Lamb v. Hillard

Simmons, Justice.

1, 2. Lamb sued Dillard the sheriff, and McConnell deputy-sheriff', of Rabun county, for false imprisonment. It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff was arrested by the defendants in Rabun county, under a warrant issued by a magistrate of Polk county charging him with cheating and swindling, and that they placed him in the jail of Rabun county where he was kept until an officer of Polk county came for him and carried him to that county seven days after the arrest; that he offered, when arrested and subsequently while in jail, to waive a preliminary trial and give bond if the sheriff' would carry him before some justice of the peace and allow him to do so, but the sheriff' would not allow him to be carried before a justice, and refused to accept a bond, with security, for his appearance at the next term of the superior court of Polk county to answer any indictment which the grand jury of that county might find against him for cheating and swindling, which had been approved by a magistrate of Rabun county who came to the jail and before whom the plaintiff waived a preliminary hearing.

Dnder the code (§4721), where an arresting officer of any county in the State arrests a person charged with crime, under a warrant issued by a judicial officer of another county, it is the duty of such arresting officer *208to carry said accused, with the warrant under ■which he was arrested, to the county in which the offence is alleged to have been committed, for examination before any judicial officer of that county.” It was, therefore, the duty of the sheriff' of Rabun county, as soon as practicable after the arrest, to carry the accused to Polk ■county. There was no law requiring an officer of Polk •county to go to Rabun county after the accused. The .statute, it is true, is hard upon the arresting officer in requiring him to carry the accused to a distant county, without any provision being made for the payment of his expenses; but he takes his office with that burden, .and must execute the law until it is changed or modified.

We think the sheriff was right in declining to accept the bond which was tendered him. There is no law authorizing the approval, tender and acceptance of such a bond in a different county from that in which the crime was committed and must be tried. There being no such authority, the tender counts for nothing. Upon this subject see: 2 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, Bail, p. 5; State v. Collins, 19 La. Ann. Rep. 145, 146.

3. At the trial the plaintiff offered evidence to show that the grand jury of Polk county had made a return •of “ no bill ” touching the matter to which the warrant related. The court excluded the evidence, and we think was right in so doing. The merits of the charge agaiust the plaintiff were not open to investigation in this suit, Whether he was guilty or innocent of that charge could have no bearing upon the issue in the ease on trial. Evidence that the plaintiff had been indicted for another •offence and was at the time of the trial a fugitive from the State to avoid arrest, was equally irrelevant, and the •court erred in admitting such evidence.

Judgment reversed.