Civil action for malicious prosecution.
On 3 September, 1935, a hearing was had before a justice of the peace on a warrant sworn out by an officer of the defendant company, charging the plaintiff with obtaining goods from the defendant under false pretense, and plaintiff was bound over to the Superior Court. Thereafter, the grand jury returned "not a true bill," and the solicitor took a nolle prosequi.
Plaintiff sues for malicious prosecution.
From verdict and judgment awarding both actual and punitive damages, the defendant appeals, assigning errors. The following excerpt, taken from the charge, forms the basis of one of defendant's exceptive assignments of error:
"Now, under this issue, if you shall find that it was done without probable cause, the law implies that it was done with implied malice — a wrongful act done without legal justification."
This instruction is not supported by the decisions on the subject.
It is true that malice, in the sense the term is used in actions for malicious prosecution, may be inferred from want of probable cause, but it is not presumed from such fact alone. Johnson v. Chambers,
Speaking to the identical question, in Bell v. Pearcy,
Again, in Turnage v. Austin,
And in McGowan v. McGowan,
The kind of malice required to support a verdict for actual as well as punitive damages in actions for malicious prosecution was the subject of extensive investigation in Downing v. Stone,
In Brown v. Martin,
The nolle prosequi taken by the solicitor was sufficient legal termination of the prosecution to support an action for malicious prosecution based thereon. Abernethy v. Burns, ante, 636; Dickerson v.Refining Co., supra; Winkler v. Blowing Rock Lines,
For error in the charge as indicated, the defendant is entitled to a new trial. It is so ordered.
New trial.