146 Ind. 117 | Ind. | 1896
The circuit court sustained a several demurrer to each of the two paragraphs of the complaint, and plaintiff, the appellant, refusing to amend and electing to stand upon his complaint, the defendant recovered judgment upon the demurrer that the plaintiff take nothing by his complaint. The rulings upon said demurrer are called in question by the assignment of errors.
The substance of the complaint is as follows:
“1st. Par. Plaintiff, for amended complaint complains of the defendant, and says that on October 4, 1893, during the September term of the Greene Circuit Court, while a grand jury of said county was in session inquiring into crimes, etc., the defendant was the regularly elected and qualified prosecuting attorney for the fourteenth judicial circuit of said State and for said county of Greene, the same being one of the counties of said circuit; that during said session of said grand jury it became their duty to inquire into a charge of crime presented them against one John Mullins for having feloniously and purposely set fire to and burned a certain barn, of the value of $400.00, the property of said Mullins,, the said property being insured by the Indiana Underwriters Insurance Company in the sum of .$400.00, with intent to cheat and defrayd said insurance company; that said grand jury voted and decided to present an indictment against said Mullins in due form charging him with said crime; that said Slinkard, acting as prosecuting attorney, but maliciously, wrongfully, and willfully intending to injure plaintiff, represented to said grand jury that he was able to present evidence that would show probable cause for and justify an indictment against
The theory of the first paragraph is in the nature of a complaint for malicious prosecution.
And it may be first noted that it states enough to show that there was an indictment against the appellant returned into open court by the grand jury, indorsed by the foreman a true bill. It takes at least five of the grand jurors to concur in the finding of an indictment, and it must be indorsed by the foreman a true bill. Burns’ R. S. 1894, section 1738 (R. S. 1881, 1669). The statute further requires it to be returned into court, and if the foreman has not signed his name to the indorsement aforementioned, the court must require him to do so, and also require the prosecuting attorney to sign it in the presence of the grand jury, if he has not already done so. It is then required to be filed by the clerk indorsing thereon the date of filing and record the same. Burns’ R. S. 1894, section 1741 (R. S. 1881, 1672).
All this the paragraph unavoidably shows has been done as to the indictment in this case. It shows also that the grand jury returned the indictment without any evidence against the appellant. It shows that they heard the pretended evidence against him, and
The question .remains, is the prosecuting attorney any more liable for his alleged participation in procuring the indictment maliciously and without probable cause?
In the State v. Henning, 33 Ind. 189, at page 191, this court said: “The turning point in the case is this: Is a prosecuting attorney an officer intrusted with the administration of justice? He is a judicial officer, created by the constitution of the State. 1 G. & H. p. 47, section 11. He is the law officer of the court to whom is intrusted all prosecutions for felonies and misdemeanors. 2 G. & H. p. 430, section 4. He is the legal adviser of the grand jury. We think he is ‘an officer intrusted with the administration of justice.’ ”
The prosecuting attorney therefore is a judicial officer, but not in the sense of a judge of a court. The rule applicable to such an officer is thus stated by an eminent author: “Whenever duties of a judicial nature are imposed upon a public officer, the due execution of which depends upon his own judgment, he is exempt from all responsibility by action for the motives which influence him and the manner in which said
It was held in Parker v. Huntington, 2 Gray (Mass.) 124, that an action against a district attorney and another person for maliciously contriving to have the plaintiff indicted for perjury, they knowing that he had not committed it, and by their false testimony obtaining a verdict of guilty against the plaintiff, which was afterwards set aside, cannot be maintained.
There is therefore no more liability against the prosecuting attorney than there is against the grand jury for the return of an indictment maliciously and without probable cause.
The second paragraph is a complaint for libel in reading the contents of the same indictment in open court to the officers thereof and in the hearing of others.
It is alleged to be false, and the publication thereof by said reading is alleged to be malicious.-
In the same section of Townsend, from which we have just quoted, it is said: “No action will lie for defamatory matter contained in a presentment of a grand jury.”
In Hartsock v. Reddick, 6 Blackf., at pages 255-6, it is said by Dewey, J., speaking for the court, that: “A complaint made to a justice of the peace, or other qualified magistrate, for the purpose of enforcing justice against an individual therein accused of crime, does not subject the person making the accusation to ' an action for slander or libel. The foundation of this
We are, therefore, of opinion that neither paragraph stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The circuit court dic\ not err in sustaining a demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint.
The judgment is affirmed.