This case comes before us irregularly, by motion in error and motion for a new trial combined. It is one of the many irregularities which have crept into our practice in relation to the-manner of bringing cases before this court, and which constrained us, during the present cir
We are all satisfied that the non-suit was properly granted as the evidence stood. The question in the case is not simply whether the defendant acted improperly, or without strict legal right, or even maliciously, but whether he was actuated in making and enforcing the orders complained of by a design and intention to break up the contract relation existing between the plaintiff and the captain of the brig Brilliant, and thereby injure the plaintiff by preventing him from acquiring his expected wharfage. The case turns on the proof of that design, and the evidence in the case does not furnish any such proof on which a jury could properly find a verdict, nor in our opinion would the evidence have been sufficient if the plaintiff had shown that the relations between him and the defendant were unfriendly. Every positive, energetic and independent man is liable to have enemies, and to have an unfriendly state of feeling .existing between him and other individuals. When such a man accepts an office whose duties, properly exercised, will necessarily bring him in conflict with the interests and prejudices of others, and those with whom his relations are not friendly, his motives will naturally be suspected and impugned; but he will be protected by the presumptions of the law in- the performance' of the duties required of him, unless it is clearly shown that his motives are private and malicious, and that he has wantonly and unnecessarily used the power incident to his official station to gratify a personal spirit of revenge. We discover nothing in this case which rebuts the presumption that the defendant was acting under a sense of official responsibility and with a view to an honest discharge of public duty.
The brig Brilliant had lain at the wharf of the plaintiff from the 21st to the 26th of September, covering part of the wharf of Miller & Go. Miller & Co. had a grain elevator upon their wharf, and there was a canal boat lying 'in the stream loaded with grain consigned to them which could not
But it appears from the motion for a new trial that the plaintiff proposed to go beyond the mere state of unfriendliness in his proof, and how far and with what effect he would have done so if permitted we are unable to see. We think he should have been permitted to prove any acts of hostility and the circumstances under which they occurred, from which an inference could be drawn, consistently with the rules of law in other respects, that the plaintiff was governed in his conduct by the design imputed to him and which constitutes the gist of the action. Because such evidence was excluded we feel constrained to grant a new trial. But we deem it our duty to say.that, unless the plaintiff can produce evidence, other than that of mere unfriendliness, to rebut the presumption that the defendant as an officer was acting from right motives, and the supporting inference arising from the fact • that a case existed calling imperatively for his official interference in some way for the protection of Miller & Go., the non-suit should be promptly renewed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred; except Carpenter, J., who did not sit.