelessness in watching the boy, both at night and in the morning; and also evidence showing that persons had frightened him as to the consequences of the offense with which he stood charged. It appeared, also, that the constable had left the slave at Boone’s in charge of others, whilst he was off summoning witnesses, and that he escaped before Lewis’ return.

The evidence, in regard to the number of persons summoned as guards, and also as to the amount of care observed in watching the boy, was somewhat varied and contradictory.

The value of the slave was proved, and it also appeared that the plaintiff owned but a life'estate in him.

Upon the foregoing facts the plaintiff and defendant both moved several instructions, which were refused. But, as no exceptions were taken at the time to the refusal, we need not stop to notice them. For, as held by this court in Kennedy vs. Cunningham, and Letton vs. Young, (2 Met.,) error of the circuit court in granting or refusing to grant instructions, unless excepted to at the time, will not avail for a new trial below, nor for reversal here.

[382]*382The court however gave the following instructions, which were excepted to by the appellant, and of which, as already said, complaint is made.

“The court instruct the jury that, if they believe, from t*he evidence, that on the 23d December last the negro man slave, Richard, then being the property of the plaintiff, was arrested by the defendant Lewis, as constable of Madison county, on a charge of stealing, and taken into his custody, and that, after said arrest, saidslave was, by the culpable negligence or fraud of said Lewis or his guards, permitted to escape, and did escape, and was thereby lost to the plaintiff before said boy had been tried, and before the possession of him had been restored to the plaintiff, then they should find for the plaintiff a verdict in damages, equal to the injury sustained.

“If they shall believe, from the facts, that the defendant Lewis, nor his guards, were notguilt3 of gross neglect of duty, nor fraud in not taking care of the said slave after his arrest, they ought to find for the defendants.

“If they believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff only had a life estate in the slave, they cannot, in any event, find for the plaintiff more than the value of that life estate.”

The objection to the first and second instructions is, that they do not define properly the degree of care which the officer was bound to take of the slave, whilst in his keeping or under his charge ; and, in our opinion, the objection is well taken.

It is true that the officer, in arresting' the slave, was acting in strict obedience to the warrant, and would have been guilty of a violation Of dut3 had he refused to execute the same.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Ky. 378, 3 Met. 378, 1860 Ky. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tudor-v-lewis-kyctapp-1860.