Going v. Dinwiddie

McFarland, J.

This is an action for alleged false imprisonment. Defendant demurred to the complaint. His demurrer was overruled, and upon his refusal to answer, judgment was rendered against him. He appeals from the judgment, and relies for reversal upon the insufficiency of the complaint.

In the complaint, it is first averred that on a certain day defendant “imprisoned plaintiff, and caused her to he imprisoned and deprived of her liberty for a period of five days, unlawfully, and with force, and without probable cause, on a pretended charge of contempt of court.” The “ circumstances attending and immediately surrounding and preceding the said false imprisonment” are then averred, and are substantially these: That, a short time prior to said alleged imprisonment, the defendant, “acting as a justice of the peace for Bear Valley township, in said county,” did “wrongfully and unlawfully” issue a writ of restitution, requiring plaintiff to quit and surrender a certain house and premises; that the writ was given to a certain constable, who, with a posse, attempted to serve the same; that an “altercation and affray ensued,” in which, among other immaterial things mentioned, “ the plaintiff was then and there roughly used and handled by said constable and his posse”; “that said writ was never served on plaintiff”; that defendant “wrongfully caused her to be arrested, as for a contempt, for the disobedience of said writ of restitution, and imprisoned the plaintiff for a period of five days, as above set forth’’; and that “by reason of the said false and wrong*637ful imprisonment” the plaintiff was damaged, etc. The above are all the material averments.

We think that the complaint is fatally defective, and that the demurrer should have been sustained. It is clear that the acts complained of were done by the defendant in his official capacity as a judicial officer, and there is no averment, in terms, that said acts were without or in excess of his jurisdiction, nor are any facts averred from which such want of jurisdiction appears. And that a judicial officer is not liable for acts done in his official capacity and within his jurisdiction is as thoroughly established as any other principle of law. One of the best expositions of that principle is found in the opinion of Shaw, C. J., in Pratt v. Gardner, 2 Cush. 68; 48 Am. Dec. 652. This court has also had frequent occasions to state the principle. (Downer v. Lent, 6 Cal. 94; 65 Am. Dec. 489; Turpen v. Booth,, 56 Cal. 68; 38 Am. Rep. 48.) The question here is not one of evidence or burden of proof; it is a question of pleading. A complaint, to be sufficient, must contain a statement of facts which, without the aid of other conjectured facts not stated shows a complete cause of action. As said by this court in Gates v. Lane, 44 Cal. 397: The pleadings but poorly subserve the purpose intended, if the court, before declaring the law upon the points presented by the parties, is compelled, as in this case, to surmise many of the essential facts on which the points turn.” In the case at bar, we are left to assume, to imagine, to surmise,” that the defendant, as justice of the peace, for some unrevealed and unknown reason had no jurisdiction to do the acts complained of. A plaintiff attempting to state a cause of action in his complaint has- no right to presume that a justice of the peace acted outside of his jurisdiction. Where the burden of proof is, when a party relies on the validity of a justice’s judgment, is an entirely different question.

The only plausible answer to the above-stated objec*638tion to the complaint rests upon the averment that defendant “ wrongfully ” caused plaintiff to be arrested, and “ unlawfully ” did certain other things. There may be some relations where “wrongfully” and “unlawfully,” and similar adverbs, have some significance, but the ordinary rule is, that, for purposes of pleading, they are utterly valueless. In Miles v. McDermott, 31 Cal. 274, the court say: “ Such words as 6 duly/ ‘ wrongfully,’ and funlawfully,’ so frequently used in pleadings, might better be omitted. They tender no issue.” In Triscony v. Orr, 49 Cal. 617, which was an action in the nature of trover for the conversion of certain sheep, the complaint merely alleged that the defendants took the property “unlawfully, fraudulently, willfully, and maliciously”; a demurrer to the complaint had been sustained in the trial court,.and on appeal to this court the judgment was affirmed. This court, among other things, say: “Whether the defendants took the sheep ‘unlawfully’ is a question of law, and not the statement of an issuable fact. If they took them ‘fraudulently,’ the facts constituting the. fraud should have been averred. Otherwise, no issuable fact is stated.” In Reardon v. San Francisco, 66 Cal. 496, 56 Am. Rep. 109, the court say: “If the defendant was empowered by law to do the work counted on, in Army Street, the averment in the complaint, that such work was unlawful and wrongful, would amount to nothing. Such epithets in a pleading are, in general, meaningless. They may be, and are, generally inserted with no valuable purpose, but only to round off or swell out a sentence. Unless the matters averred show the acts complained of to be unlawful or wrongful, such words are mere superfluous verbiage.” And in Pratt v. Gardner, 2 Cush. 68, 48 Am. Dec. 652, which was an action against a justice of the peace, and very similar to the case at bar, the complaint was, as Judge Shaw says, “thickly sprinkled” with such epithets as “unlawful,” “wrongful,” “ illegally,” “ groundless,” “ false,” “ willfully,” *639“ maliciously,” etc.; but judgment for the defendant on the demurrer was sustained, and the court said that such epithets “ cannot change or qualify the material facts.”

Our conclusion is, that the complaint is insufficient, because it does not show that the acts of defendant complained of were without or in excess of his jurisdiction as justice of the peace, and that the use of the words wrongfully ” and “ unlawfully ” does not supply the omitted, facts, and that therefore the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained.

The judgment is reversed, with directions to the superior court to sustain defendant’s demurrer to the complaint.

Sharpstein, J., and Thornton, J,, concurred.

Hearing in Bank denied.