7 S.C. 224 | S.C. | 1875
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
To sustain an action for malicious prosecution, it is necessary that the proceedings of the Court in which the prosecution was had should be proved on the trial, either by the production of them or by a copy in a properly authenticated form. In the case in hand there was no such proof, and it was proposed to substitute it by evidence of the loss of the original papers by a a copy of ■ the affidavit made by a clerk in the office of the attorneys for the plaintiff. This was objected to on the part of the defense, but allowed by the presiding Judge, and is brought to this
The prosecution there is commenced, not by an indictment, but an information under oath, setting forth the offense charged. Besides it does not apply even in the Court of Sessions to cases of misdemeanor. — Mims vs. Burty, 2 Hill Ch., 303; Burton vs. Watkins, 2 Hill, 674. We cannot say “that the plaintiff on the trial introduced no evidence sufficient to entitle him to go to the jury,” as is submitted by the sixth ground. In Lifford and wife vs. McColhom, (1 Hill, 82,) it is said: “What is probable cause is a question of law for the Court. If there is any evidence of it, the case should go the jury; otherwise it is the duty of the Court to order a nousuit.”
Where a matter is so much in the legal discretion of the presid-
The Board of County Canvassers is the primary body, and the ing Judge, we would not feel justified in interfering, unless there was manifest error. What.effect the warrant may have on the case by the use in it of the phrase “feloniously,” we are not called on now to determine.. No such objection was made in the Court below, either in the pleadings or on the trial. As the motion for a new trial must be granted on the ground herein referred to, a consideration of the grounds not noticed is not necessary.
New trial ordered.