Tufte v. City of Tacoma

431 P.2d 183, 71 Wash. 2d 866, 1967 Wash. LEXIS 1031
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1967
Docket38612
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 431 P.2d 183 (Tufte v. City of Tacoma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tufte v. City of Tacoma, 431 P.2d 183, 71 Wash. 2d 866, 1967 Wash. LEXIS 1031 (Wash. 1967).

Opinion

Langenbach, J.

Respondent sued the city of Tacoma and its chief of police for false arrest and false imprisonment. The chief of police was dismissed. From a verdict for respondent, the city of Tacoma has appealed.

Mr. Paul Arthur Tufte, respondent, was suffering from diabetes and took medication to control that disability. This required that he eat at scheduled intervals to achieve a balance between medication and food consumption. On May 16, 1964, a Saturday, respondent arose early and, after having taken his prescribed medicine and having eaten breakfast, went fishing from his boat in Puget Sound, near Tacoma. It was necessary that he eat again promptly at noon. Respondent fished until 11:15 a.m. when he returned the boat to its moorage and secured it. He then relaxed in a deck chair and dozed. Upon awakening, he finished securing the boat. That is the last thing he remembered until he awoke much later in the Tacoma city jail’s drunk tank.

At 2:24 p.m. the police, in response to a call, went to the corner of Jefferson and Pacific streets in Tacoma where they found respondent slumped over the wheel of a small car of foreign manufacture. The motor was running, and the car was faced in the wrong direction on a one-way street. Upon turning off the motor, the police officers checked respondent’s pulse, which was strong, shook him awake and assisted him out of the car. Both officers felt that they detected the odor of alcohol about respondent and that his eyes were bloodshot. They found his walk unsteady and his speech slurred.

Respondent was placed in the back seat of the patrol car where he answered questions about his vital statistics but, unaccountably, did not inform the officers of his diabetic condition. While he produced, after considerable effort, the *868 wallet which contained his driver’s license, the officers declared that they did not see a card therein which stated: “I am a Diabetic. I am not intoxicated.” The officers concluded he was drunk, impounded his automobile and took him to the city jail where he was charged with being drunk in an auto.

At the jail respondent was booked, searched and the contents of his pockets removed. This process at least included removing the money from his wallet. He was placed in the drunk tank to sober up. The time was about 3 p.m., and the shifts of the arresting officers and jail booking officer were changing. Respondent was left lying on the drunk tank floor in the appearance of sleep.

When respondent had not returned home for lunch by one o’clock, his wife became alarmed. She checked at the boat moorage and about 4 p.m. contacted the police. She testified that she told them her husband was a diabetic and that she feared he was in insulin shock. Giving a description of the car (a Renault sedan) and its license number, she urged that they find the car and pull it over to the side of the road. The officer replied that the police could not do that.

In addition to numerous additional calls to the department, respondent’s wife also called the sheriff’s office, the state patrol, radio station KTNT and gave them similar particulars. She also called respondent’s personal physician, Dr. Betteridge. Between 6 and 7 p.m., Dr. Betteridge telephoned the Tacoma police department. He asked if they had a party named Mr. Tufte. He told them that Tufte was a diabetic who had failed to return home and that the police should be on the lookout for him as he could well be slumped over the wheel of his car on the roadside in an insulin reaction. The doctor was told that they would be on the lookout for Mr. Tufte.

Respondent remained unconscious in the jail’s drunk tank until about 3 a.m. Sunday morning when he came to and discovered where he was. He called the officers, and they allowed him to bail himself out of jail for $35. Upon *869 being released, he was given his possessions. He testified that:

[An officer] gave me a bag. It had my name on the bag, and he dumped the stuff out on the desk. Everything fell out, my sugar, my saccharine tablets, my keys, my billfold, my driver’s license, everything.
I saw the driver’s license. I said, “That’s funny, I never had my driver’s license laying loose like that.” I started to put it back in my billfold, and right with it was my diabetic card and I said, “Look, there is my diabetic card. Why did I have to bail myself out?” He said, “Well, you were put in here for being drunk. There is nothing I can do about it.”

Respondent ate some sugar lumps and called his wife. She drove toward the jail and found him on the street in a dazed and confused condition, after he had been released by the jailer. Together they returned to the jail where Mrs. Tufte complained of the treatment given them by the police. They were told to come back Monday morning if they had any further complaint. On Monday they went to the chief of police and informed him, and a captain, of the treatment Mr. Tufte had received. They also went to police court where respondent had been ordered to report. After hearing respondent’s story, the police judge reinstated the bail which had been ordered forfeited and continued the case. The chief of police had promised an investigation, and when this was later completed, the drunk charge was dismissed, but a charge of negligent driving was substituted. In time this, too, was dismissed, but the bail was not returned to respondent.

This action was then commenced which resulted in a verdict for respondent, from which the appeal was perfected.

We may note in limine that there is no contention made that the police officers, jailers, and others who acted in the name of the city of Tacoma were not acting entirely within the scope of their employment. See Kelso v. Tacoma, 63 Wn.2d 913, 390 P.2d 2 (1964).

*870 The appellant argued that the arrest of respondent was lawful. We agree that the original arrest was justifiably made under the plausible belief that respondent was intoxicated. But the fact that the arrest might have been lawful did not determine that the subsequent imprisonment was also entirely lawful. This is the flaw in appellant’s assignment of error to the court’s failure to instruct the jury that:

[T]he arrest was lawful. Accordingly, you are instructed that Plaintiff cannot recover damages from Defendant for his arrest or for being placed in jail pursuant to that arrest.

This is a non sequitur inasmuch as it fails to recognize that a lawful imprisonment following proper arrest may under some circumstances become unlawful. See e.g. Housman v. Byrne, 9 Wn.2d 560, 115 P.2d 673 (1941). The proposed instruction suggested that consideration of the facts surrounding the imprisonment was foreclosed if there was initially a lawful arrest. That is not a correct instruction, and it was not error to refuse an instruction which incorrectly stated the law. State v. Twitchell, 61 Wn.2d 403, 378 P.2d 444 (1963).

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Bluebook (online)
431 P.2d 183, 71 Wash. 2d 866, 1967 Wash. LEXIS 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tufte-v-city-of-tacoma-wash-1967.