This was an action on the ease for a malicious prosecution. The declaration, the sufficiency of which is called in question by the pleadings, contains but one count, and substantially avers that the defendant, maliciously intending to injure the plaintiff, &c., on the thirty-first day of August .1S48, in the county of Butler, falsely and maliciously, and without any reasonable or probable cause therefor whatever, charged the plaintiff with having (in connection with others) on the night of the.28th day of Avgust, A. D. 1848, unlawfully taken from the premises of said, defendant his, the said defendant’s, beloved daughter Sarah Ann, and that the said defendant had good reason to suspect that the said Sarah Ann was confined away from her parents, with intent to carry her out of the limits of this State, against.her will and consent, and upon such charge thus causelessly prefered, the defendant maliciously &c. caused the plaintiff to be arrested by his body and to be detained in custody before one Shagard, an acting justice of the peace, in that behalf duly qualified to hear and determine the cause &c., and then and there before said justice of the peace, falsely and maliciously and without any reasonable or probable cause, accused the said plaintiff of the said crime. The declaration then avers the issuance of the warrant by said justice at defendant’s instance, the arrest by an officer under it, and imprisonment twelve hours, his examination before such justice upon the charge alleged, upon which examination, it is alleged, “ there being no reasonable or probable cause against the said plaintiff he, the said plaintiff was then and there discharged by the said justice from such imprisonment, and out of custody from said charge: By means of which,” &c. &c.
The first objection taken to this declaration is that the charge made by the defendant before the justice against the plaintiff, as set forth in the count, does not constitute a criminal offence as known either to the statute or common law. It is unnecessary for us to go into an inquiry to ascertain whether the facts set out as constituting the charge made against the plaintiff
The second objection made to the count is that the declaration merely sets out the facts, but does not describe the offence by name for which the party was prosecuted, nor draw the legal
But.it is insisted that the declaration is defective. in not. showing that the prosecution is at an end; that the averment of. the plaintiff’s discharge before the magistrate is insufficient to. warrant this action,. It is certainly, necessary for.the-declaration to show that the-prosecution is ended, (1 Chit. PI. 679, ib. 133,). and if it merely show that the .prosecutor caused the plaintiff to be released and set at liberty, and that said prosecutor wholly abandoned said prosecution, this is not sufficient, as we held in Ragsdale v. Bowles,
It was certainly permissible for the plaintiff below to introduce evidence to disprove the allegations in the complaint made by the defendant belovv to the justice. Such proof would show the want of probable cause, and raise the presumption of malice. Upon this principle of law, we think it was permissible to prove the declarations of the daughter of the prosecutor made shortly before her alleged, abduction to Briggs, to be communicated to one of the parties jointly prosecuted for taking her off, showing her willingness to go. The bill of exceptions says they were made before her departure, and as it does not disclose how long before, upon the established rule for construing bills of exceptions most strongly against the party excepting, we are bound to fix the declarations at that time before her departure which would render them legitimate. Now, suppose that the daughter had requested Briggs to inform Leaird of her willingness to run away with him and to make certain preparations for the elopement; that at the time and in the manner agreed on, Leaird, in company with or aided by the other persons named in the prosecutor’s affidavit, had gone to the house of the prosecutor,
In respect to the charges given and those refused.by the court, it is only necessary to say that it is the duty of the court to expound the written testimony in the cause when requested so to do, (Br. Bank at Mobile v. Boykin,
The judgment, for this error, must be reversed and the cause remanded.
