By his complaint as amended plaintiff sought damages for malicious prosecution of a criminal proceeding charging him and others with violations of section 182, subdivisions 1 and 4 of the Penal Code (conspiracy to steal merchandise from defendants’ warehouse). It was alleged that at the conclusion of the preliminary hearing in December of 1958 he was held to answer for trial in the superior court, and that on February 16 of the following year the proceedings were dismissed “in the interests of justice” on motion of counsel for the People. It was further alleged that such dismissal was a favorable termination of the prior proceeding in that the People’s counsel knew or should have known that the evidence was insufficient to convict plaintiff of any crime, and that the motion was made despite plaintiff’s refusal to stipulate to “probable cause.” The remaining elements necessary for maintenance of the instant action, malice and lack of probable cause
(Jaffe
v. Stone,
Defendants’ answers each included an affirmative defense alleging that plaintiff, after being held to answer, unsuccess *595 fully moved to quash the information (Pen. Code, § 995) and thereafter permitted such order of denial to become final without taking steps by writ of prohibition or otherwise to review its propriety; that inherent in the order of plaintiff’s commitment for trial is a finding that there was probable cause to believe him guilty of the offenses charged, and he is therefore estopped from seeking the relief sought in the subject action as to matters which, it is further alleged, are now res judicata.
By stipulation the trial court first considered the merits of the above special defense (Code Civ. Proc., § 597.) Upholding such defense, the court found that since the order denying plaintiff’s motion under section 995 had become final, he was collaterally estopped to deny the existence of probable cause; it was further found that such final order was res judicata of the existence of reasonable and probable cause for plaintiff’s arrest and prosecution. Prom the ensuing judgment, plaintiff has appealed.
Defendants agree with plaintiff’s assertion that the holding of a person to answer by the committing magistrate is not conclusive evidence that the prosecution later complained of was with probable cause and without malice
(Diemer
v.
Herder,
“ On a motion to set aside an information, the question of the guilt or innocence of the defendant is not before the court, nor does the issue concern the quantum of evidence necessary to sustain a judgment of conviction. The court is only to determine whether the magistrate, acting as a man of ordinary caution or prudence, could conscientiously entertain a reasonable suspicion that a public offense had been committed in which the defendant had participated. [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Jablon,
No ease authority is cited by defendants in support of the proposition presently contended for; on the other hand, it has been stated that if a defendant does not seek prohibition, preferring to plead and stand trial, he may indirectly challenge the denial of his motion to quash on appeal from the judgment of conviction. (Witkin, Cal. Criminal Procedure (1963) p. 215.) Cited is
People
v.
Elliot,
The fallacy of defendants’ argument lies in their failure to appreciate the fact that a preliminary hearing is not a complete trial on the merits; otherwise there would be no reason for the determinations reached in
People
v.
Jablon, supra,
A further fallacy in defendants’ argument is disclosed by their reliance on
Teitelbaum Furs, Inc.
v.
Dominion Ins. Co., Ltd.,
Perhaps too much emphasis has been placed by the parties upon this element of finality, or otherwise, since “it is now the well-established rule that a verdict or final determination upon the merits of the malicious civil suit or criminal prosecution complained of is not necessary to the maintenance of an action for malicious prosecution, but that it is sufficient to show that the former proceeding had been
legally terminated.
The fact that such legal termination would not be a bar to another civil suit or criminal prosecution founded on the same alleged cause is no defense to the action for malicious prosecution; otherwise, a party might be continuously harassed by one suit after another, each dismissed before any opportunity for a trial on the merits.”
(Hurgren
v.
Union Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
*599
The situation at bar being not unlike that mentioned above, the question remains whether there was a favorable termination of a proceeding otherwise final. According to
Jaffe,
“the requirement of favorable termination is that it tends to indicate the innocence of the accused, and coupled with tlie other elements of lack of probable cause and malice, establishes the tort, that is, the malicious and unfounded charge of crime against an innocent person.” (P. 150.) In
Jackson
v.
Beckham, supra,
In the present proceeding, as noted at the outset, the only ground for the order of dismissal was “in the interests of justice.” In addition, as also heretofore noted, such order followed the refusal of the defendant (plaintiff here) to stipulate to the existence of probable cause. In the light of the meager showing on the instant point by all parties to the present appeal, we would experience some difficulty in deter *600 mining whether the dismissal in question tends to indicate the innocence of the accused and, in such circumstances, would warrant a finding of a termination favorable to plaintiff. The term “In the interests of justice” implies considerations which would favor each side to this litigation. We are persuaded that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for the following reasons: The affirmative or special defense is silent on this element of favorable termination; there is no discussion of such element in any of the briefs; no testimony was taken with respect thereto, and there is no finding covering this particular element.
Having concluded that the affirmative defense does not bar plaintiff's claim, we reverse the judgment for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views hereinabove set forth.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Notes
Apropos this facet of the case is the following from Jaffe-. “If the accused were actually convicted, the presumption of his guilt or of probable cause for the charge would be so strong as to render wholly improper any action against the instigator of the charge. The thought has also been expressed that the tort action under such circumstances would involve a collateral attack on the criminal judgment. ’ ’ (P. 150.)
Defendants refer to an annotation in
