134 Ky. 550 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the court by
— Reversing.
Dr. Robert E. Gatz, a physician of Louisville, brought this suit against Dr. C. H. Harris, who is also a physician practicing there, to recover damages for malicious prosecution. At the conclusion of the evidence on both sides the court instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the defendant, and, the plaintiff’s petition having been dismissed, he appeals.
As the case went off on a peremptory instruction, tlie plaintiff, for the purpose of testing the correctnes of that instruction, is entitled to have the testimony for him taken as true, including such reasonable inferences as it warranted. The proof before the jury was somewhat conflicting; but we will only state the facts as shown by the evidence for the plaintiff as it must here be taken as true. On the evening of December 31, 1907, Mrs. W. H. Merz and her daughter were injured in a street car collision. About 8 o’clock Dr. Gatz received a telephone call from Jas. Kinnarney, telling him that a woman had been hurt about 7 o’clock, and that he must come at once to Thirty-Fourth and Pflanz avenue and wait upon her; that it was very important, and he must hurry. He was told to go to High street and a man would meet him there and take him to the house, as Pflanz avenue
James Kinnarney was a detective, and a part of his business was the looking up of damage suits. He went to the Merz house soon after Dr. Harris left, and obtained a contract from W. H. Merz employing
‘ ‘ Then I called up Dr. Gatz over the telephone, and asked for the doctor, and he replied that that was him, and I said-. ‘Did you go down to see Mrs. Merz last night — the injured woman?’ He said, ‘yes.’ I said, ‘who sent you down there?’ He said, ‘the Kentucky Detective Bureau.’ Well, I said: ‘Doctor, I am the man who applied the first dressing down there, and how does it come that you went in on my case?’ Well, he said: ‘Mr. Kinnarney sent me there to take charge of it.’ I said: ‘Did you have a lawyer down there with you too?’ and he said, ‘yes; had a lawyer.’ I said, ‘who was the lawyer?’ He said, ‘Judge Richardson.’ ‘Well,’ I said: ‘Suppose you have the judge down there again today. Would that suit you?’ He said, ‘yes; you call him up.’ And he gave me his telephone number. It is double 83. The conversation ended at that.” Dr. Gatz says that he did not tell Dr. Harris that Richardson was there, or that he would •have him there. His statement on this subject is as follows: “No, sir; he asked me something to this effect — whether I knew who the lawyer was — and I told him that the people had inquired of me whether
The attorney whom Dr. Harris consulted gave this testimony: ‘ ‘ Of course, I do not undertake to give the exact language nor all that was said, hut substantially it was that that these men had gone down there in the ambulance chasing business before the woman. Well, she was in a very nervous condition, and'that this doctor had gone up there and taken these dressings off which another doctor had put on there, as he must have known, and put the woman through the cruel treatment of having these dressings taken off, and he putting on his own dressings, and got a contract from the woman for a contingent fee for a lawyer to bring suit against the street car company almost before they could say Jack Robinson, and I said that was certainly in my judgment disorderly conduct, and they ought to be arrested and ought to be punished for it. Q. And you so advised Dr. Harris? A. I so advised Dr. Harris. ’ ’
On this evidence the court instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the defendant on the ground that the warrant was sworn out on the advice of counsel;
It is evident from the proof that Dr. Harris took no steps to inform himself as to what the facts were after he had talked with Dr. Gatz over the telephone before he went to the lawyer’s office and had the doctor arrested. He did not go to the Merz house and see if any disorderly conduct had occurred there, or learn why Dr. Gatz had gone there, or what condition he found when he reached there. The proof shows that Dr. Gatz was not only not disorderly at the Merz
Advice of counsel is not a defense in an action for malicious prosecution unless the facts are fully and fairly laid before the counsel. If the real facts are not laid before the counsel, his opinion is no defense to an action for malicious prosecution. Crawford v. Keyser, 5 Ky. Law Rep. 693; Burke v. Rhodes, 13 Ky. Law Rep., 431; Anderson v. Columbia Finance & Trust Company, 50 S. W. 40, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1790; Ahrens & Ott Manufacturing Co. v. Hoeher, 106 Ky. 692, 51 S. W. 194, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 299.
In addition to this the advice of counsel will consti-kite probable cause only when reasonable diligence is used to learn the facts on which the advice of counsel is sought. In the case last referred to the court said:
“Pie who consults an attorney about a matter affecting a third person ought to use that care which men of ordinary prudence would ordinarily use in matters of like magnitude. Less than this would not show good faith. Of course, it is absolutely necessary in questions,of this sort that people should act upon the advice of counsel; but they must exercise in doing so reasonable care to get the truth before the counsel.”
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial, and for further proceedings consistent herewith.