44 Cal. 609 | Cal. | 1872
This is an action for malicious prosecution; and a judgment having been rendered for the plaintiff, the defendant appeals. At the trial, when the defendant was under examination as a witness in his own behalf, his counsel asked the witness whether he had any information which caused him to suspect the plaintiff of having appropriated his (defendant’s) money, and upon which he acted in procuring his arrest? The witness answered in the affirmative, and was then asked to state what the information was. The question was unobjectionable in form, but was, nevertheless, objected to by the plaintiff, and excluded by the referee. The point of the objection is not stated, nor does it appear on what ground the question was excluded. In this ruling the referee erred. It was competent for the defendant to prove what the circumstances were under which he caused the arrest. Such proof was competent as rebutting the averment of malice, and a want of probable cause. If the defendant had received information from an apparently reliable source of a character to induce a prudent, cautious man to believe that the plaintiff had been guilty of the offense for which he was arrested, he should have been allowed to state what the information was; not for the purpose of proving that the plaintiff was; in fact, guilty of the offense imputed, to him, but that the defendant, when he caused the arrest,
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.