6 Pa. Super. 618 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1898
Opinion by
This action is based on an alleged malicious prosecution of the plaintiff by the defendants. The grounds on which such an action must rest are well settled; it must appear that the prosecution upon which it is founded was commenced maliciously and without probable cause. These are essential and must coexist. What circumstances constitute probable cause, are for the court; whether they have been shown in a particu
In the case before us, it appears that the plaintiff was arrested for larceny at the instance of the defendants, and bound over for his appearance at the next court of quarter sessions. The grand jury to whom the bill of indictment was submitted ignored it, and the defendants were discharged. A month later this suit was brought. No further action was taken on the return upon which the indictment was founded, and no other prosecution for the alleged larceny has since been commenced. The criminal proceedings seem to have been finally dropped, and the statute of limitations as to larceny had fully run before this case was called for trial. On the trial the plaintiff offered, inter alia, the record of the criminal proceedings which showed that the grand jury returned the indictment “Not a true bill.” To meet the effect of this finding, the defendants called the district attorney, who testified, under objection, that the indict
At the close of the testimony, the trial judge directed a verdict for the defendants in the following brief charge: “ It is indispensable to a recovery in an action for malicious prosecution that the prosecution claimed to be malicious was fully ended when the action was brought. This the plaintiff has failed to show. On the contrary, the undisputed evidence shows that the prosecution was not fully ended. You will therefore return a verdict in favor of the defendants.” It was erroneous thus to declare that “ the undisputed evidence shows that the prosecution was not fully ended,” and to direct a verdict for the defendants for that reason, contrary to the legal effect of the record. True, the district attorney, was called by the defendants and testified, under objection, that after the bill was ignored he had told Mr. Mauser, one of the proseexitors, it was a mistake, and that he would lay another indictment before the next grand jury. But when Mr. Mauser was questioned about his conversation, he said he had agreed that it was wrong thus to dispose of the prosecution; but he did not admit that he had concurred in the proposition to send another bill before a subsequent grand jury. Whether the circumstances under which the bill was ignored rebutted the presumption of want of probable cause raised by the record, was for the jury to determine under the evidence. The record, and the manner in which the finding of the jury was brought about, were evidence on this question. But the record of the court of quarter sessions, like that of other courts, imports verity, and cannot he impeached or contradicted by parol evidence except for fraud, or, perhaps, plain mistake:
The defendant in the indictment was in no default in the prosecution upon which this action is grounded. The finding of the grand jury and his discharge were all he could ask. Whether the proceedings should be continued ,by & new bill, or renewed by another prosecution, were matters beyond his control ; and in the absence of fraud on his part he had a right to rely upon the record. That a return of “ ignoramus ” or “ not ■a true bill ” by the grand jury, approved by the court, is a sufficient ending of the prosecution, and such an “ acquittal ” of the defendant, as will support an action for malicious prosecution based thereon, is elementary law, not now to be questioned : Savil v. Roberts, 1 Salk. 13; Lowe v. Wartman, 1 Cent. Rep. (N. J.) 437; Shock v. McChesney, 2 Yeates, 473; Stewart v. Thompson, 51 Pa. 158; Murphy v. Moore, 10 Cent. Rep. 92 ; Charles v. Abell, Brightly Rep. 131. In this last case the principal question was the right to maintain an action for malicious prosecution upon the discharge of the defendant on a writ of habeas corpus, and it was there said by Mr. Justice Bell, at nisi prius, “ It seems to be now agreed that if a grand jury ignore the bill, it is sufficient to maintain the action; ” and the entire opinion embracing this sentence was quoted approvingly by Mr. Justice Paxson in delivering the opinion of the court in Zebley v. Storey, 117 Pa. 478. In the case of Stewart v. Thompson, supra, the prosecution for which damages were claimed had terminated, as to the plaintiff, by the grand jury ignoring the indictment; and while the chief contention in the Supreme Court was whether trespass or case was the proper form of action, Mr. Justice Read said: “But the prosecution did not stop here: he [the prosecutor] procured a bill of indictment, valid in form, .... to be presented to the grand jury, which
Complaint is made, under the third and fourth specifications, of the admission of a conversation between the justice who issued the warrant and Mauser, one of the defendants, in the absence of the plaintiff, after the warrant was issued and before its return by the constable. This was offered for the purpose of showing the absence of malice, and was admitted on that ground. We think its admission was erroneous. It was a mere declaration by the defendant, made several hours after the warrant Avas issued, unaccompanied by any act or request to discontinue the prosecution. Mr. Mauser then told the justice, substantially, that he did not want to have Auer arrested for stealing; but he said nothing about recalling the warrant or revoking the written instructions he had sent to the justice in the morning by his tenant, Mr. Smoyer: “ Mr. Snyder, go for this man Auer criminally to have hay and straw returned,” in pursuance of which the complaint was made and the warrant issued. Though disclaiming a desire for the arrest, he still al
It was competent for the defendants to show the circumstances under which the prosecution was terminated, and that its termination was without their concurrence or knowledge. If the action of the grand jury resulted from the mistake of the district attorney, and by reason thereof the defendants and other witnesses for the commonwealth were not sworn, this fact might be shown tó-rebut, so far as it might do so, the presumption of want of probable cause arising from the discharge of the plaintiff. Hence the testimony of the district attorney and of the defendant Mauser, in so far as it shows the circumstances which led to the finding of the grand jury, was admissible. But the testimony should be confined to this subject; the expression of the intentions and future purposes of the district attorney and of the defendants, or either of them, in the absence of the plaintiff, and forming no part of the res geste, could not be thus introduced in evidence against the plaintiff. With this qualification the fifth and sixth specifications of error are overruled.
The judgment is reversed, and a venire facias de novo is awarded.