31 Miss. 464 | Miss. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought by the defendant in error for a malicious prosecution instituted against-him by the plaintiff in error, in causing him to be arrested and imprisoned upon a charge of stealing a negro slave, the property of the plaintiff in error, of which charge he was acquitted.
On the trial in the court below, the plaintiff gave in evidence the affidavit of the defendant preferring the charge, the warrant of a justice of the peace issued against him thereon, and proved his arrest under the warrant, and his discharge by the justices before whom he was tried. He further proved that Greenwade knew of the possession of the slave in Leake county by the plaintiff, about a week previous to the arrest, and that Greenwade offered one John M. Burnett horses for the slave, before the arrest. He also read a bill of sale, dated in November, 1849, for the slave, from Burnett to the plaintiff, and also proved that, upon process issued by the governor of this State, upon a requisition of the governor of the State of Kentucky, for the arrest of the plaintiff, the defendant assisted an officer in pursuing the plaintiff with dogs.
On the part of the defendant, it was proved that the slave in question had been the property of John M. Burnett, who, while the slave was an infant, had made a verbal gift of her to one Mrs. Elliott, who took possession and held her for more than a year, and sold her to one Cain, by whom she was given to his daughter, the
The plaintiff then introduced his father, who testified that the witness who had proved these statements of Burnett, was very old and infirm, and incapable of understanding business transactions. But her intelligence and -character for veracity, and her capacity to understand such transactions were fully established by several witn esses of good character, who have known her for a great number of years, and who testify that she is not more than fifty years of age.
The verdict being for the plaintiff, the defendant • moved for a new trial upon several grounds; which motion being overruled, exceptions were taken, upon which the case is brought here.
The first objection made, is to the instructions granted at the instance of the plaintiff.
The first of these instructions is, “that if the jury believe from the evidence, that defendant had arrested and imprisoned the plaintiff upon a charge of theft, and which was proved not to be true upon a trial before the Justices Court, then the law is for the plaintiff, and they must so find; provided there were not probable grounds for so doing upon the part of defendant.”
This instruction is clearly erroneous. It makes the liability of the defendant, for the alleged grievance to the plaintiff, to depend solely upon whether or not there was probable ground for instituting the prosecution. But the settled rule upon the subject is, that the prosecution must have been instituted not only without probable cause, but also with malice, in order to render the prosecutor chargeable. Farmer v. Darling, 4 Burr. 1971; Munns
But this instruction is erroneous in another respect. It leaves the question whether there was or was not probable cause, to be settled entirely by the jury, without any directions as to the principles of law arising from the evidence, by which they should be governed in determining the question. Since the leading case of Johnstone v. Sutton, it is universally agreed that the question of probable cause is a mixed proposition of law and fact; that whether the circumstances alleged to constitute probable cause are sufficiently established, is a matter of fact for the jury; but whether, supposing them to be true as alleged, they amount to a probable cause, is a question of law to be decided by the court. Munns v. Dupont, 3 Wash. C. C. R, 31; Broad v. Ham, 5 Bing. (N. C.) 722; Pangburn v. Bull, 1 Wend. 345; Thomas v. Rouse, 2 Brev. 75. If the evidence in relation to essential facts be doubtful, or the testimony conflicting, the court should instruct the jury with reference-
The second instruction granted at the plaintiff’s instance is, that u if the jury believe, from the evidence, that Greenwade knew that Mills 'had title to the slave at the time of the arrest, and if they further believe that Greenwade had no title to said slave, then they must find for Mills, and assess such damages as, in their opinion, the plaintiff ought to have.”
This instruction is erroneous in two particulars. The first branch of it, in relation to the defendant’s knowledge that the plaintiff had .title to the slave, is not warranted by the evidence, and was calculated to mislead the jury. There was no evidence that Greenwade knew-that Mills had any valid title to the slave. The jury might have believed that he set up a claim to her, and that he had a bill of sale from Burnett. But having a bill of sale and having the title are very different things. It is most probable that the jury considered that having a bill of sale was sufficient to show that the plaintiff had the title, and that the defendant’s title, without a bill of sale or deed, amounted to nothing; for, upon no other view can the verdict be sustained, if the evidence in behalf of the defendant received full credit. That evidence, if credited, showed that Burnett had made a gift of the slave to Mrs. Elliott, several years before his bill of sale to the plaintiff; that the de
If the jury believed from the evidence^^TNi*ic®en%Lnt knew that the plaintiff claimed title to the ^^^Wnichis*®! mat the evidence justified them in believing — and if tJlex4Í¥i^2-#f believed that the defendant had no title to the BJal^)'aiMRÍfat nu charged the plaintiff with stealing the slave, it|by nam^^^^OTrad that these facts entitled the plaintiff to r^OTei. mot though the defendant might not have had a good tití^feesmagfíave believed that he had; and if, after the slave was taken clandestinely from his possession by the plaintiff, the defendant made the charge under the honest belief that she was his property, it is clear that there is an absence of that malice without which an action like this cannot be maintained.
But the latter branch of the instruction is clearly erroneous in referring the question whether the defendant had title to the slave, to the jury. If left to them to determine whether, under the facts shown in behalf of the plaintiff, and on the part of the defendant, the defendant had title, — this was submitting a question of law to the jury. It was the duty of the court to instruct the jury that if they believed, from the evidence, the particular facts relied on by the plaintiff to exist, then the title was in him; and to give a similar instruction with reference to the facts upon which the defendant’s title rested. Thus the law, applicable to the question, would have been settled by the court, and the facts to which it might apply, submitted to the jury. But by this instruction the
The only other objection to the judgment, which we deem it necessary to notice is, that the verdict is not supported by the evidence.
Upon the point of title to the slave, it appears that the slave was originally the property of Burnett, who gave her verbally to Mrs. Elliott, previous to the year, 1844, and delivered possession; that Mrs. Elliott sold her to Cain, the defendant’s father-in-law, who gave her to the defendant’s wife, and she remained in defendant’s possession until December, 1849, when she was taken away in the night, clandestinely, by the plaintiff; that Burnett was a minor when he made the gift, but acknowledged it after he became of age, and before he made a bill of sale to the plaintiff; that in November, 1849, he made the bill of sale to the plaintiff, and that the defendant offered Burnett horses for the slave before the arrest of the plaintiff on the charge of larceny; but at what time or under what circumstances, it does not appear, and that the defendant knew that the plaintiff had possession of the slave, in Leake county, about a week previous to the arrest.
If these facts, showing the defendant’s title, were true — and they appear to be amply sustained by the evidence — it is manifest that his title was good as against the claim of the plaintiff, as well as against Burnett; and that it was not affected by his offer to give Burnett horses for his title. If such an offer was ever made — and the proof of it is very indefinite, and made by the plaintiff’s father alone — it most probably was done in order to obtain formal evidence of title from Burnett, or under the belief that a conveyance by deed was necessary to render his title good. At all events, this conduct could not divest his title, if the facts upon which it rests, as stated by the witnesses, really existed.
The title of the defendant appears, therefore, to be fully sustained by the evidence, and it is difficult to perceive how the-jury could have found against it, unless they were misled by the first branch of the second instruction, or unless they misapprehended the force of that instruction.
With respect to the circumstances under which the slave was
We think it clear, therefore, that the verdict is not warranted by the evidence.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.