Sleight v. Ogle

By the Court.

Woodruff, J.

The complaint herein was for false imprisonment of the plaintiff (the wife). The answer was a general denial only. The only issue was, therefore, whether the plaintiff had been imprisoned by the defendants or not, for no justification was set up in the answer. But the ease was manifestly tried upon the question of the legality of the arrest and detention of the wife, as the fact of such arrest and detention were not controverted, and the matter of justification was examined, and, indeed, was the subject of proof by the plaintiffs themselves in the examination of them first witness. And in this aspect of the case, the questions were, was the wife arrested upon a lawful warrant; and if not, was she arrested by the procurement of the wife of the defendant, Ogle ?

The action being trespass, the question of probable cause was only material in mitigation of damages; for however great the cause, if the offence complained of was only a misdemeanoz’, the arrest cozzld not be justified without lawful warrant. And if the process was lawful, and the officer had jurisdiction, no action for.false imprisonment would lie, even though the. prosecutor had not probable cause to make the *447complaint. In the latter case the party improperly proceeded against has a remedy hy action on the case for a malicious prosecution ; but in an arrest upon valid process issued by a competent tribunal having jurisdiction, there is no trespass, and false imprisonment will not lie, even though such arrest be maliciously procured by the prosecutor without probable cause. And in this particular, I think, the plaintiffs in the present action have mistaken their remedy.

It appeared by the plaintiffs’ evidence, that the wife of Sleight was arrested successively under two warrants, issued by a police justice, on the complaint of Mrs. Ogle, for malicious mischief. The warrants, though very brief, comply with the statute in reciting the accusation, and give the name of the complainant, and are under the hand of the magistrate. (2 Rev. Stat. 706, § 3.) The statute does not require that the very words of the section should each of them be inserted in the warrant, if its substance is contained therein. And I am clearly of opinion that the warrants were sufficient in substance, and were issued by competent authority. And it further affirmatively appeared that a complaint was made to the magistrate before the warrants were issued. This was prima facie sufficient to authorize the arrest, and devolved on the plaintiffs the burthen of showing that no sufficient complaint had been made. He did prove that there was no written complaint, or rather the evidence of one of the witnesses contains that language; and though it is not entirely certain but that the witness in that refers to the time when Mrs. Sleight was brought before the magistrate, under arrest, rather than to the complaint made by Mrs. Ogle in the morning, yet, in support of the finding below, we ought to take this language most favorably to the plaintiffs. And, therefore, the question arises, whether the omission of the magistrate to reduce the complaint of the prosecutor to writing, before issuing the warrant, makes the prosecutor a trespasser ? I think not. The statute does not prescribe any such pre-requisite to the validity of the process. Section 28 (§ 26) of the statute makes it the duty of the magistrate to return all ex ami*448nations taken pursuant to that title to the court, &c. But if this he deemed to include the complaint, as well as the examinations had after the arrest, and which the statute in terms directs shall he taken down in writing, (§§ 17, 20.) and by implication to make it his duty to reduce the complaint to writing, also, I do not think that his neglect of duty, in that particular, made the prosecutor liable.

The plaintiffs, having themselves shown that the arrest was made under process valid on its face, and issued by competent legal authority, upon complaint made of a misdemeanor, I think were not entitled to maintain the action, and the judgment should, therefore, he reversed.

Judgment reversed.