127 So. 188 | Ala. | 1930
This is a suit by appellant against appellee for malicious prosecution. The court left the issue to the jury upon an appropriate oral charge and gave some special charges at the instance of appellee. There were exceptions taken by appellant to the rulings of the court on the introduction of evidence, and they and the charges given at the instance of appellee were assigned as error.
The first assignment of error relates to the refusal of the court to permit appellant to ask his witness a leading question. This was discretionary with the trial court. We do not find that this discretion was abused. Section 7732, Code; 12 Michie Dig. Ala. Rep. 1195.
It was not improper on cross-examination of plaintiff's witness, an officer who investigated the charge and arrested plaintiff, for defendant to inquire as to the facts which induced him to make the arrest. Patton v. State,
The answer to the question of whether plaintiff's witness who swore out the warrant for his arrest had heard any complaint before about his checks being bad was not prejudicial. Defendant had the right to show also what information was possessed by the officer which was influential or may have been influential in causing them to begin the prosecution. When plaintiff was requested to go to police headquarters, he was directed by this officer to write the name of the man whose signature was supposed to be forged. This officer testified to that on direct examination, and that he then told plaintiff after he had willingly done the writing, "You are it." On cross-examination it was not error for him to express his opinion, though not an expert on handwriting, as to a comparison of the signatures. It tended to show the basis of the act of this witness in swearing out the warrant. This was not improper on cross-examination. On the same principle it was not improper on such cross-examination to ask if defendant's manager did not simply give the information and left it to the officer, and his answer, "I guess he did."
What occurred after the case against plaintiff was disposed of showing that some one else committed the crime, but that this was not and could not have been known to defendant when the case against plaintiff was begun and heard, is not admissible. The question is what was known to defendant when the prosecution was begun and continued, and not what was afterwards known or may have occurred. Hanchey v. Brunson,
We do not understand that it is expressive of a conclusion for a witness in a malicious prosecution suit to state whether in fact he requested the arrest of plaintiff, though that may be one of the principal issues in the case. It calls for a fact within his knowledge and not a conclusion.
At the conclusion of the evidence counsel for plaintiff offered to read to the court from the opinion of the Court of Appeals in Wood v. Hacker,
Many cases have been considered in which the trial judge permitted counsel to read to him or to the jury extracts from opinions of this court and of the Court of Appeals. The question has usually, if not uniformly, arisen when the court permitted such extracts to be read, and not when the privilege was denied. These authorities are collated in the opinion on rehearing in Louisville N. R. R. Co. v. Cross,
The bill of exceptions does not show just what portion of the opinion in Wood v. Hacker, supra, plaintiff's counsel offered to read in the presence of the jury. Whether the jury *32 should hear any of it was primarily discretionary with the presiding judge. We conclude there was no error in this respect, as plainly there was no abuse of discretion.
In the case of Standard Oil Co. v. Davis,
Giving information of a crime to officers, or a request that the officers investigate a crime is not aiding or abetting or instigating a prosecution, unless such information was a misrepresentation of the facts in order to induce action, or there was a suppression of known material facts. American Surety Co. v. Pryor,
We have concluded that the assignments do not show reversible error, and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.