8 Ga. App. 772 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
According to the evidence of the plaintiffs, it is clear that they were damaged by the issuance of the injunction, and the only question is whether the Gress Manufacturing Company can be held liable for these damages, or, in other words, whether, conceding that the jury would have been authorized to act upon the evidence introduced by the plaintiffs as representing the truth of the transaction, the Gress Manufacturing Company is liable for these damages. We think the plaintiffs made a prima facie case, which, in the absence of evidence on the part of the defendant, would have authorized a recovery, and that therefore the judge erred in withdrawing the case from the jury. As we have frequently held, a motion for a nonsuit is merely a demurrer to the sufficiency of the evidence to prove the plaintiff’s case as laid, and a nonsuit should never be granted except where it plainly appears that there is no view ot the evidence in which-a recovery by the plaintiff would be authorized. We think the evidence in this case was sufficient to authorize the jury to infer that the injunction was prosecuted without any probable cause; and, of course, malice may be inferred from the total absence of probable cause. The essential ingredients of an action for the malicious use of civil process are the same as those in the case of a malicious criminal prosecution. It must appear that the action was prosecuted maliciously and without probable cause. The fact that the action was prosecuted maliciously would not raise an inference that there was not probable cause, but the total want of probable cause would supply circumstantial evidence of the malice required by law.
In the present ease the evidence for the plaintiffs is sufficient to support the conclusion that there was no reason why the Gress Manufacturing Company should have sought an injunction against them, unless some ulterior object was in view, by means of which it hoped to gain an unfair advantage over them. It appears, from the evidence for the plaintiffs, that they wished to purchase from Bell certain timber, on which the Gress Manufacturing Company held a mortgage. They employed an attorney and sent him to Tifton and arranged with the Gress Manufacturing Company to
Judgment reversed.