In this case, upon motion of the defendant, the District Court ordered the plaintiff, within a certain time designated
The petition alleges in substance that on the 31st day of May, 1899, the defendant in error, maliciously intending to injure the plaintiff, etc., and -without any probable cause, charged the plaintiff, before a Justice of the Peace of Laramie County, with having feloniously compounded a felony, to-wit: The felony of obtaining money under false pretenses, charged to have been committed by one James Raff and one Clifford Lang; and procured said justice to grant a warrant for plaintiff’s arrest upon said charge; that a warrant was issued accordingly, and thereupon plaintiff was arrested and held in the custody of the sheriff for two hours; that he demanded an immediate hearing, which was denied him by the justice, acting under the advice and suggestion of defendant, and a hearing was set for the 9th day of August, 1899; and thereupon, to obtain his liberty, plaintiff was obliged to give and did give bail for his appearance. It is then alleged that on the 3d day of August the defendant procured the discharge of plaintiff upon said charge of having compounded a felony, and the proceeding thereon had wholly terminated.
Then follows several other allegations, which may be briefly summarized as follows: That when the charge aforesaid was preferred against plaintiff criminal complaints were pending before said justice against the said Raff and Lang for the crime of obtaining money under false pretenses, to establish which plaintiff’s testimony was necessary; that on the 3d day of August the preliminary hearing on those com
Counsel for plaintiff in error contends that but one cause of action is set out, viz.: malicious prosecution; and that the allegations concerning plaintiff’s subsequent imprisonment for contempt, and the consequent damage to him are incorporated merely to show special damages growing out of the charge of compounding a felony, which, it is alleged, defendant maliciously preferred against him.
We cannot agree with that view. Whatever may have
If the defendant is liable in damages for the imprisonment of plaintiff for contempt upon his refusal to testify on the hearing of Raff and Lang, such liability is not in consequence of the complaint against plaintiff and his arrest on the charge of having compounded the felony.
It follows that the allegations respecting the later imprisonment and discharge of plaintiff have no place in the petition except as part of a separate cause of action. Counsel for plaintiff in error argues that from the paragraph of the petition introducing the matter of the hearing of Raff and Lang and the refusal of the plaintiff to testify, to the conclusion of the allegations respecting his imprisonment for such refusal and his subsequent discharge, a good cause of action is not well pleaded; and that it would require a restatement of some of the preceding allegations to make a good second cause of action. But it is not a sufficient answer to a motion for separate statement and numbering that one or more of the causes of action embraced in the petition are not well or perfectly pleaded. (Thompson v. Gatlin, 58 Fed., 534.) There is, moreover, this. substantial error in counsel’s argument : The allegations referred to as contained in the latter part of the petition do not in the present condition of the pleading stand alone. It is sought to recover damages from
We think it clear that the petition embraces more than one cause of action, and the court did not err in ordering their separate statement, nor in dismissing the case for a failure to comply with the order. (Thompson v. Gatlin, supra; Eisenhouer v. Stein, 37 Kan., 281.)
The jüdgment will be affirmed.
