77 Miss. 762 | Miss. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant sued the appellee for a malicious prosecution of him on a charge of theft. The defendant company pros
The peremptory instruction should not have been given; the ease should have been submitted to the jury. If the peremptory instruction rested upon the fact that the superintendent of the defendant company acted upon the advice of counsel, it should not have been given, for, in order that the advice of counsel may be a defense, it must clearly appear that the party acted in good faith upon such advice, and the evidence of W. Kehl, the father of Charles Kehl, that the superintendent of the defendant company demanded of him that he should make the bale of cotton right, and unless he should do so declared that it would cost him more than fifty bales of- cotton, and other particles of evidence in the case, make the question of the good faith of said superintendent in instituting said prosecution a matter for the decision of the jury. And if the peremptory instruction was given because it was thought that prob.able cause was shown, still we think, the learned judge erred, and that he should have submitted -that question to the jury.
Reversed and remanded.