Wendelboe v. Jacobson

353 P.2d 178, 10 Utah 2d 344, 1960 Utah LEXIS 183
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1960
Docket9025
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 353 P.2d 178 (Wendelboe v. Jacobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wendelboe v. Jacobson, 353 P.2d 178, 10 Utah 2d 344, 1960 Utah LEXIS 183 (Utah 1960).

Opinions

McDonough, justice.

The plaintiff in this action brought suit against the defendants (1) for assault and battery, (2) for false arrest and imprisonment, and (3) for malicious prosecution. The case was submitted to a jury on those issues and from a no cause of action verdict and judgment entered thereon plaintiff appeals. He contends that the verdict is contrary to the evidence on each of the charges above stated and assigns certain other errors hereinafter discussed. The defendants having prevailed, are entitled to have us review the evidence in the light most favorable to them.1

At about three o’clock in the morning of April 6, 1958, the three defendants in the performance of their duties as Salt Lake City police officers were cruising just east of the business section of the city near Second South and Fifth East. They noticed an automobile parked on the west side of Fifth East heading south, near a service station under construction where there was a shed containing tools and equipment. As they drove by they noticed that the lights [346]*346of tfie automobile were out and that the engine was running. After brief reconnoitering .near there they returned and, seeing the car still there, pulled up beside it to interrogate the occupant, who turned out to be the plaintiff, Stratford L. Wendelboe, a young man about 37 years of age.

Officer Jacobson went over to the car and asked Wendelboe for his driver’s license. The happenings from that time forward seem to be a good example of the old story concerning the echo which illustrates that our surroundings echo back to us just about what we project to them. It is apparent from the testimony that the plaintiff was either in a bad mood or the officer’s approach inspired one. He made no verbal response, but gave the officer a temporary driving permit. Since there was no physical description of the bearer, nor other identification except a name and address, he asked for additional identification and for the registration certificate of the car. The plaintiff thumbed through the cards and other papers in his wallet but avoided giving his army identification card, which the officer saw and requested. His suspicions aroused, the officer asked plaintiff to step outside of the car and questioned him as fo what he was doing there at that time of the morning. The plaintiff’s answer was:

“None of your damn business,” and further that “I am a citizen — and have my rights.”

The officers searched the plaintiff and placed him in the police car, advising him that he was either going to identify himself satisfactorily and produce the registration certificate, or be taken to jail. According to the officers the plaintiff refused to answer questions, but persisted in trying to get out of the car so that it was necessary for Officer Lang to hold him in. Jacobson advised Lang to release him and perhaps he would tell them what he was doing there and assist in his further identification. The officers’ testimony is that as the door was released plaintiff burst out, knocking both of them aside, where he struggled and tried to break away. The officers attempted to handcuff the plaintiff as the result of which a melee ensued during which blows were struck. They managed to get one handcuff upon him and he flailed with it and cut Officer Jacobson. Officer Lang then struck him on the head with a flashlight and the officers were able to subdue him and snap on the other handcuff. They then took him to the jail and thereafter to the county hospital for examination, where it was determined that he had suffered no serious injury and he was returned to jail. There he refused to talk, to stand, or to walk so it was necessary for the officers to carry him into the jail. He refused to give the booking officers his name or any information and would not get up so he was laid on the floor. Because of his strange behav7 ior the plaintiff was given the ttsual treat[347]*347ment for such cases, stripped of his clothing and placed in an isolation cell as a safeguard against possible injury. There he remained for some hours and until an attorney was called to come to his assistance.

Complaints were signed by Officer Jacobson, charging the plaintiff with vagrancy, assault and battery, and resisting an officer. After various trials on these charges, all were terminated in favor of the plaintiff. It is to be kept in mind that such a determination does not necessarily mean that the arrest and the prosecution were unjustified. In the criminal case the state must prove the charge beyond a reasonable doubt, which it may fail to do. If this meant ipso facto that the prosecution was malicious, then every defendant in a criminal case who was acquitted would have such an action. Upon this civil action, the burden shifted to the plaintiff to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the prosecution was malicious, upon a completely separate trial of the issues, and the jury found against him.

Plaintiff’s claim of false arrest is based upon the assertion that the “officer cannot legally make an arrest for a misdemeanor without a warrant or unless the offense was being committed or attempted in his presence.”2 This is correct as a general statement of the law. The defendants’ rejoinder is that Sec. 41-1-40, U.C.A.1953, provides that the registration certificate of a motor vehicle shall be carried in the vehicle or upon the person driving it, who must, “display the same upon demand of a police officer * * * ” and Sec. 41-1-142(k) makes it a misdemeanor to violate the above section.

The issue as to whether the plaintiff violated the law in the presence of the' arresting officers was correctly presented to the jury in Instruction No. 7. And the evidence was reasonably susceptible of the finding resolving the issue in favor of the defendants.

Instruction No. 17 is also attacked as being erroneous on the issue of false arrest. The court told the jury that:

“The officers had the authority and the positive and absolute duty to investigate any circumstances or situation whatsoever which would reasonably suggest to them a reasonable possibility that a public offense was being committed or * * * was about to be committed. * * *
“If these defendants had any reasonable suspicion * * * that the plaintiff * * * might be committing any public offense whatever, or that he might be about to commit any public offense whatever, then these defendants [348]*348had the power and the authority and the absolute duty to approach the plaintiff and ask him what he was doing- at that time and place * * * They have the positive duty to detect, uncover, reveal, or discover the existence or presence of any fact which might show that a public offense was being committed or was about to be. committed. They have a positive duty to prevent crime before it occurs * * * and no person has any right whatever to resist, interfere with, obstruct or delay a police officer in the exercise of this duty. * * *” (Emphasis ours.)

We see nothing in this instruction inconsistent with the law of this jurisdiction.3 However, we agree that the emphasized adjectives, which are particularly complained about by the plaintiff, are both unnecessary and somewhat ill-advised. The court should be wary of using terms of that character because they are argumentative and, coming from the court, may give an emphasis in the eyes of the jury greater than is intended or justified.

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Wendelboe v. Jacobson
353 P.2d 178 (Utah Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 P.2d 178, 10 Utah 2d 344, 1960 Utah LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wendelboe-v-jacobson-utah-1960.