37 Kan. 686 | Kan. | 1887
Opinion by
This is an action brought by Matthews, as plaintiff, against Bell, in the Shawnee superior court, to recover damages for a malicious prosecution. The material facts are, that on the 30th day of April, 1885, Bell caused the arrest of Matthews for a violation of the prohibitory law. Matthews was unable to give bail, and was confined in the county jail for several weeks. On the 28th day of May following, the county attorney, in open court, and in the presence of Bell and the witnesses he had procured to be subpenaed, dismissed the information, and Matthews was discharged from custody. The county attorney being examined as a witness in this case, stated that Bell came to him and stated what he himself had seen, and what he could prove about Matthews keeping whisky for sale at his house, and taking it out in baskets and selling it on the streets; of per
These are all the questions discussed, and we shall pay no attention to other questions which might arise on this record.
I. The first error assigned can be disposed of in a very few words. The cases of Marbourg v. Smith, 11 Kas. 562; Kelley v. Sage, 12 id. 109; Mitchell v. Sullivan, 30 id. 231, are against the contention of the plaintiff in error.
III. The question asked Bell on page 66 of the record was in the most objectionable form, and the ruling of the court must be affirmed ou that ground alone. He was not asked to state what his honest belief was as to the guilt or innocence of Matthews at the time he caused the information to be filed, and how the honest belief was produced; but the question asked him assumed that the witness saw things, that his wife told him other acts of Matthews, that other persons had given him information, that Mr. Manning had made certain statements to him, and that these things had made him feel that he was justified in filing the information. It is not denied but that the defendant, in actions of this kind, can testify to his honest belief as to the guilt of the plaintiff at the time of the arrest, but the questions propounded must not be leading and full of assumptions as this one was. It was objected to at the time, and the court refused to permit it to be answered. The plaintiff in error did not vary his questions, or try to divest them of their objectionable features, but dismissed his witness from the stand, and assigns this ruling of the court as error. No court would allow this mode of examination by a party of his own witness, if objection were made.
IV. The first instruction asked for by the plaintiff in error was, in substance, that if the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant acted on the advice of the county attorney in filing the affidavit upon which Matthews was arrested, and upon such advice had an honest belief in the validity of the proceedings in said action, and on such advice was under an honest belief that he was using such process as the law provided for the enforcement of the laws of the state, having first given a full statement of the facts of the case to the county attorney, then there was not such malice in the wrongful use of legal process by him as would entitle the plaintiff to re
y. In the twelfth instruction, this sentence occurs: “that they might take into consideration the proper and reasonable expenses of conducting this suit;” and this is said in connection with the question of damages. It is very evident from a cursory glance at the record, that the use of the words “this suit” is a clerical mistake, either made by the judge when he drafted the instructions, or by the clerk in transcribing them. This is proved by the connection in which they are used. The instruction is as follows:
“12. If you-find for the plaintiff, it will be your duty to award him such damages as will adequately compensate him for such loss and injury, which from the evidence you shall find he suffered. The plaintiff should be made whole for his loss of time, his anxiety and suffering, and any injury to his reputation, caused by his being arrested and imprisoned; and if you allow anything on account of vindictive or punitive damages, you may in your discretion in assessing the amount of such damages take into consideration the proper and reasonable expenses of conducting this suit.” .
Now the plaintiff below proved an attorney’s fee of $50 which he paid or became liable for in the defense of the criminal prosecution, but did not offer to make any such proof in this action. The instruction would not have been applicable to the state of facts presented here. There would have been no necessity for such instruction, if the evidence referred to had not been given. The court below, having in mind this evidence, instructed the jury very properly, that the plaintiff could recover for such fees, and no one better than the learned judge who tried this case knew the law on that question. It is one of those mistakes which sometimes creep into a record, and entirely change the meaning of an instruction, that seemingly no amount of care can guard against. The instruction
VI. The sixth-assignment of error has already been considered under that of the fourth, and it only remains to say that this plaintiff in error did not go to the county attorney with a frank statement of the facts. He misconstrued and distorted the acts of Matthews, and he failed to produce the witnesses to prove the other statements he made to the prosecuting officer. When the witnesses he named were produced in court they not only failed to sustain his assertions and promises to the county attorney, but testified to the reverse of what he had said. He sought the county attorney, he gave him his version of the acts of Matthews, and asserted what he could prove by others. Almost every statement he made turns out to be untrue, or so discolored that its resemblance to the truth is very faint. The county attorney told him that if he could prove his statements, Matthews could be convicted. This was not advice to Bell: it was an expression of opinion by the officer of a certain result if the facts were as stated. Bell made the affidavit for arrest because of his own assertion of the existence of certain facts, not because the county attorney advised him that it was his duty to do so. We see nothing in this state of facts that would defeat a recovery. This disposes of all the questions urged by counsel for plaintiff in error for reversal.
On the state of facts presented by this record there arises a well-grounded suspicion that the criminal process of the court was used for the purpose of dispossessing Matthews of a house he had rented from Bell; and if this is so it was such a prostitution of the instrumentalities of justice as not only to justify the very reasonable verdict of the jury, but to compel this court, in considering the various proceedings of the trial of this case, to look with a most lenient eye on all of the rulings of the court below, and sustain its judgment if there was not too great a departure- from thé principles and rules that conduce so much to the due administration of the law. We
By the Court: It is so ordered.