13 N.C. 370 | N.C. | 1830
FROM HAYWOOD. The defendant had procured the plaintiff to be arrested under a State's warrant for beating and harassing the cattle of the defendant and driving them from their range on his, the defendant's land. While the plaintiff was under arrest the defendant abused him very grossly, struck him, and spit in his face. Upon the examination the plaintiff was discharged by the magistrate. The defendant proved that the plaintiff had beaten his cattle, and had driven them from their range on his, the defendant's, land.
His Honor charged the jury that if the facts alleged by the defendant were true, there was no probable cause for suing out the warrant; that if he did sue it out, and they were satisfied it was maliciously done, the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict.
The jury found for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed. It is proper that the boundaries of actions should not be confounded; but that for every wrong the appropriate remedy should be pursued. An action of trespass lies for all injuries of which force is the immediate cause, and for which the defendant cannot produce a justification. If one person cause another to be arrested without (371) process, it is a trespass and false imprisonment. So, if he arrest him upon process that is void in itself, or is issued by a Court or magistrate having no jurisdiction. An action for malicious prosecution, on the other hand, is a special action on the case, for the abuse of the process of law from malicious motives. It presupposes valid process, and case is given because trespass will not lie. It is given against the party suing it out, because the hand which executes the process is justified by it, and it is not guilty of a trespass. There being no other remedy, this special action is provided.
In the case before us, the propriety of this rule is made very manifest. The charge in the warrant is for a mere civil injury, of which a justice of the peace has no jurisdiction. It constitutes no crime. *237 But every fact alleged in the warrant is fully proved. That did not justify Greenlee in taking it out; because admitting the facts to be true, the magistrate could not take cognizance of the case, since it was not an indictable offense, nor a private wrong which he could redress. The prosecutor, magistrate, and sheriff were, therefore all guilty of a trespass. But how can malicious prosecution lie? That can only be sustained where the party has been lawfully arrested, and where the prosecutor had no probable cause to believe the party guilty of the acts charged to him. Now, every fact charged here was prroved. [proved] If that does not constitute probable cause, nothing can. It is true, they do not constitute probable cause to think that Allen was guilty of a crime, but no crime is charged, and they do make probable cause to thing that he did the acts charged, since it is in proof that he, in fact, did them. The judge confounded two distinct principles when, in order to maintain this suit for what, it appears, to have been insulting and oppressive conduct on the part of the defendant, he told the jury that there was no probable cause. There was full proof. Had the action been trespass, he would have been perfectly right in saying the evidence proved no justification. This action cannot be maintained, (372) and there must be a new trial.
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.
Cited: Baldridge v. Allen,