Dinmark v. Farrier
Dinmark v. Farrier
Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of defendants Michael Farrier, Jimmy Gibbs, and Wayne Dooley. On February 18, 1986, the plaintiff, Brenda Dinmark, filed a claim for false imprisonment against Michael Farrier and Hudson-Thompson, Inc. On March 17, she amended her complaint to add Jimmy Gibbs, Wayne Dooley, and Big Bear Super Foods. On March 28, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Hudson-Thompson, Inc., and on May 7, Big Bear Super Foods was dismissed. The facts surrounding this case are as follows:
On February 23, 1985, between 8:00 and 9:45 p.m., after drinking one beer, Dinmark drove her grandmother to a grocery store. Dinmark illegally parked her car in front of the store. She also had another beer in her possession. Her grandmother went inside the store, and Dinmark waited in the car for her grandmother to return. Farrier, a policeman working as a security guard, asked Dinmark's grandmother to ask Dinmark to move her car because she was illegally parked. Farrier also asked a store clerk to ask Dinmark to move her car. In *Page 820 response to his requests, Dinmark rolled up her window and refused to move her car. Farrier then told Dinmark to move her car, that he was a security officer and a policeman, and that if she did not move her car, he would have to place her in jail. Dinmark then moved her car. Upon returning to the store, Farrier told Dinmark's grandmother that he almost had to lock Dinmark up. Dinmark noticed Farrier talking to her grandmother. She went inside and in a loud manner began an argument with Farrier about Farrier's reporting to her grandmother. Farrier began walking toward the manager's office; as Dinmark followed, maintaining her loud behavior. Farrier began relating the events of the incident to the manager. Farrier then asked Dinmark to leave the store. He again informed Dinmark that he was a police officer and showed her his badge. She told Farrier that his badge meant nothing to her and brought her purse around in front of her. Farrier testified that he thought she was going to take something out of the purse. Farrier told Dinmark she was under arrest and grabbed Dinmark, and a scuffle ensued while Farrier tried to get Dinmark's purse from her. Farrier held Dinmark until other police officers arrived. Dinmark was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, failure to obey a police officer, and disorderly conduct. She was taken to jail and placed in a drunk tank. Her blood alcohol level registered .01%. The municipal court found Dinmark not guilty of the charges. Following her acquittal, Dinmark brought this action. On appeal she argues that the trial court erred when it admitted a memorandum concerning the criminal charges; that the trial court erred in instructions to the jury on probable cause; and that the trial court erred in finding that Farrier acted in his capacity as a police officer. We affirm.
Farrier cites Burgin v. Sugg,
However, the admission of the memorandum was harmless error, if error at all. The main purpose of the memorandum was to emphasize that the police officer, when "moonlighting" as a security officer, could not, absent some change in his status, act *Page 821
in his function as a policeman.1 Apparently, from the trial court's judgment entry, this was the ground for Dinmark's acquittal. In order for the admission of evidence to be reversible error, "the error complained of [must have] probably injuriously affected [the] substantial rights of the parties." Rule 45, A.R.App.P. The burden is with the appellant not only to show error, but also to show probable injury. Wallace v.Phenix City,
"Now, the good faith of the person making the arrest, the law says, or the existence of probable cause does not justify trespass, does not justify an illegal arrest, good faith doesn't." (Emphasis added.)
At the beginning of the paragraph concerning probable cause, the trial court said the following:
"Probable cause then, can be considered, as far as whether or not you are going to bring any punitive damages." (Emphasis added.)
The trial court, at the onset of its discussion of probable cause, limited it to the area of punitive damages. Therefore, as the instructions were not confusing or misleading, no error resulted.
For the reasons set forth, the judgment of the trial court is due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
JONES, ALMON, SHORES and STEAGALL, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Brenda Dinmark v. Michael Farrier
- Cited By
- 20 cases
- Status
- Published