60 Tex. 438 | Tex. | 1883
It appears from the transcript in this cause that the term of the court at which it was determined ended on the 11th of June, 1881, and that the statement of facts found in the record was approved and filed on the 20th of that month. We find no order in the transcript permitting the statement to be made-up and filed after the adjournment of court for the term, and hence-this statement is improperly in the record and must be disregarded. Ross v. McGowen, 58 Tex., 603; McGuire v. Newbill, id., 314; Texas & Pacific R. R. Co. v. McAllister, 59 Tex., 349.
Without a statement of facts we can revise none of the errors, assigned -to the action of the court in giving or refusing charges to. the jury, nor those which attack the verdict as being against the law and evidence, or as finding excessive damages for the plaintiff. R. R. Co. v. McAllister and Ross v. McGowen, supra; Armstrong v. Lipscomb, 11 Tex., 649; Bast v. Alford, 22 Tex., 399; Birge v. Wanhop, 23 Tex., 441.
The onlyassignments of error, therefore, that claim our attention are the first, second and third, which relate to the ruling of the court below on the plea in abatement and the demurrers filed by appellants to the pleadings of the appellee.
The plea in abatement set up that the appellants (defendants below) were, at the institution of this suit, residents of the county of Galveston, and not of the county of Wood, where this suit was commenced. This plea was overruled and the defendants excepted, and make this action of the court the subject of their first assignment of error.
The pleading of the plaintiff ’below alleged, as the cause of action upon which the suit is founded, the injury which he received because of a false accusation made under oath against him before a justice of the peace in the county of Wood, by J. W., Raleigh, one of the
By our statute regulating the venue of suits, which governed at the time this action was commenced, it was provided that, where a defendant had committed some offense for which an action of damages would lie, suit might be instituted in the county where the offense was committed. Pasch. Dig., art. 1423.
The present offense is in the nature of a conspiracy, and it is a well settled principle of- criminal law that such an offense is deemed to have been committed where any overt act in pursuance of the unlawful combination is performed, by any one of the conspirators, or any other person at their instigation. In point of law the conspiracy is considered as renewed with every act done in carrying out the plan. 1 Bish. on Crim. Procedure, § 61; People v. Mather, 4 Wend., 229; Commonwealth v. Gillespie, 7 S. & R., 469, 478.
The first and principal overt act performed by the defendants was the making of the affidavit before the justice of the peace in Wood
It may be further remarked, that such pleas should exclude all such supposable matter as would, if alleged on the opposite side, defeat the plea. Stark v. Whitman, 58 Tex., 375, and authorities cited. The plea in this case did not negative the allegation that the defendants had committed an offense in Wood county, and for this reason also was properly overruled.
The second assignment of error is not well taken. It has been frequently held by this court that an amendment seeking a different or an enlarged relief does not set up a new cause of action. Much less does a prayer for a greater amount of damages, when the injury for which they are claimed is the same previously declared on. Chapman v. Sneed, 17 Tex., 428; Pridgin v. Strickland, 8 Tex., 427; Porterfield v. Taylor, decided at present term (ante, 264).
Neither can the third assignment prevail. The fact that the magistrate, upon the original complaint, and the district judge, upon the writ of habeas corpus, held the plaintiff to bail and refused to discharge him, and the grand jury indicted him for the offense with which he was charged by the defendants, were not in themselves conclusive evidence of probable cause. His subsequent acquittal by a petty jury, taken in connection with the other facts alleged in the petition, rebutted any inference of probable cause to be drawn from the circumstances mentioned. It i's not so much the intermediate action of the courts upon the charge, when there is a final decision of it in favor of the accused, as the motives, grounds, facts and evidence upon which the prosecutor proceeded in making it, that determines the two principal questions of malice and want of probable cause in a suit for malicious prosecution. Townshend on Slander, § 428 et seq.; Griffin v. Chubb, 7 Tex., 603.
We find no error in the judgment in the state of the record as presented to this court for which the judgment should be reversed, and it is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered November 23, 1883.]
Labatt & Noble, Horace Chilton and Albert N. Mills, for appellant, filed motion for rehearing, which was overruled.