65 A. 829 | N.H. | 1907
One count charges the defendants with malicious prosecution in instituting and carrying on a proceeding in the lodge, of which all the parties are members, for the expulsion of the plaintiff. In order to sustain an action of this character, it is necessary for the plaintiff to show that the defendants instituted the prosecution against him, without having probable cause to believe he was guilty of the offence charged. Cohn v. Saidel,
The other count, upon which the plaintiff bases his right to recover, alleges a conspiracy on the part of the defendants in carrying on a prosecution against him in the lodge for his expulsion, without having probable cause to believe he was guilty. The charge alleged against him was the threatening language referred to in the other count; and for the reason above suggested, the defendants, even though they may have confederated together to bring about the plaintiff's expulsion from the lodge, are not liable for a conspiracy, since they had probable cause to believe he was guilty. In such a case it is unimportant how bitter and hostile the defendants' personal feelings were against the plaintiff, or how persistent they were in conspiring to cause his expulsion. 1 Cool. Torts (3d ed.) 210.
If this count may also be construed to include a conspiracy to induce the lodge to wrongfully take jurisdiction of the complaint and to vote for the plaintiff's expulsion, little doubt can be entertained upon the evidence that the lodge had jurisdiction. Upon the filing of the complaint, in accordance with the by-laws, alleging a violation by the plaintiff of a regulation of the order intended to promote friendly relations among the members, the lodge possessed the power to determine in the first instance the matter in issue, and to expel the respondent if found guilty. It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff's contention reduces itself to the proposition that the defendants, acting as officers of the lodge and charged with the duty of trying the plaintiff upon the complaint regularly filed against him, are liable in this action because they were prejudiced against him and proceeded in an irregular manner. But it is a sufficient answer to this position to say that they were judicial officers in the performance of that duty, and as such are not responsible in damages for their acts in that respect. To hold otherwise would be to violate fundamental principles relating to the administration of justice and the due and orderly settlement of private contentions. *143
The acts of Flack and Clement, as officers of the lodge, in appointing the committee, and the committee's acts in investigating the charge against the plaintiff, though irregular and reprehensible in many respects, were essentially judicial acts (Niblack Ben. Soc., s. 55), authorized by the contract of membership. Moreover, the plaintiff was duly notified of the hearing, was present, and did not object to any of the proceedings of which he now complains. His contract of membership, and his acquiescence in and practical submission to the tribunal as constituted, amounted to a waiver of any valid objection he might have had to the committee as a judicial board. Sperry's Appeal, 116 Pa. St. 391, 397; Pitcher v. Board of Trade,
The ruling of the court directing a nonsuit was correct.
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *144