State v. Shaw
State v. Shaw
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Defendant was tried for resisting an officer and assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, on the following facts: A warrant charging him with disposing of property under lien was issued by a magistrate and directed to W. F. Allen, a rural policeman of the county, and delivered to him for execution. Allen took the warrant and drove to defendant’s house in a buggy with a Mr. Bradham. He left the warrant in his buggy, 150 or 200 yards from the house, and went into the house and put his hand on defendant’s shoulder and told him that he had a warrant for him and to consider himself under arrest. Defendant asked, “What for?”. Allen replied, “For disposing of property under lien,” and told him that Mr. Bradham had sworn out the warrant. Defendant said, “I am not going,” and violently resisted arrest, which was accomplished after a struggle. Allen then sent Bradham to the buggy to get the warrant. Upon these facts the jury found defendant guilty. The Court, on defendant’s motion, set aside the verdict, on the ground that at the time of making the arrest the officer had not such possession of the warrant as is required by law.
The question is novel and important. It involves, on one hand, the liberty of the citizen, and, on the other, the majesty of the law and the duty of the citizen to yield prompt obedi *361 ence to its authority.. While the law is very tender of the liberty of the citizen, nevertheless it considers resistance of judicial process an offense of very high and presumptuous nature, especially the obstruction of arrest on criminal process, for that strikes at the very foundation of government and tends by the strong arm to defeat justice and overthrow peace and order. State v. Bowen, 17 S. C. 58. Notwithstanding, if the arrest was unlawful, defendant not only had the right to resist it (State v. Wimbush, 9 S. C. 309), but it made Allen liable for assault and battery and false arrest; and the consequences would have been even more serious if either had been seriously wounded or killed in the encounter.
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“As a general rule, it is the duty of an officer in making an arrest to state his official character and the cause of the arrest, exhibiting his warrant, if he has one; but the failure to take these precautions does not justify homicide or even physical resistance by the party arrested without inquiry on his part as to the authority for his arrest. In State v. Anderson, 19 S. C. L. (1 Hill) 327, 345, which is generally regarded a case of great authority, a private citizen was killed while attempting to arrest Anderson in this State for a murder committed in Georgia. Judge O’Neall says : ‘The qualification to the general rule to which I have alluded is that, where the party making the arrest inform the prisoner of their intention to arrest, or actually make it, and the prisoner makes no demand of the cause, it is not necessary to state it. After Col. Martin informed the prisoner that he and his party were there to arrest him, to avail himself of his want of knqwledge of the cause of the intended arrest, he ought to have demanded it. His failure to do so, as well as the facts to which I have already adverted,«deprive him of any benefit of this defense.’ ”
The Circuit Judge rested his decision upon the case of Adams v. State, 121 Ga. 163, 48 S. E. 911. But in that case the officer did not have the warrant with him, but had left it at his home, which was said to be some distance (though it is not stated how far) from the scene of the arrest — presumably too far for the officer to have produced it on demand. The same observation applies to all the cases cited in the textbooks (2 R. C. L., p. 465, and 3 Cyc. 876) in support of the rule that the officer must have actual possession of the warrant. In some of them the warrant was at the station house in the possession of the chief of police, while the arrest was made by an inferior officer while out on his beat in another part of the town; in others it was in the possession of another officer in another county or town or in a different part of the same town, and could not, therefore, have been produced on demand, and the accused would have been deprived of his liberty for an unreasonable length of time before the warrant 'could be produced. In none of them was it so near at hand, as in this case, that it could have been produced with reasonable promptness on demand. This case is differentiated by the facts and circumstances mentioned.
The order of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the case is remanded to that Court for the purpose of having the sentence imposed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Shaw.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Arrest — Criminal Actions — Necessity op Warrant — Actual Possion op Officer. — Without a warrant in his actual possession an officer cannot lawfully make an arrest for a misdemeanor not committed in his presence. 2. Arrest — Criminal Actions — Actual Possession of Warrant by Officer — Production Upon Demand. — Where the officer attempting to make an arrest is known, the production of the warrant cannot be required before the arrested person has actually submitted to his authority, though it may be demanded immediately thereafter. 3. Arrest — Criminal Actions — Warrant—Presumption That Defendant Knew Official Character of Officer. — Where nothing to the contrary appears, it will be presumed that the official character of the officer making an arrest is known to the defendant. 4. Arrest — ■ Criminal Action— Necessity of Warrant— Actual Possession by Officer. — -Where officer with warrant for arrest of accused in his possession drove to the home of accused, and left the warrant in a buggy some 200 yards from the house where the arrest was made, held, the officer was in such actual possession of the warrant as to make the resistance of the accused unlawful.