McCully v. Malcom
McCully v. Malcom
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of tbe court.
This is an action of trespass and false imprisonment, brought by the plaintiff in error against the defendants and another in the Circuit Court of Blount county, and removed by change of venue to Knox county for trial. Verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendants in the court below, and the plaintiff prosecutes an appeal in error to this court.
Several errors have been assigned and insisted upon in the argument of this case.
1. During the progress of the trial, and upon the plaintiff’s case being closed, there being no evidence against the defendant, James Griffith, the defendant’s counsel moved the court that an acquittal be directed as to him; and it was accordingly ordered by the court that the case as to the said defendant be separately submitted to the jury, who, thereupon, returned a verdict of not guilty, and judgment was instantly rendered thereon, that the defendant go hence and recover his costs, &c., and the trial proceeded as to the other defendants.
In this proceeding we think there was no. error. It is well established that in actions for torts, being in their nature and legal consequences several, as well as ordinarily joint, and there being no contribution among wrong-doers, if one who is a material witness for the defendants has been improperly joined with them in the suit, for the purpose of excluding his testimony, the jury will be directed to find a separate verdict in his favor; in which case, the suit being at an end with respect to him, he may be admitted as a witness for the other defendants. But this can only be allowed where there is no evidence
2. The defendant, James Mathews, justified the trespass and imprisonment, alleged in the declaration, upon the ground that a warrant legally issued by a justice of the peace of Blount county, charging one Henry McCully with an assault upon a certain Thomas Ferguson, with intent to commit murder in the first degree, was placed in his hands to be executed, he being a deputy sheriff of said county, by virtue of which warrant he arrested said Henry McCully, and that the plaintiff attempted to assist in the rescue of said prisoner. Upon the trial, the original warrant upon which the arrest was alleged to have been made, was offered in evidence by the defendants, upon proof, by a third person, of the handwriting of the justice by whom it was issued, and also of the justice who •committed the defendant. This was objected to by the plaintiff upon the ground that both of said justices were witnesses in the case, in attendance upon the trial, and had been sworn and placed under charge of an officer, as ■witnesses for the defendants, It is insisted that said
3. The next error assigned is, in permitting the officer’s return upon the warrant to be read as evidence in his own favor, of the fact that he had the warrant in his hands at 'the time of his arrest. In this there was no error. It is well settled that a return by the sheriff — being the official act of a public, sworn officer — is evidence against third persons. And, in the case of McBee vs. The State, Meigs’ Rep, 122, it was held by this court that the sheriff’s return upon a scire facias, in the case of a forfeited recognizance,
4. The copy of a bill of indictment found against Henry McCully in the Circuit Court of Blount county, for an assault upon said Thomas Ferguson, with intent to commit murder in the first degree, was admitted as evidence to the jury, though objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel. In this, we think the court erred. If, in any aspect of this case, the record of the prosecution against Henry McCully, upon said indictment, was irrelevant and inadmissible evidence, the entire record should have been produced, and not a part merely, showing the finding of a true bill, which may have had the effect to prejudice the plaintiff’s right, when, if the whole record had been produced, it might have appeared that the defendant had been acquitted on the trial. For this error, the judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed, and the case be remanded for a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.