123 Minn. 204 | Minn. | 1913
Appeal by defendants from an order denying their alternative motions after verdict for plaintiff, in an action to recover damages for malicious prosecution.
The trial court so charged, and the sole questions for our consideration on this branch of the case are, therefore, whether the evidence justified the submission of the case upon this issue, and also upon that of malice, which, in a proper case, may be inferred from want of probable cause. Nelson v. International Harvester Co. 117 Minn. 298, 304, 135 N W. 808; Hanowitz v. Great Northern Ry. Co. supra. It may thus be defined:
“Whatever is done wilfully and purposely, if it be at the same time wrong and unlawful, and that known to the party, is in legal*206 contemplation malicious. That which is done contrary to one’s; own conviction of duty, or with a wilful disregard of the rights of others, whether it be to compass some unlawful end, or some lawful, end by unlawful means, or, in the language of the charge, to do a. wrong and unlawful act knowing it to be such, constitutes legal malice.” Wills v. Noyes, 12 Pick. 324, 328.
While the testimony was conflicting, the jury might well have-found as follows: Prior to September 15, 1910, defendant company-owned certain premises in Dakota county, known as Antler’s Park,, and in particular a tract of 36 acres therein, used for farming purposes and containing farm buildings. This land had been occupied! by a tenant of the company from April 15, 1909, up to the date-last mentioned, and during such period considerable manure had accumulated from stock stabled thereon by the tenant. Shortly prior to the criminal prosecution complained of, plaintiff, a farmer owning a farm in the vicinity, obtained from the tenant permission to, and did, himself and by his servants, remove considerable thereof' from the premises. Defendant Mason, who at this time had charge-of the land for the purpose of sale, exercising over the same in this, connection a general control and supervision, and acting in the interest of his eodefendant and for no purpose personal to himself, twice-notified plaintiff’s employees not to do so, but had no conversation with plaintiff, whom he did not personally know and assumed to-be one of the persons so notified. Plaintiff’s employees, however,, continued, asserting to Mason that defendant company’s tenant had-authorized such removal; whereupon he, having for the third time-seen them so engaged, and after consulting with the company’s attorney and a justice of the peace, made complaint in writing before-the justice charging plaintiff with larceny in the first degree of the-company’s manure, his purpose in so doing being to stop plaintiff’ from hauling it, and advised the justice, at the time he made complaint, about 3 p. m., that he wanted a warrant served that night and plaintiff required to give bond or be incarcerated. After examination before the justice, plaintiff was discharged.
Applying the rules stated to this situation, we find no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that, as to defendant Mason, want of
3. It is claimed by defendant company that it cannot be held liable. Summarizing the evidence on this point, it appears that in prosecuting plaintiff Mason was not acting in any personal or private capacity, but assumed to act for the company’s interest and in the furtherance of its business in a matter over which he had general supervision; that the company’s attorney was advised of his con
Order affirmed.