34 App. D.C. 242 | D.C. Cir. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This case comes here on appeal from a judgment for appellee, Thomas O. Selfridge, in the supreme court of the District, on a verdict directed by the court.
On the 26th of December, 1907, appellee, defendant be'low, appeared in the police court of the District and made oath that “twelve curtains of the value of $300, * * * of the goods and chattels of said Thomas O. Selfridge, have, with
Thereupon, on the same day, a search warrant was issued by said court, and a search made of the aforesaid premises by three officers of the law, accompanied by appellee. The alleged stolen goods were not. found, and the cause, which had been docketed in said court, was nolle prossed in due course.
On March 17th, 1908, appellant, Rachael B. Brown, brought this suit against appellee for malicious prosecution, her declaration being based upon the foregoing recital of facts. At the trial appellant testified that she knew Admiral Selfridge, the appellee, having been in his employ for nine or ten years prior to 1907; that after the death of his wife, which occurred two years before she left his employ, she acted as cook and housekeeper, did the marketing and attended to different things about the house; that she was sometimes entrusted with market money by appellee and, in the absence of the family, often had charge of the house; that she left his employ to open a boarding house, where she remained from August, 1907, to April, 1908; that on the day of the search she met Admiral' Selfridge as he was entering her house with the officers, saying to him: • “ ‘Why Admiral, what do you want in here?’ and shook hands with him, but he never said a word.”
The foregoing negatives the existence of express malice on the part of the appellee; hence if malice be shown it must obviously be implied, that is, malice in law.
To entitle a plaintiff to maintain an action for malicious prosecution three elements, aside from all questions of special damage, are necessary, viz., termination of the previous suit, want of probable cause, and malice. As there is no controversy as to the termination of the previous suit, that element
• It appears from the record that Mary Levy, whose name was joined with appellant’s in the affidavit of appellee, on which the search warrant was issued, was, and for some time prior thereto had been, living with appellant on the date of the search.- Appellant-testified that she had never taken anything from Admiral Selfridge, or from his house, and had not been accused of stealing anything of that kind before; but Mrs. Levy never denied taking the goods, and at no time during the trial was it denied by either appellant or by Mrs. Levy that the goods had been on the premises.
To meet the burden of showing want of probable cause, appellant offered in evidence the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that she had previously borne a good reputation for honesty and integrity. This evidence, appellant contended, established, prima facie, the want of probable cause, and that the burden of proof then shifted to appellee. The court ruled that appellant had not met the burden .of showing want of probable cause, and therefore, without hearing appellee, directed the jury to return a verdict for him. Appellant’s assignment of error is that “the court erred in directing the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant, appellee.”
The burden of showing want of probable cause was sustained by appellant, if at all, by the evidence of previous good reputation thus introduced; but we hold that this burden was never met by her. It will be noted that the affidavit of appellee did not charge that appellant had stolen the goods, but that they “have, within 200 days last past, by some person or persons unknown> being feloniously stolen, taken, and carried away, * * * and that the said Thomas hath probable cause to suspect, and doth suspect, that the said goods and chattels are now concealed in the premises of one Rachael Brown and Mary Levy.” There is nothing in the record to show that some person other .than appellant did not steal the goods and
A search such as was made in this case is almost always attended with uncertainty from the very nature of the proceeding; and while it is certainly true that the law does, and by all means should, discourage the bringing of suits without reasonable cause, because of the unavoidable suffering entailed thereby, it is equally true that the interests of justice demand that no restriction should be imposed which would render timid the man who honestly, and with sufficient cause, suspects that
In McCormick v. Conway, 12 La. Ann. 53, the plaintiff was charged by defendant with passing a counterfeit bank note with knowledge. Plaintiff was not imprisoned, and there was no proof of actual damage. The jury found for plaintiff, and on appeal the court said: “We searched the evidence carefully, and find no proof of malice or of bad faith on the part of the defendant. It is true that malice may be inferred from an utter absence of probable cause, but in such case the absence of probable cause to form the basis of a presumption of malice should be shown affirmatively and positively. In the case at bar the defendant is shown to be a man of good character, and no fact has been brought to our notice which could 0 induce the belief that he had a motive which could prompt him to make a false accusation against the plaintiff.”
In Legallee v. Blaisdell, 134 Mass. 473, it appeared that Blaisdell was administrator of the estate of one Jones. He applied to a master in chancery for a certificate authorizing the arrest of plaintiff on the ground that he was about to leave the state in violation of his obligation to pay a judgment against him in favor of the estate. His arrest followed. It developed on hearing and was admitted by the defendant, that, as a mat-’ ‘ ter of fact, such an intention was conclusively shown by the evidence not to have been entertained by the plaintiff. Defendant offered no evidence, and asked the court to direct a verdict in his favor, which was done. Held not to be error on appeal.
Mr. Bigelow, in his Leading Cases on the Law of Torts,” speaking of the want of probable cause, says [p. 197] :■ “There ought to be enough to satisfy a reasonable man that the accuser had no ground for proceeding but his desire to injure-the accused.” Citing Williams v. Taylor, 6 Bing. 183-186.
In this' case appellee, under oath, had declared his belief that
The prima facie showing of probable cause, which the law, for reasons already given, assumes for the protection of a defendant, strengthened by the appellee’s sworn statement of his belief that the stolen goods were concealed on the premises of appellant and Mary Levy, was, we think, amply sufficient to offset the mere evidence of reputation or character. And when the failure of both appellant and Mary Levy to meet, at any point in the proceeding, the real charge of appellee as to the alleged concealing of his property, this conclusion seems inevitable.
The propriety of the court’s withdrawing the case from the jury seems undoubted. The jury finds the facts; the court determines whether those facts constitute want of probable cause.
On application of the appellant a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States was allowed February 1, 1910.