87 W. Va. 292 | W. Va. | 1920
To review a judgment of the circuit court of Wyoming county rendered upon the verdict of a jury in an action for malicious prosecution, this writ of error is prosecuted.
The defendant David M. Klein was engaged in the mercantile business in the town of Mullens, in Wyoming county, occupying
Several assignments of error are based upon the action of the court below in the admission and rejection of evidence. Upon
The defendant Klein was also permitted to say that he did not know what sort of warrant the justice was issuing, and to state that he had no malice or ill will toward the plaintiff. As to his statement that he did not know what sort of warrant the justice was issuing certainly the jury could give to it very little credence, for he states, and it is shown in the record, that he made a complaint in writing before the justice, signed it, and swore to it, in which he charged that the plaintiff in this suit broke into his storeroom in the daytime with the intention of taking, stealing and carrying away his property. After having made this sort of complaint he could not expect the justice to issue a warrant for anything except the offense which he charged in the complamt, and the fact that he may not actually have known by reading the warrant what it contained could not be material. He did make the complaint in writing under oath upon which the warrant was issued, and the warrant was issued for the very offense with which he charged the plaintiff in that
Exception is also taken to the action of the court in refusing to permit the introduction in evidence of an advertisement inserted in a newspaper by the defendant in regard to his removal from the building in question. "We cannot say whether the action of the court in this regard was correct or not. The advertisement offered in evidence does not appear in the record, and being unadvised as to what it contained we are unable to say whether or not it was competent or material. Davis v. Dumber Co., 85 W. Va. 191, 101 S. E. 447.
The court refused to permit.the plaintiff to show that on the day following his arrest, when the parties, including the defendant, were congregated in the office of the justice, the justice stated in the presence of the defendant that he had informed him when he procured the warrant upon which the arrest was made that the facts did not justify making the complaint that he did, or the issuing of the warrant that he asked for, but that the defendant insisted upon having a felony warrant issued for the plaintiff instead of a warrant for trespass, as the justice advised, which statement, although made in the presence of the defendant and in his hearing, was not denied by him. This evidence certainly had a strong tendency to prove that the defendant was actuated by malice in making the complaint against the plaintiff, and any evidence which tends to prove express malice, such as statements made by the defendant, or statements made in his presence, and undenied by him, in regard to the transaction, which have a bearing upon his conduct, are proper. 8 Enc. of Evidence, § 405.
The action of the court in refusing to give to the jury an instruction offered by the plaintiff is also assigned as error. This instruction told the jury that under the evidence they should find for the plaintiff and assess his damages at such amount as they thought sufficient to compensate him for the injuries sustained, and, further, if they found that the defendant in causing the plaintiff’s arrest whs actuated by malice, that his acts were
In this case, the effect of the defendant’s testimony is to admit that he knew at the time he made the complaint that the plaintiff entered the storeroom. under a claim that he was entitled to do so, and not for any unlawful or felonious purpose, and he says that bis only purpose in making the complaint and having the warrant issued was to get the parties out of the storeroom. With full knowledge of these facts he went before a justice- and made affidavit to a false complaint. In these suits for
'Reversed and remanded..