148 S.E. 105 | W. Va. | 1929
The plaintiffs, Ray Dunlap and Denver Dunlap, respectively, recovered judgments of $2,999.00 and $1,500.00 against the defendant, Chesapeake Ohio Railway Company, for false arrest and malicious prosecution.
A sealed freight car of the defendant was broken into in the nighttime near McCorkle, Lincoln county, and six hundred Camel cigarettes, fourteen pounds of Pay Car scrap tobacco, and other articles, of the total value of $27.50, were taken therefrom. The following morning G. C. Beane, a special officer in the employ of the defendant, accompanied by Jeff Estep and L. B. Huffman, in search of the goods and the culprits, followed human tracks from the vicinity of the car up a small water course along which the father of the plaintiffs (with whom they lived) and other persons resided. On a second trip in the afternoon of the same day, they discovered (according to their testimony) in a small building about three hundred feet from the Dunlap residence two packages of Camel cigarettes, two bags of Pay Car scrap tobacco, a bottle containing hair tonic (similar to some missing from a freight car of defendant previously broken into at McCorkle), and other small articles of merchandise. They testified also that the plaintiffs, Ray Dunlap and Denver Dunlap, and their cousin, Fred Dunlap, (who were 16, 18 and 17 years of age, respectively), fled from near it as they approached the building. The three Dunlaps admit being close to the building, *188 when the searchers appeared on the scene, but state that they were then in the act of leaving and did so in an orderly manner to repair some fencing and attend to other duties. The boys were arrested later in the afternoon by Beane, Estep and Huffman, taken to the station house of the defendant at McCorkle, there detained until the following morning, and then arraigned before a justice on a warrant charging them with breaking and entering the railway car. Beane and another police agent of the defendant requested the postponement of the trial until further evidence could be secured. The justice, upon objection of the plaintiffs, refused to postpone the trial, and, no evidence being offered by the state, dismissed the warrant.
The ground for reversal in each case is that the evidence does not establish want of probable cause for the arrest or prosecution. In determining this question it is important to consider not only abandonment of the prosecution by defendant, but also the statement of Beane soon after the dismissal of the warrant and his testimony while testifying as a witness for the defendant in these cases. A few hours after the release of the plaintiffs, Beane in conversation with their attorney said: "I knew all the time we did not have any evidence against the boys." He also testified at the trial of these cases, in an effort to deny responsibility for the arrest or prosecution, "I didn't have anything to do with securing any warrant; there wasno evidence for getting any warrant on." It is evident from this testimony that Beane, who, according to the evidence for the plaintiffs, was chargeable with the arrest and prosecution, did not believe at the time that he was acting upon probable cause. Is good faith on the part of the prosecutor an element of probable cause? Point 14 of the syllabus in Vinal v. Core,
In an exhaustive note on "probable cause" as a defense to an action for malicious prosecution, L.R.A., 1915-D, 79, it is said that the belief of the defendant in the guilt of the plaintiff, or which is the same thing, in the truth of the charge made against that person in the prosecution complained of, is a material element in probable cause, seems to be clearly recognized, either expressly or impliedly, by all the definitions of that defense. The elaborate note toRoss v. Nixon, 26 A.S.R., 140, states: "That the prosecutor did not believe the accused was guilty, or did not believe there was probable cause for his prosecution, is certainly a very material circumstance, whether it necessarily negatives the defense of probable cause or not. Whether circumstances sufficient to create a belief in the mind of a reasonable man that the accused was guilty of the crime, charged, and which, if believed by the prosecutor, would sustain the defense of probable cause, lose their power to shield him upon proof being made that they did not generate that belief in his mind, is not clearly settled, some of the cases indicating that his want of belief is admissible merely to disprove the existence of probable cause, and others that such want of belief is conclusive against this defense."
Whether non-belief of the prosecutor in the guilt of the person charged with crime is conclusive of want of probable cause for the prosecution or merely evidence of that fact, this Court would not be warranted in holding that the evidence of bad faith on the part of Beane and the other testimony in the case are not sufficient to establish want of probable cause for the arrest and detention of the plaintiffs. Certainly, in the absence of evidence that all of the facts known to Beane at the time of the arrest were presented at the trial, *192
there is no reason for questioning his statement that "there was no evidence for getting any warrant on." No effort has been made to prosecute the plaintiffs since the dismissal of the warrant. "Probable cause for prosecution for a crime depends upon the honest and reasonable belief of the person commencing the prosecution." Homer v. Watts, (Ore.),
The judgments are, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.