111 So. 200 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
While there are 27 assignments of error, many of these are not so insisted upon in brief as to meet the requirements of Supreme Court rule 10. Such assignments as are not briefed as required by this rule are waived, and in passing upon questions presented we shall follow those pointed out in brief in such way as to require decision.
Mistreatment, wrong, or abuse by an officer making an arrest is not matter of aggravation in a suit for malicious prosecution, unless participated in or ratified by the defendant. Marks v. Hastings,
Just why the court permitted the plaintiff to testify that he had been a witness *593 in a suit "Nixon had about a mule" is not apparent. The inquiry is not followed up and is disconnected, as it appears in the record. The answer could not affect the case one way or another.
This case grew out of a prosecution begun by a sister of plaintiff charging defendant with trespass. Plaintiff and his sister were in the joint possession of the premises claimed to have been trespassed upon and at which time it is claimed defendant, over the protest of both plaintiff and his sister, took and carried away a mule. On the trial of the trespass case plaintiff testified to certain facts, and, after the trial of defendant, defendant swore out a warrant charging that in the trial above alluded to defendant had probable cause for believing that plaintiff was guilty of perjury, in that he falsely swore that he (plaintiff) had forbidden defendant to take the mule. One of the material allegations of this complaint is malice. To prove this all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties at the time of the alleged trespass are relevant and admissible. That defendant was acquitted of the charge of trespass out of which grew the prosecution against plaintiff for perjury was immaterial and irrelevant.
Whether defendant held mortgage on the mule taken by him or on the land upon which he was charged with trespassing could not shed any light upon the inquiry here, which is, Was there probable cause for believing that plaintiff swore falsely in the trespass case when he testified that he (Frank Pierce) "forbid J. N. Nixon of taking possession of a certain mule." As was stated by the trial judge, these facts might have been perfectly good evidence in the trial of the trespass case, but here a different issue is presented.
There was evidence in the case that plaintiff employed a lawyer to defend him in the prosecution brought against him by defendant, and therefore the counsel for plaintiff was only stating a fact commonly known of all men when he said: "You know lawyers don't work for nothing." At least such is the belief by all laymen and such should be the rule.
The evidence of probable cause or the lack of malice would prevent a recovery in this case, but these are questions of fact and were properly submitted to the jury.
The foregoing follows and passes upon every question presented in brief of counsel. All other assignments of error are waived.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.