163 P. 300 | Idaho | 1917
This is an action to recover damages for an alleged malieious prosecution. The material facts out of which this litigation arose, briefly stated, are as follows; several years prior to the commencement of this action the Murphy Land & Irrigation Company, Limited (which will hereafter be referredOto as the “Water Company”), con
The respondent in this action was in charge of the Joyce ranch, which was among the other claimants above mentioned. Neitzel at the time of the controversy was, and had been for some time prior thereto, the secretary and treasurer of the Water Company, and was also general manager of the dam and reservoir. An employee of the Water Company, Martin M. Welch, was in immediate charge of the dam and reservoir and controlled the various headgates and canals.
A dispute arose between respondent and Welch in regard to the amount of water that was being released by the Water Company under its agreement. The respondent contending that something over 600 miner’s inches was running into the reservoir and that no such quantity was being permitted to flow out of the reservoir into the creek below. And he thereupon took possession of the dam and turned a considerable quantity of water into the creek, so that it would proceed to the Joyce ranch. There is a decided conflict in the evidence as to whether or not Welch objected to respondent’s conduct in increasing the flow of water into the creek. However, there is no conflict in the evidence that later Welch readjusted the gate and placed a chain and padlock upon it, which the respondent, after a more or less serious controversy with Welch, broke with an iron bar, raised the gates and permitted a large quantity of water to escape from the reser
After Neitzel stated these facts, communicated to him by Welch, to the county attorney of Owyhee county, the latter informed him that it would be necessary to determine whether or not a criminal action wo aid lie, and for that purpose he desired time to look into the question. Shortly thereafter he telephoned Neitzel and informed him in effect that the respondent was guilty of an indictable misdemeanor. It was thereupon arranged by Neitzel and the county attorney that a criminal complaint be sworn to by the county attorney, which was done, and a warrant was thereupon issued out of the probate court and later served upon the respondent, who subsequent thereto appeared in said court, where at the date fixed a preliminary examination was held, at which time the depositions of the witnesses offered on behalf of the state were taken. The probate court, sitting as a committing magistrate, after hearing all the testimony offered by the state, discharged the respondent. Thereafter this action was brought in the district court of the third judicial district for Owyhee county, to recover damages for a malicious prosecution, which resulted in a verdict in favor of respondent.
Neitzel, however, offered no testimony but at the conclusion of respondent’s case made a motion for a nonsuit upon numerous grounds, which motion was overruled and the case submitted to the jury, a verdict was rendered in favor of respondent and judgment entered thereon. This is an appeal from the judgment thus entered.
It is urged that the court erred in denying Neitzel’s motion for a nonsuit. Under this assignment of error we think may be properly determined whether in this action the respondent here, the plaintiff below, affirmatively shows that there was a want of probable cause, in the absence of which, malice being present, this action may be maintained. (Crescent City Livestock etc. Co. v. Butchers’ Union, etc. Co., 120 U. S. 141, 7 Sup. Ct. 472, 30 L. ed. 614; Harkrader v. Moore, 44 Cal. 144;
If we understand counsel’s contention correctly, they insist that the respondent was charged in the probate court with the infringement of the provisions of the second paragraph of see. 7146, Rev. Codes, or, in other words, that the respondent was charged with “disturbing” a headgate, which was “regulated by the duly authorized agent of the Murphy Land & Irrigation Company, Limited, .... and used and to be used for the measurement of water. ’ ’ Of the commission of this offense he was, by the committing magistrate, discharged, which being true, there existed prima facie evidence of want of probable cause. The fact that the respondent was discharged by the committing magistrate, however, is not conclusive so far as the question of probable cause is concerned — that is to say, if it appears affirmatively from the facts introduced upon the trial that he was in truth and in fact guilty of an indictable misdemeanor, although under a different statute, even though Neitzel acted with malice, still there would not be an absence of probable cause. The fact that the respondent was not charged under the proper statute with the commission of a criminal offense would furnish no evidence of bad faith in Neitzel if he believed, and had reason to believe, the respondent guilty of a crime, and such belief was based upon personal knowledge, or information received from others upon which he honestly and in good faith relied.
Probable cause has been defined as “the existence of such facts or circumstances as would excite the belief of a reasonable mind, acting on the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that the person charged was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted.” It must be conceded that the proof conclusively shows that Welch communicated with Neitzel over the telephone, and informed him of the fact that the respondent went upon the dam, broke the lock, interfered with the headgate, and discharged a large flow of the water out of the reservoir into Sinker Creek, and was holding possession of the works. We think the record clearly shows Neitzel to have been in possession of knowledge of the exist
An examination of the record discloses the fact that the respondent, in relating the incidents of the dispute between himself and Welch, testified that he went upon the dam and' found the headgate locked with a padlock and that he broke the lock with a big iron bar; this testimony is as follows:
“Q. How did you break that lock? What did you use?
“A. A big bar of iron, put it inside the chain and lock and pried it open.
“Q. A padlock?
“A. Yes, a padlock and chain around the standard of the wheel, I broke that and opened the headgate and let the water down the creek.....”
The query therefore arises: Did the respondent by breaking the lock of the headgate commit a crime? As the case stood at the time the motion for a nonsuit was made, it had been clearly established by the undisputed facts in evidence on the part of the respondent, that the headgate, which had been damaged and interfered with by the respondent, was appurtenant to the dam used by the Water Company for the purpose of storing water and distributing the same to the water users under its canal system, for a beneficial use. Clearly, the act of the respondent in breaking the padlock and interfering with the headgate was a violation of sec. 7145, Rev. Codes, which provides: “Any person or persons who shall cut, break, damage, or in any way interfere with any ditch, canal, headgate, or any other works in or appurtenant thereto, the property of another person, corporation, or association of persons, and whereby water is conducted to any place for beneficial use or purposes, and when said canal, headgate, ditch, dam, or appurtenances are being used or are to be used for said conduct of water, shall be guilty of an indictable misdemeanor, ’ ’ Not only did Neitzel have reason to believe that the respondent had committed a misdemeanor, but a misde
“A party who stands before a jury in such a case as this, on pure technical law, for a defense against an act of moral turpitude, and claiming a discharge because his prosecutor has not pursued a statutory mode of proof to convict him of a crime punishable by the statute, may congratulate himself that the precautions of the law have availed him to escape its merited penalty; but he certainly ought not to have, in addition to this immunity, a right to claim a small fortune from his victim for having mistaken the remedy, or not been as well versed as himself in the technicalities which sometimes shield guilt from public justice.”
See, also, McNulty v. Walker, 64 Miss. 198, 1 So. 55; Ruffner v. Hooks, 2 Pa. Super. Ct. 278; Lancaster v. McKay, 103 Ky. 616, 45 S. W. 887; Newton v. Weaver, 13 R. I. 616.
There are numerous errors assigned by appellant other than the one herein discussed, which we think are in the main meritorious, but in view of the fact that it is so patent from
The action of the district court in denying Neitzel’s motion for nonsuit is reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to the trial court to sustain the motion and dismiss the case. Costs awarded appellant.