Robinson v. State

Lumpkin, Justice.

1. "Where it is the duty of a sheriff' to arrest one charged with a felony, we know of no law which authorizes this officer to “deputize” a private citizen either to make or assist in making the arrest, and thus constitute the person so “ deputized ” an officer. Under section 4722 of the code, every officer charged with the execution of a penal warrant has the authority to summon to his assistance, either in writing or verbally, any citizen of the county. When citizens are thus summoned by the sheriff', they are, while co-operating with him and acting under his orders, not themselves officers, nor are they mere private persons, but their true legal position is that of - a posse comitatus. A posse may be summoned under the form of “ deputizing ” the person or persons composing it. The mode is immaterial, so that the object be to require or command assistance.

2. A member of a posse comitatus, summoned by the sheriff to aid in the execution of a warrant for felony in the sheriff’s hands, is entitled to the same protection in the discharge of his duties as the sheriff himself; and to this end, a person so summoned may do any act to promote or accomplish the arrest which he could lawfully do were he himself the sheriff, having personal custody of the warrant and bound to execute the same. See 13 Criminal Law Magazine, §30, p. 198. In order *84to have the benefit of this protection, it is not essential for a member of the sheriff’s posse to be and remain in the actual physical presence of the sheriff. It is sufficient if the two are in the same neighborhood, actually endeavoring to make the arrest and acting in concert with a view to effect this, their common design.

The evidence in the present case shows that the deceased, Powell, had been summoned by the sheriff' to aid him in making the arrest of Robinson, under a warrant charging the latter with felony. It is quite likely that the sheriff supposed that by “ deputizing ” Powell, he had, in a sense, been made an officer for this purpose. If the sheriff really entertained this idea, he was, as already stated, mistaken. Be this as it may, however, the sheriff was near the scene where it was expected the arrest would take place, and had given orders to Powell, obedience to which would tend to accomplish the arrest, Powell was obeying these orders, not literally, it is true, but certainly according to their general spirit, and the variance by Powell from the precise instructions given him by the sheriff' was evidently necessitated by a change in the movements of the accused which had not been anticipated. Tinder these circumstances, we hold that the conduct of Powell was substantially in obedience to the sheriff’s orders, keeping in view the real object of their presence in the vicinity, which was undoubtedly the arrest of Robinson.

It was seriously contended by counsel for the plaintiff in error, that as the sheriff' was not in sight when Powell laid his hand on Robinson to prevent his leaving the house of his brother, and as the warrant was not then in Powell’s possession, the attempted arrest was unauthorized and illegal. The law applicable to this contention is thus aptly stated by Mr. Bishop in the first volume of his work on Criminal Procedure, §186 : “ To justify the private person who thus assists the officer, the latter *85must be in some sense present commanding him. There is no precise distance which the two may be apart; but, where a sheriff is endeavoring to make an arrest, or preserve the peace, and he has called in others to help him, he is, though absent from the particular place occupied by them, to be deemed constructively present, within this rule, if his absence is in furtherance of the common design.” The text of this distinguished author is admirably supported by the case of Coyles v. Hurtin, 10 Johns. 85, as will appear from the following extract from the opinion of Chief Justice Kent: “ The sheriff' is quodam modo, present by his authority, if he be actually engaged in efforts to arrest, dumfervet opus, and has commanded and is continuing to command and pi-ocure assistance. "When he is calling upon the power of the county, or a requisite portion of it, to enable him to overcome resistance, it would be impossible that he should be actually present in every place wdiere power might be wanting. The law is not so unreasonable as to require the officer to be an eye or ear witness of what passes, and to render all his authority null and void except when he is so present. He could not, upon that construction, use the power of the county with effect, and it would be attended with great inconvenience and danger to the administration of justice. The question in these cases does not turn upon the fact of distance, so long as the sheriff is within his county, and is bona fide and strictly engaged in the business of the arrest.” In this connection see, also, Com. v. Field, 13 Mass. 321, cited by Mr. Bishop. There is an obvious distinction between the officer’s calling one to his assistance, and merely attempting to delegate his authority and accomplish the arrest through the agency of third persons acting alone, as in the case of Rex v. Patience, 7 Car. & P. 775, where a constable, without attempting himself to execute a warrant in his hands, employed his two sons to make the arrest. In *86Kirbie v. State, 5 Tex. App. 60, it was held that persons called upon by an officer holding a warrant to assist in the arrest of a party charged with crime, were protected, whether they had the warrant at the time of the attempted arrest or not.

Under the facts as disclosed by the record now before us,, we think the sheriff was at least constructively present when Powell was attempting to arrest Robinson, although the officer was not in sight at that time. He was using Powell to accomplish the arrest, just as though he had reached out his own arm, supposing it was physically possible for him to do so, over the entire distance, and had taken hold of the person of Robinson himself. Powell was really a mere physical agency employed by the sheriff, by means of which the officer was enabled to extend his presence to the scene of action. It was undoubtedly the right of the sheriff to do this, he, of course, being responsible for the consequences of Powell’s acts so long as the latter conformed literally or substantially to the sheriff’s orders. A sheriff on foot might be unable to overtake a fleeing prisoner who could run faster than the officer; but if he shouted to a bystander to seize the fugitive, and this was done, it would be a seizure by the sheriff, and this, we think, would be undoubtedly true even though the fugitive ran out of the sheriff’s sight before the bystander succeeded in overtaking and catching the escaping prisoner. The case before us is, in principle, within the class covered by this illustration.

There is nothing in the case of Croom v. State, 85 Ga. 718, contrary to what is here ruled. A warrant for the arrest of Croom was in the hands of the marshal of TyTy, who, without delivering it to Hamlin, a bailiff, showed it to him and told him if he would arrest Croom, he (the marshal) would divide with Hamlin a reward of twenty-five dollars -which the former had been offered *87for making the arrest. Hamlin, without the warrant and on his own account, went with a posse summoned by himself to the house of Groom’s father, and was there killed by Groom. Under these circumstances, Chief Justice Bleckley very properly said, on page 722: “The warrant not being in the hands of Hamlin, but in the possession of the marshal of Ty Ty, who was not present, was no authority to Hamlin to make an arrest.” Hamlin was in no sense acting as one of a posse summoned by the marshal. Indeed, the latter had nothing whatever to do with the attempted arrest, either in its inauguration, or in the method adopted for its execution. Groom’s case, théréfore, is similar to that of Rex v. Patience, supra, and Hamlin did not bring himself within the rule as stated in Whart. on Homicide, §242, “that the warrant must be executed by the party named in it, or by some one assisting such party, either actually or constructively,” nor within the principle of Codd v. Cabe, 13 Cox Cr. Cas. 202.

There is also a distinction between the authority of an officer to arrest without a warrant in cases of felony and of misdemeanor. Thus it has been said that “ he may arrest any one of whom he has a reasonable suspicion that he has committed a felony, without waiting first to procure a warrant ” ; but without first procuring such warrant, “he may not arrest one who has committed ... a misdemeanor out of his presence.” See 13 Cr. Law Mag. pp. 177-78, and cases cited. On the same line is the’case of Drennan v. People, 10 Mich. 169, in which it was held that a constable, having knowledge that a warant had been issued for the arrest of a person charged with felony, could lawfully make the arrest without having the warrant in his possession. This case will also be referred to in connection with the question discussed in the next division of this opinion.

We are fully convinced that the rule announced in *88the second head-note is both sound in principle, and well supported by authority.

3. It appeal’s that when Powell grasped Robinson by his right arm, the former said, “ I am deputized to arrest you,” to which Robinson replied, “ Show your authority,” and the answer which Powell made to this demand ■was, It don’t make any difference; I have got to take you.” Under these circumstances, we think it was the duty of Powell to have informed Robinson of the existence of the warrant in the sheriff’s hands, and also that he (Powell) was attempting to make the arrest under authority of this warrant, or at least, that he had been commanded by the sheriff' to do so. As a general rule, a known officer, in making an arrest, is not bound to exhibit his authority. Certainly he is not absolutely required to do so before the accused person has submitted to the arrest, but after submission the officer ought to make known the substance of the warrant and for what cause and whence it issued. Where, however, one not a known officer is specially summoned to make an arrest, he ought, unless prevented by the conduct of the accused from so doing, to show the warrant upon demand; or, if it is not in his possession, it is his duty to state the authority under which he is acting. State v. Curtis, 1 Haywood (N. C.), 471; 1 Bish. Cr. Proced. §191; Murfree on Sheriffs, §§152-3. Accordingly, it was said in Drennan’s case, supra, that a constable attempting to make an an^st for a felony without having the warrant in his possession ought to inform the person arrested of the facts, or at least, of the offence for which he was apprehended. In .this connection, see, also, 13 Cr. Law Mag. 343.

Assuming, however, as sound law, that it is the duty of one who has been summoned by an officer to assist in making an arrest for a felony to explain to the person sought to be arrested the cause for which his appre*89tension is attempted, and the nature of the process under which the arresting party assumes the authority to act, the omission to perform this duty will not necessarily justify the person sought to be arrested in resisting the attempted arrest. If he in fact already knows, or on reasonable and probable grounds believes, that he is under a charge of felony, that a warrant has been issued for his arrest, and that the arrest attempted is really in consequence of the warrant and in execution of the same, he ought to submit peaceably to the arrest. If he refuses to do so, under such circumstances, his resistance will be at his peril. “ One who is guilty of a felony has no right to kill one who pursues him, if he has notice of the object of the pursuit, whether the pursuer be an officer or a private person, or whether he be with or without a warrant.” Kerr on Hom. §189. See, also, the cases cited under this section. This doctrine is in complete harmony with that announced by this court in Snelling v. State, 87 Ga. 50, where it appeared that the accused killed one who was attempting to arrest him for a felony for which he had been indicted three years, the deceased being in fact an officer, though he did not disclose his character as such or exhibit or mention the warrant under which he was acting. It was accordingly held in that case that, the circumstances showing the accused, who was a fugitive from justice, must have apprehended the arrest and realized the intention of the arresting party, the killing was murder. It was manifest that the accused was not in good faith resisting an attack which he had any right, under the circumstances, to believe was a mere unauthorized assault, it further appearing that before he fired the fatal shot, the deceased had said to him, “Consider yourself finder arrest.” The same principle controlled the case of Ramsey v. State, 92 Ga. 53, 17 S. E. Rep. 614, in which it distinctly appeared that the accused knew the official character of the po*90licenian attempting his arrest, and also, that this policeman had been summoned by the wife of the accused to arrest the latter for beating her, and the officer plainly and distinctly announced his purpose to make, the arrest for this breach of the peace, which had just taken place m his presence or hearing.

If the demand made by Eobinson for Powell’s authority was a mere pretense, and he really knew, or ought to have known, why Powell was attempting to apprehend him, he had no right whatever to resist the arrest, and his conduct in so doing was totally unauthorized and unlawful. If, however, the demand for authority was made in good faith and under real ignorance of the facts, for the purpose of eliciting information actually wanted and needed, resistance by Eobinson to any reasonable and proper extent, upon the failure of Powell to comply with this demand, would have been justifiable; and even the slaying of Powell might, under these circumstances, have been manslaughter only. It has been said that “ unless the slayer knows the official character of the deceased, the homicide is only manslaughter, where committed without deliberation but “ if the killing was clearly malicious and premeditated, the fact that the officer was acting under a void process is no mitigation or excuse. The same is true if the defendant had knowledge that the intended arrest was one which the officer had a right to make without a warrant.” Kerr on Horn. §98. The following is a correct and concise statement of the law applicable in such cases : “Notice of the official character of the officer to the person charged with killing him is a material question in all these inquiries. This notice may be express or implied. If there is no notification, either express or implied, by which we may say if the prisoner has no information of the officer’s powers and intentions, of the character in which the person is acting, the killing will *91be manslaughter only; otherwise it will be murder.’3 13 Or. Law Mag. §57, p. 516, citing cases.

If Robinson was acting in perfect good faith in making the demand and resisting the arrest, honestly believing Powell was making a totally unauthorized assault upon him; and if Powell made the first demonstration with a deadly weapon, and thus put Robinson in danger of life or limb, the killing by Robinson might have been altogether justifiable. Of course, we do not mean to express, or even intimate, what the real truth was. The killing of Powell by the accused presents a case of murder, voluntary manslaughter, or justifiable homicide, according to the facts as they may be found by the jury in the light of the principles announced in this opinion.

4. Taking into view the charges of the court complained of and the refusals to charge, in connection with the entire charge of the court as sent up in the record, it is quite clear that the case was made to turn chiefly on the right and power of the deceased to make the' arrest, irrespective of the manner in which that power was exercised and of the failure of the deceased to respond fully to the demand made upon him for his authority, and without reference to the good or bad faith with which that demand was made. The case, therefore, was not properly submitted to the jury, and there should be a new trial. While it is true that the court read to the jury the sections of the code defining voluntary manslaughter and justifiable homicide, he did not give appropriate instructions for applying either of these sections in conformity to the principles which ought, in view of the issues of fact involved, to have controlled the determination of the case.

Some other questions were made in the motion for a new trial; but as they cannot possibly arise upon the next hearing, they require no notice at our hands.

Judgment reversed.