147 Va. 263 | Va. | 1927
delivered the opinion of the court.
T. 1ST.. Camden, plaintiff in the trial court, has recovered of A. O. Barton, hereinafter sometimes called the defendant, $1,500 damages, claimed as for a malicious prosecution.
The evidence presents' issues of fact, and the contentions of the parties may be thus summarized: The plaintiff’s claim is, that after he had caught the defendant’s son with liquor in his shop (which was rented of
On the other hand, Barton, the defendant, makes this defense of Ms part in the transaction: That he, being a justice of the peace, felt it incumbent upon him, in the performance of his public duty, to investigate charges and rumors which he heard with reference to liquor being handled in the shop occupied by his own son, the Purvis boy and the plaintiff, Camden; that actuated by a desire to do his duty, he sought the
There is support in the evidence found in the record for both of these theories, which manifestly raises issues of fact upon which the verdict of the jury is conclusive here, unless the defendant, Barton, can show harmful error committed during the trial.
We shall not refer to each of the assignments of error, but only to those which we think necessary to dispose of the case here.
It is claimed that none of the errors are sufficiently assigned, and the rule so recently stated by this court in Lorillard Co. v. Clay, 127 Va. 746, 104 S. E. 388; Puckett v. Commonwealth, 134 Va. 574, 113 S. E. 853; Lamb v. Commonwealth, 141 Va. 489, 126 S. E. 3, and Lipford v. Gates & Sons, 141 Va. 325, 127 S. E. 183, is relied on. There is much force in this objection, but we think that the assignments to which we shall refer are sufficiently pointed out.
1. One of the assignments is, that the court erred in trying the case upon the theory that the charge made in the warrant constitutes a crime. That charge, quoting from the warrant of arrest, is “that T. N. Camden, in said county, did, on the 29th day of April, stated to A. O. Barton that liquor was in his shop, stored there by E. C. Purvis.” The warrant concludes in the usual form, requiring Hughes, the deputy sheriff to whom the warrant was addressed, forthwith to apprehend Camden and bring him to trial.
True it is that construed literally, without any reference to the statute or the surrounding circumstances, it may be said that the warrant only charges what Camden said to Barton. This would, however, be too narrow a construction. Code, section 4675 (12), de
In 38 Corpus Juris, 389, this is said: “While there is some authority for the rule that no action for malicious prosecution will lie where the affidavit, complaint, indictment or information, or warrant fails to state facts constituting a crime, according to the weight of authority if the necessary elements of an action for malicious prosecution are present, the action will lie, notwithstanding the affidavit, complaint, indictment or information, or warrant did not allege facts constituting the crime charged, or any crime known to the law.”
The authorities cited appear to support the statement.
In Bell v. Keepers, 37 Kan. 64, 66, 14 Pac. 542, 543, this is stated as the reason for the rule: “A void process, procured through malice and without probable cause, is even more reprehensible, if possible, than if it charged a criminal offense. The wrong is not-in the charge alone, but more in the object and purpose to be gained, and the intention and motive in procuring the complaint and arrest. The contents of the complaint, when maliciously made and without good
The same rule is thus stated in 18 R. C. L. page 20: “As pointed out by some of the decisions upholding the right to maintain the action, the injury to the accused is the same, whether the warrant is legal or illegal. The defendant is the cause of the prosecution, and since he has done all he could in furtherance of it, the officer’s error should not excuse him. If the proceedings are merely irregular or defective, it is generally conceded that the action for malicious prosecution will not be denied, as for instance, where a crime was charged nominally, but the information or affidavit failed to state facts constituting the offense, or was formally insufficient.”
We conclude, therefore, that notwithstanding the form of the warrant, and its manifest defects, these cannot be held to immunize the defendant and defeat this action.
There is another assignment of error, based upon the refusal to give instruction “H” for the defendant. This instruction reads:
“The court instructs the jury that if they shall believe from the evidence that the plaintiff did state to the defendant that there was liquor in plaintiff’s shop, stored in there by E. C. Purvis, then the charge contained in the notice of motion against the defendant is true and they shall find for the defendant.”
The objection to this instruction is that it is misleading. Of course, it is a good defense to such an action to show that the plaintiff was guilty of the crime charged; but under the evidence in this ease, while it is true that the plaintiff did state to the defendant that Purvis had stored liquor in his shop, the plaintiff did not mean by that statement that he was
Another assignment of error raises a question about which a casual reading of the cases in this jurisdiction and elsewhere there may have been some confusion of statement.
In this case, the first instruction for the plaintiff ' contained the statement that the discharge of the plaintiff on the hearing before the justice is of itself prima jade evidence that the warrant was sworn out without probable cause. This is held in Jones v. Finch, 84 Va. 204; 4 S. E. 342, and many other Cases could be cited in support of that rule.
In contrast with that is the line of cases of which Saunders v. Baldwin, 112 Va. 431, 71 S. E. 620, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 958, Ann. Cases 1913B, 1049, is typical. It is said there: “In an action for malicious prosecution, the acquittal of the accused is not evidence of want of probable cause, but such evidence is admissible to show that the prosecution has terminated;” and Buchanan, J., there says: “The general rule is that the acquittal of the accused is not evidence of want of probable cause. Such evidence is admissible merely to show that the prosecution has terminated.”
The difference is this: When a justice of the peace, having no authority to try the case, but merely to examiné into the facts in order to determine whether the accused shall be discharged or sent on to the grand
That the general rule supports the instruction here is well sustained by authority. Lewis v. Goldman, 241 Mass. 577, 136 N. E. 67, 24 A. L. R. 261, et. seq. The reason for holding that an acquittal is not evidence of the want of probable cause, is because the accused may have been acquitted for some technical reason, or because of a reasonable doubt of his guilt. There may nevertheless have been overwhelming reasons to justify his indictment and trial, unquestionable cause for the prosecution, and yet upon trial and full investigation he may have been acquitted. When this is shown, the action for malicious prosecution must fail. Upon an action for malicious prosecution, it should always be emphasized that the jury is not trying the question of the guilt or innocence of the plaintiff, and their attention should be directed to the true issues in such an action, among which are whether or not there was probable cause for the prosecution, and whether or not the defendant was actuated by malice, both of which must be shown affirmatively by the plaintiff before he can lawfully recover damages of the defendant.
The instruction complained of was proper in this case.
The import of the expression “prima facie evidence,” used in instructions to juries, may not always be perfectly clear to them. Some clarification of this expression may be helpful to them. They should be
Another assignment of error is based upon an alleged contradiction in instruction No. 1, for the plaintiff, and instruction “D,” for the defendant, defining probable cause, upon the ground that they are inconsistent.
A comparison of the instructions shows that the inconsistency is quite immaterial. Instruction No. 1 'uses the generally accepted language, that probable' cause “means knowledge or information on the part of the defendant, honestly believed by him to be true, of such facts as would justify a reasonably careful and prudent man in believing that the plaintiff was guilty of the crime charged against him by the defendant,” while instruction “D,” in defining probable cause, states that it means “such a state of facts as would lead a man of ordinary prudence to believe and entertain an honest and strong suspicion that the plaintiff was guilty of the offense charged in the warrant.”
It is not at all probable that the difference in the language of these two instructions was misunderstood or misconstrued by the jury. Certainly that difference
There is another assignment which grows out of these facts: A witness, L. P. Gilliam, was permitted to testify on behalf of the plaintiff that, upon being consulted by the defendant as to the charge, he advised the defendant not to make the complaint. On the other hand, when the defendant was under examination and offered to testify that be also consulted with a deputy sheriff and local prohibition officer, and was advised by him to secure the warrant which was issued in this case.
It is difficult to understand why, if the advice of the justice, Gilliam, was admissible against the defendant, the advice of the prohibition officer was not admissible in his favor. It should be observed that in neither ease was the evidence offered as conclusive of any issue. It affected the question of malice. The advice of the justice of the peace tended to show, by the defendant’s disregard of the advice, that he had some ulterior motive, and this evidence was admitted; whereas, when the defendant undertook to disprove malice by showing that he was advised by the prohibition officer, who was also a deputy sheriff, to have the warrant issued, he was not allowed to do so. Under the peculiar facts of this case, it seems to us that this was harmful • error against the defendant. There is nothing improbable about his testimony to. the effect that he was driven by his conception • of his public duty to take such action, because of the rumors, the charges against his own son, and in vi'ew of.the statements of the plaintiff to him as to occurrences there. The' substantial amount of the verdict clearly indicates, we think, that the jury believed that the plain
The significance of this point is fully realized by the able attorneys for the plaintiff, and they seek to escape the consequences by alleging that Hughes himself (the prohibition officer) afterwards came upon the stand and gave the jury substantially the same evidence, so that the error was thus corrected. We do not so construe the evidence of Hughes. We have no reason to suppose that if he had undertaken to tell the jury what his advice was, it would not have been again objected to and again excluded by the court. His evidence does not directly allude to the proposition to which we are referring. He says he was consulted before the warrants were issued- and that he told the defendant that another justice of the peace would be by in a few minutes and “we would” stop him and get the warrant;” but there is no word in his testimony which could have led the jury to think that- Hughes was taking any responsibility or giving any advice whatever with reference to the arrest of the plaintiff. A fair construction of Hughes’ testimony is that he was not taking the initiative, but that he was acting in his official capacity alone and taking no responsibility whatever as to this particular arrest. It seems to us that the exclusion of this testimony as bearing upon the question of malice must have been of such great
Tbis being our view, we must reverse tbe judgment and remand tbe case for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.