Williams v. Morris

14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 353, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 219
CourtFranklin Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 353 (Williams v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Franklin Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Morris, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 353, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 219 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

The action in this case, according to the plaintiff’s petition, is one of false arrest and imprisonment. The petition alleged, among other things, that the defendants maliciously assaulted plaintiff, shot at him, threatened to kill him and by force unlawfully compelled him to go with them and imprisoned him in a corn crib and there detained him against his will, depriving him ,of his liberty from about 8:30 o’clock p. m. on June 12, 1908, until about 5 a. m., June 13, and refusing him food and water during said time, and that on June 13 said defendants maliciously, unlawfully, and with force compelled the plaintiff to go with them to a magistrate and there to answer to a pretended charge of trespassing, all without warrant and without authority of law.

That the plaintiff was afterward, according to ah order of the court of common pleas, dismissed, or at least discharged from the action, and that the plaintiff was compelled to expend the sum of $25 in counsel fees in attaining his release and discharge.

The defendants for answer admit in substance that the defendants did detain plaintiff a certain length of time, but that the plaintiff was then trespassing upon defendants’ land and that the alleged arrest was made by a duly authorized deputy sheriff and that the arrest was made on view and that the plaintiff was taken, as early as convenient on the following morning, to a justice of the peace, where an affidavit was filed and a warrant was duly issued by the justice, and the plaintiff pleaded guilty, and the justice imposed a fine, and that it was this action of the justice of the peace in imposing such fine that was set aside by proceedings in error, and denies the other allegations.

The case was tried to a. jury and a verdict of $25 given for-plaintiff. Motion was made for a new trial by both the plaintiff [355]*355and defendants below, which motions were overruled and each of the parties excepted thereto. The charge of the court was excepted to by both of the parties and error is principally predicated upon the law as laid down by the court.

The defendant in error, while not specifically pointing out in his brief the matters objected to, takes the position for his ground for setting aside the judgment below that the court below took the view throughout the trial and in its charge to the jury that the arrest in the first place was legal, and left the jury for determination from, the evidence the questions as to whether or not the accused had been detained an unreasonable length of time before being taken to the magistrate, and whether or not he had been detained in an improper place, and whether’ or not he had suffered at the hands of his captors improper treatment’ and indignities.

And defendant in error admits that if the view taken by the court below was correct that there was no prejudicial error. The facts show that Mr. Williams, one of the plaintiffs in error, was . the owner of a tract, I believe about 130 acres, of land several miles from Columbus; that the other plaintiff in error, Mr. Rutter, was a duly appointed and acting deputy sheriff. On Mr. Williams’ farm there was an artificial lake less than ten miles in length, into which had been introduced some fish, 'and it was such a lake that a person trespassing thereon for the purpose of fishing would be guilty of an offense under the statutes of Ohio. (99 O. L., 380, Sec. 76.)

The defendant in error, with two others, came out to this lake about 8:30 o’clock for the purpose of fishing, and between that hour and 10:30 ocloek they were caught in the act of fishing by Mr. Rutter and by him placed under arrest, and afterwards were taken up to the house of Mr. Williams, and there detained in a com crib until the next morning, when they were taken before a justice of the peace, where Mr. Rutter made out an affidavit for the violation of this section, and the defendant in error and his two companions pleaded guilty and were fined $10 each, and given thirty days in which to pay the same, or give bond in the sum of $75.

Under Section 77, 99 O. L., 380 (General Code, 12526), it is provided;

[356]*356“Prosecutions for a violation of the-provisions of such section shall be instituted, only upon complaint of the person or his agent upon whose land or rights in land or waters the trespass has been committed.”

In making out the affidavit for the warrant before the justice of the peace, the deputy sheriff did not state therein that he was the authorized agent of Mr. Williams, but merely signed his name to the affidavit. These proceedings before the justice of the peace were taken up to the court of common pleas and reversed, for the reason that the affidavit did not show an offense; that is, as this prosecution could only.be instituted by Mr. Williams or his authorized agent, and the affidavit did not show that fact, the proceedings before 'the justice of the peace were erroneous.

However, the warrant on its face was regular and the evidence shows that Mr. Rutter was in fact the authorized agent of Mr. Williams, when his affidavit was made, and that he was duly authorized to make a proper affidavit, and that he was also the duly authorized agent for Mr. Williams at the time that he made the arrest..

The defendant in error contends that because no valid complaint had been filed prior to the arrest, that all the proceedings were illegal.

The court, however, tried the ease and took the opposite view that Mr. Rutter as deputy sheriff duly authorized by Mr. Williams might on view lawfully make the arrest, even though no complaint had before been filed, or the complaint thereafter filed was not valid in law. To hold that a person found violating this law could not be detained or arrested, without first having the owner file an affidavit, would in many instances defeat its enforcement entirely. Such persons are not likely to kindly wait for these preliminaries, nor are they particular about disclosing their identity, and the return on the officer’s warrant would generally be “not found.”

We think that the court was right in this view, that it is not necessary under this statute to have a complaint made before an arrest can legally be made, especially when the arresting officer makes the arrest on view. If an officer should arrest on view [357]*357and thereafter the owner of the land would refuse to institute proceedings, a different question would arise, but in this case the officer had authority from the owner at the time the arrest was made and had full authority to institute proceedings in this ease. So the fact that the court of common pleas afterwards set these proceedings of the justice aside would not, in our view, make the arrest illegal.

In fact, the court charged the jury in this ease that:

1' The fact that the plaintiff was subsequently released and discharged from custody by order of the court of common pleas of this county, cuts little or no figure in this case. ,

In this we think the court was right.

If the arrest in the beginning was legal, the only question which was really in the case was whether or not the plaintiff below was unlawfully detained or illegally imprisoned from the time that the arrest was actually made until the affidavit was filed before the justice of the peace, and this question was submitted to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 353, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-morris-ohcirctfranklin-1911.