98 Tenn. 48 | Tenn. | 1896
The plaintiff commenced this suit in the Circuit Court of Davidson County against the Fidelity Mutual Life Association and James M. Head, to recover damages for an alleged malicious prosecution. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff appealed and has assigned errors. The record discloses that from May 8, 1893, to September 12, 1893, the firm of Selden & Graham, composed of A. A. Selden and the plaintiff, James Graham, was the general agent in the State of Tennessee for the defendant insurance company, with authority to solicit life insurance, deliver policies, collect premiums, and remit the same to the association at Philadelphia. About October-10, 1893, the defendant company caused the arrest, indictment, and prosecution of said agents on a charge-of embezzlement. The defendants were both acquitted of said charge, and thereupon plaintiff, Graham, instituted this suit against the company and James M„ Head, its attorney, to recover damages for the criminal prosecution.
The fundamental inquiry underlying the present action is, whether at the time the prosecution was set on foot there were such facts and circumstances of an incriminating character presented
It appears from the record that the Fidelity Mutual Life Association, of Philadelphia, had been represented in Tennessee by the said A. A. Selden prior to the formation of his partnership with the plaintiff, Graham. At the date of the appointment of the firm of Selden & Graham as general agents of said
It further appears that, on September 8, 1893, the general agent of the company, one Bolling, came to Nashville for the purpose of obtaining a settlement of Selden’s individual indebtedness to the company. While here, he discovered a deficiency also in the accounts of the new agency of Selden &
Thereafter, on October 6, a bill was filed in the Chancery Court for the collection of said deficiency, and, on October 10, an .indictment was returned by the grand jury of Davidson County against Selden & Graham, charging them with embezzlement. As already stated, the plaintiff was acquitted of the criminal charge, and brings this suit to recover damages for the wrongful prosecution. In this brief statement we have not undertaken to narrate all the facts or to point out all the controverted issues. - The
The first assignment of error is that the Court erred in permitting the witness, George C. Mitchell, over objection of plaintiff’s counsel, to read to the jury a statement purporting to be the account between the plaintiff and the defendant company, when said statement was taken from the original books and cards by others than the witness himself. Counsel for plaintiff states, in this assignment of error, that notice had been served on defendant to produce the original books and cards. We find, upon an examination of this notice, that while it does embrace letters, reports, and accounts, there is no demand for the production of the original books and cards. But, conceding for the purposes of this assignment, that no notice was necessary, we are yet of opinion that this assignment is based upon an erroneous predicate in respect of what transpired in the trial Court. It assumes that the Circuit Judge permitted to be read to the jury, as original evidence, disconnected with the personal knowledge of the witness, a statement of what is shown by certain books and cards without the production of the originals. This is alleged to be erroneous for three reasons — first, because the original cards referred to
An examination of the record will show that the Court did not allow this statement to be read to the jury as original evidence, but simply permitted the witness to refer to it as a memorandum, to refresh his recollection. Moreover, the record shows that the witness, Mitchell, was the chief clerk of the defendant company, and the original entries were made either by the witness himself or by his assistant bookkeepers under his personal supervision, and were based upon reports and accounts furnished by the firm of Graham & Selden, and the preceding firm, of which Mr. Selden was a member. In addition to this, the witness testified in respect of his knowledge of the correctness of these accounts. So that in no sense is this a case in which copies of books and accounts have been admitted as original evidence, as assumed in the assignment of error. Greenleaf on Evidence, Yol. I., Sec. 436, p. 597.
The second assignment of error is based upon the refusal of the Court to permit the plaintiff to introduce in evidence the individual contract between A. A. Selden and the defendant association, made
The individual contract between Selden and the defendant company, was entered into prior to the formation of the firm of Selden & Graham, and was supplanted by the new contract entered into between Selden & Graham and the defendant association. It was shown in proof that Selden, during the pendency of his individual contract with the company as general agent, and also while subagent, had become in
The contention of Graham is, that, under his private contract with Selden, he acquired a .one-half interest in the renewal commissions of Selden’s individual contract with the company, and that it was error for the Circuit Judge to exclude from the consideration of the jury the individual contract of Selden with the company, which would show the extent of Graham’s interest in said contract. It should be remarked in this connection, that when Bolling came to Nashville for a settlement of Sel-den’s shortage, and accidentally discovered a deficiency in the accounts of Selden & Graham, the latter admitted that he had in his hands funds belonging to the company, but undertook to set up a counterclaim against the company.
On the trial, Graham undertook to establish his counterclaims in two ways: (1) By proof of traveling expenses and other items incident to running
In this we think there was no error. These renewal interests were wholly speculative, and contingent upon the duration of the policies for eight years and the continuation of plaintiff’s agency. The Circuit Judge, however, held that “ plaintiff would be entitled to show, at the time a demand for settlement was made upon him and refused, that Mr. Selden had in the hands of the company money actually to his credit on account of renewal commissions, and that there was nothing due from Mr. Selden to the company, or, at least, there was a balance due him after paying off his shortage to the company, but that the simple, estimated value of renewal interests, calculated upon the principle of insurance average — namely, the value to the agent of possible, contingent, or uncertain renewals — cannot be brought up as an offset in this cause.” This ruling was not only proper, but the proof shows that there was nothing due Selden on the tenth of September, 1893, when the company demanded a settlement. On the contrary, the testimony conclusively shows that Selden was indebted to the company in the sum of $1,738, and the firm of Selden
The first assignment upon the charge is that the Judge erred in the following instruction: “This action is only intended to apply to cases where a criminal accusation is made against an innocent man with malice, and in the absence of even a fair, reasonable probability that it is true.” The contention of plaintiff is that the Court should have charged that it was only ‘ ‘ such facts and circumstances brought to the mind of -a 'reasonably prudent and cautious man as would cause him to believe in the guilt of the accused,” that would operate as a justification for a wrongful prosecution, and not a “ fair, reasonable probability of its truth.” It is not perceived wherein the charge given was less favorable to plaintiff than the' instruction counsel claim ought to have been given. The charge, as given, was correct, and if counsel desired any explanation or a charge upon a different aspect of the facts, it should have been formulated and presented to the Court.
The next assignment necessary to be noticed is that the Court charged that “malice may be inferred from the want of probable cause, but this is not a presumption of law nor a necessary presumption. It is a mere inference of fact, which you may or may not make, as the circumstances require.”
The criticism of appellant is more especially directed to the following paragraph from the charge,
The next assignment of error is based upon the refusal of the trial Judge to give the following instruction to the jury, submitted by plaintiff’s counsel, to wit: “That if defendants believed that the plaintiff was guilty at the time the prosecution was instituted, but that afterwards, and before the trial,
The fourteenth request submitted by counsel for plaintiff was, viz.: “That if the jury find that the defendant association sought the advice of Mr. Head for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not it was possible to scare or bluff the plaintiff out of any amount of money, that advice of counsel, so sought, is not sought in good faith, and is not available as a defense.” We think the instructions of the Court, in his general charge on the subject of advice of counsel, fully and accurately covered the law on the subject. He said, viz.: “If you should find that before beginning any criminal prosecution, defendant’s agent, S. C. Bolling, consulted, in good faith, James M. Head, in his capacity as an attorney and counselor, giving to said Head a. full, true, and complete statement . of all material facts within his knowledge, and you also find there were no other material facts relative to the matter which the defendant might have ascertained by the-
“Again, if Mr. Head, after his employment as attorney, did, as the authorized representative of the company in that matter, submit to the Attorney - general for the county of Davidson, in good faith, a full, true, and complete statement of all material facts within the knowledge of the company’s agent and himself, and if you find there were no other material facts relating to the matter which he or the defendant company might have ascertained by the exercise of reasonable diligence, and if you further find that, after considering all the facts so submitted, the Attorney-general advised the indictment of plaintiff upon the charge of embezzlement, and that this advice was warranted by the law governing and defining embezzlement (hereafter to be given in charge), if you find that the advice was-
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.