Wrains v. Rose

175 So. 2d 75
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 14, 1965
Docket4690
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 175 So. 2d 75 (Wrains v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wrains v. Rose, 175 So. 2d 75 (Fla. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

175 So.2d 75 (1965)

Charles WRAINS, Sherwood A. Innis, Ralph Finno and Michael Galatka, Appellants,
v.
James W. ROSE, Appellee.

No. 4690.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

May 14, 1965.

*76 James E. Edwards, C. Shelby Dale, William J. Lee, Fort Lauderdale, for appellants.

Ray Sandstrom of Sandstrom & Hodge, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee.

WHITE, Judge.

The defendants appeal a final judgment for plaintiff entered on a jury verdict in an action for unlawful arrest, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution and assault and battery. The plaintiff was arrested by the defendant officers of the city of Fort Lauderdale Police Department while he was in a phone booth in the city of Dania. When arrested the plaintiff was communicating by telephone with his sister. The plaintiff asserted that he was unlawfully frisked, shoved, jerked and pushed around before being taken to the Fort Lauderdale Police Department where he was charged with vagrancy under a Fort Lauderdale city ordinance and caused to be incarcerated for some 40 hours; that the defendant officers placed a "hold order" against him so that he was not permitted to be bonded out at the time of his arrest.

The plaintiff further charged that he was forced to empty his pockets which contained $7.00 in change, a bank deposit slip in the amount of $2,500.00 and his car keys before he was ordered to "take his pants off." The defendants conceded that they inventoried plaintiff's property but denied that they ordered him to strip. They asserted that plaintiff undressed voluntarily without any cause to do so. The officers denied malice in the course of events and further denied committing any assault and battery upon the plaintiff. At the close of the trial the jury found against the defendants and awarded the plaintiff $1,000.00 compensatory damages and $4,000.00 punitive damages. Motion for a new trial was denied.

On appeal the defendants assign error asserting that the jury could not competently resolve the conflicts in favor of the plaintiff — primarily because the plaintiff has an unfavorable record of prior convictions and hatred towards law officers. Secondly, having denied committing any assault and battery upon the plaintiff, the defendants urge that since the plaintiff received no physical injury while under detention and since he was bonded out 40 hours after his arrest the aggregate of compensatory and punitive damages was excessive. The defendants urge in their last point on appeal that error was committed in assessing punitive damages against the four defendants jointly and severally without distinction as to their respective financial conditions. The points will be discussed seriatim.

The initial question concerns whether or not the verdict is supported by the evidence. There were conflicts of testimony *77 on the issues presented not only as between the parties but also as among the defendants themselves. Defendant Innis testified that he was aware that the Fort Lauderdale Police were without authority to arrest for violation of a Fort Lauderdale City Ordinance in some other city when not incident to hot pursuit. He stated that no warrant was issued for plaintiff's arrest and that no offense was committed in his presence. The officers denied making an arrest in the City of Dania. They asserted at trial that they merely offered plaintiff transportation and that plaintiff accepted the offer and voluntarily entered the police car. Plaintiff's own vehicle was left parked near the telephone booth. According to the defendants' version the plaintiff was not "arrested" until after he arrived at the police station.

The plaintiff's sister, Dixie Rose Sawyer, a school teacher, stated on deposition that she was talking to her brother on the telephone:

"And all of a sudden I heard somebody saying something, `Give him the shake-down.' And I started saying, `James, James, James.' And James didn't answer. After I said it about ten times, I said, `James, what is going on?' And then some one took the telephone and identified themselves as a Fort Lauderdale police officer, and said — I don't remember whether he told me his name or not, but I know he said he was a Fort Lauderdale police officer and that they were arresting my brother. And I said, `For what?' And he said — `No.' I said, `For what?' And he says, `We are arresting your brother.' And I said, `For what?' And he says — I think he told me if I wanted to find out more about it, to call the police station the next morning, or to call the police station some time.
"And I said, `Where is that located? I am coming there right now.' And he said, `Lady,' or `Ma'am,' or something, `you needn't come here. We are taking your brother to jail right now.' And bang went the receiver. And that's the last I heard until I called the police station the next morning."

The jury, however, heard her testify first hand and her testimony in open court apparently was believed. She testified:

"* * * I said, `Who is this?' And he said, `The Fort Lauderdale Police.' He identified himself as a Fort Lauderdale Police Officer, and I said, `Well, could you please tell me what's going on?' and he said, `We are arresting your brother.' And I said, `For what?' And he said, `If you want to know more about it you can call the Fort Lauderdale police station,' and I said, `Where is this I am talking right now?' And he said, `You need not call, we are bringing your brother to jail right now.' And he hung up and I did not know where he was nor why he was arrested.
"Q. He had been arrested when you came in contact with the Fort Lauderdale police?
"A. Yes. I don't know whether the officer told me I could call that night or the next morning. I think he told me I could call that morning, and I could find out whatever I wanted to know. I know I did call the next morning. I asked him what they were holding him for and he said for vagrancy, and I said, `Excuse me sir, would you please explain what he was arrested for, I don't know the situation.' And I said, `Could I speak to my brother on the phone?' And he said, `No.' And I said, `If I come to the jail could I see him?' And he said, `No.' And I said, `I didn't know of anyone being in jail before and I thought it was very irregular that you couldn't speak to them, or couldn't see him or couldn't bond him out.' And I said, `When can he get out?' And he said, `Two or three weeks.'"

*78 The plaintiff was charged as follows:

"On the 23d day of November, 1961 did conduct himself as a vagrant by wandering from place to place without means of support, within the corporate limits of Fort Lauderdale in violation of Section 28.53 of the Code of Ordinances of said City."

A court reporter testified that defendants Wrains, Innis and Finno appeared as witnesses in support of the charge and that during the trial the court directed a verdict of acquittal for James Rose, the plaintiff herein.

There were unwritten aspects of the trial that apparently had some bearing on its outcome. The jury heard the testimony of the witnesses and the tone of their answers and observed their demeanor. These and other elements affect the credibility to be accorded to testimony. Plaintiff's witnesses for the most part were firm and consistent. The same cannot be said of the testimony of the various officers whose statements were at times evasive with frontal attacks on the character of the plaintiff.

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175 So. 2d 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrains-v-rose-fladistctapp-1965.