35 Fla. 58 | Fla. | 1895
The case in the court below was a suit for malicious prosecution. The appellee was the plaintiff, and the appellant was the defendant. This case has been before this court before (18 Fla. 328), where the declaration is set out it full. On the trial plaintiff recovered judgment, from which the defendant appealed.
The only assignments of error that are argued by the counsel for the appellant relate to instructions given by the judge to the jury, and to his refusal to give other instructions which were requested by the appellant. In accordance with our rule we consider only the assignments which are argued. One of the instructions given by the Circuit Judge was as follows: “Both the questions of probable cause and malice, as well as the questions of the prosecution by the defendant and its termination in acquittal or discharge of the plaintiff, are questions for the jnry to determine and find from the evidence.” The objection urged against this in.struction is, that the question of probable cause is one of law, or sometimes a mixed one of law and fact, but never a question of fact alone. It is contended that the Circuit Court, by this instruction, declared that probable cause was a question of fact for the jury to determine, or has constitutued the jury the judges of the law as well as the triers of the facts in the case. If this charge had stood alone, and was considered upon its individual merits without reference to other portions of the charge of the court, it would undoubtedly be obnoxious to the objection made, and erroneous. It would be a practical direction to the jury to find the facts in the case, make their own definition of probable cause, and thus determine the facts and legal effect. We have been unable to find any authority which holds that
The defendant asked the court to charge the jury as follows: “That where a party before commencing suit or making a complaint takes competent legal advice on a full, complete and correct statement of the material facts known to him, or that he had reason to believe existed, and acted honestly upon it, believing he had a cause of action, it is a defense to an action of malicious prosecution.” We do not think the refusal of the court to give this instruction was error, for the principal reason, that there was no evidence to which it was applicable. The malicious prosecution complained of was one for perjury. The perjury was alleged to have been made in making final proof to perfect the homestead entry of public lands of the United States. At the time of making a statement to counsel, Lewton, the defendant, had never seen the deposition supposed to have been made by Hower, the plaintiff. It does not appear that he had any information as to the contents of such depositions. He simply knew and only informed his counsel that he had been informed, that final proof had been made by Hower. His counsel in turn informed him that in order to make such final proof certain matters must be sworn to, as to residence, cultivation and non-alienation of the homestead land. Then Lewton comes to the conclusion that if such things were sworn to, that they were false. No effort whatever was made to see or to get a copy of the deposition, which was on file in the public land offices of the United States. No facts at all as to what was contained in the deposition was stated to the counsel. The bare fact of formation that final proof had been made, was all that was stated by Lewton. From this statement the coun
The next alleged error argued is that the court below erred in refusing to instruct the jury upon request of defendant as follows: “The action of the U. S. Commissioner in finding sufficient cause from the evidence introduced before and considered by him as sufficient to bind the then defendant over to appear at the trial: court, to that extent contradicts the charge of malice-in the prosecution in preferring the charge, unless it is shown that he used illegal practices to procure testimony, or to influence the Commissioner in his action in that cause.” The charge requested was not strictly correct, and it was not error to refuse it. Two elements are necessary to sustain a suit for malicious prosecution: (1) malice in the prosecutor, and (2) a want of probable cause for the prosecution. The fact that-
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.