55 Pa. Super. 429 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
Two appeals are here presented, one by Mabel Bosley, by her next friend and father, and another by James T. Bosley in his own right, against the defendants, for the
The facts developed on the trial are as follows: On March 3, 1911, Mabel Bosley, the plaintiff, seventeen years of age, was employed by the defendants as a domestic servant in their home, and continued in that relation until March 29, when she was discharged, and arrested on an information made by John Gerrity, the husband, in which she was charged with suspicion of larceny. When arrested by an officer, she was taken in a patrol wagon to City Hall, photographed, and her physical description made of record. She was held by the alderman for a hearing and afterward, for action by the grand jury,. and failing to obtain bail she was detained in Moyamensing Prison until April 5, on which day the grand jury ignored the bill of indictment and she was discharged.
The testimony disclosed that on March 23, she was directed by Mrs. Gerrity' to attend to some special housework, and among other things to prepare for delivery to Gimbel Brothers driver a chiffonier, “and to take everything out of the drawers, and put it on the bed before the driver removed it from the house.” Mrs. Gerrity was not at home when the furniture was taken from it, and soon after her return she noticed that “six sheets and a white spread that she knew of being in one of the drawers of the chiffonier were missing.” She at once asked Mabel where they were, and was told “All the sheets I had seen I had taken out of the chiffonier drawer and laid them on the spare bed.” The girl was directly charged with stealing this property, and while she made a specific and prompt denial of knowledge of their whereabouts, Mrs. Gerrity insisted, “You must have seen them and taken them, there was no one here
On the trial, Mrs. Gerrity testified, that when the articles were missed, she went on the same day to Gimbel Brothers, to whom the chiffonier had been sent, to make inquiry for the missing articles. The furniture was traced by its number at the warehouse, and she was informed that nothing had been found. On April 14 following, all the articles were found in a drawer of the chiffonier in the warehouse. In reply to an inquiry by the court viz.: “When you first went to Gimbel Brothers they could not find these articles?” and Mrs. Gerrity replied, “No, your honor, and everything was going.on very nicely. We did not accuse her, I never accused Mabel of taking the things. I simply asked her if she knew where they were, and when she brought back a message from her mother that she thought I must have taken the things myself to get her into trouble, I felt I could not have her in the house any longer.” She further testified, “Q. You had no reason
The undisputed facts in the case are, that the bed linen disappeared from the defendant’s house about the same time the chiffonier was taken away'; that Mabel was promptly charged with their theft and she emphatically denied any knowledge of their whereabouts; that inquiry was promptly made of Gimbel Brothers, and the only information received by Mrs. Gerrity in regard to them was that neither the chiffonier nor the linen could be located. The warrant for her arrest was dated March 28, 1911, and soon thereafter, in April, Mrs. Gerrity had conclusive proof of the fact that her property had been found in a drawer in the chiffonier in Gimbel Brothers warehouse, and which fact was never communicated to this young girl or her father until the time of this trial. This action was begun on May 17, and, doubtless, had information been promptly given of the recovery of the property, which fully exculpated Mabel of any wrongdoing, this litigation would have been avoided. The reputation of a domestic servant for honesty is of first importance to her, and the lack of prompt and fair inquiry on the part of the defendants before the warrant was issued made this a perfectly proper ease for submission to a jury.
In an action of this character it is necessary to a recovery that want of probable cause and malice must be
In an action for malicious prosecution the question is not whether the person charged with a crime was guilty, but what were the indications of guilt? And the test is the prosecutor’s belief of the existence of probable cause based on reasonable grounds. Several important facts were in dispute in this case, and the inferences to be drawn from the testimony of both of the defendants made it a proper subject for decision by a jury to
The' public interests demand that courts shall not frown upon honest efforts to bring guilty parties to justice. It is just as true that individuals are to be protected against rash, wanton and causeless prosecution, Mehaffey v. Byers, 151 Pa. 92; Cole v. Reece, 47 Pa. Superior Ct. 212; Com. v. Storey, 49 Pa. Superior Ct. 282; Roessing v. Pittsburg Rys., 226 Pa. 523; McCoy v. Kalbach, 51 Pa. Superior Ct. 364.
While the warrant of arrest was founded on the affidavit of John Gerrity, the wife was so actively identified with the proceedings and there being no request for special instructions as to any particular defense as to the wife, it was proper to submit the case to the jury as to both of them.
The judgment is affirmed.