Lead Opinion
During the night of April 21, 1920, a residence and barn owned by the appellant, Reed, were destroyed by fire. On the next day, April 22, 1920, appellant filed a complaint before Henry M. Burns, justice of the peace for precinct No. 7 of Montague county, charging appellee, Tom Lindley, with the burning. A warrant was issued upon the complaint, under which Lindley was arrested in Foard county and brought to Montague county, and at an examining trial had upon said charge on April 27, 1920, Lindley was discharged, and has not since been indicted. Lindley brought this suit against W. L. Reed in the district court of Montague county for malicious prosecution and slander, seeking to recover actual and exemplary damages. At a trial had on the 3d day of February, 1921, Lindley recovered judgment for $800 actual damages, and this appeal is from that judgment.
The evidence, briefly stated, in substance furnishes but little, if any, reason to doubt that the fire was incendiary in its origin. It further appears that on the 17th day of March preceding the fire Lindley, who had theretofore married Gertrude Reed, daughter of appellant, W. L. Reed, deserted her and their two children without cause. Prior to 1920 Lindley and family lived on farms belonging to Mr. Reed, but at the time he abandoned his wife and children he was living on a rented place in Montague county not belonging to Reed. Will Benson, one of the witnesses for the defendant, testified that Lindley said that the reason for his moving down there was that the “old man” (Reed) had promised them a place, and he had moved to the rented place for “aggravation.” After said abandonment, and prior to the fire, appellee’s wife, Gertrude, procured a divorce from appellee on the ground of having been falsely accused by her husband of a want of marital fidelity, and she testified on the trial that before appellee had abandoned his family he frequently expressed animosity against her father, and made threats of serious injury against him, and that these threats had been communicated to her father after the abandonment, but before the fire. Mrs. Lindley testified that at the time appellee abandoned her and their two infant children, aged two and three years, respectively, he carried with him his clothes, including two pair of work shoes; that the right heel of his work shoe was run down, and would show in his tracks.
Appellee in his accusation of his wife’s infidelity named no person, nor does it appear that he made any answer to her suit for divorce.
On April 14, 1920, Lindley, at Foard City, Foard county, wrote and mailed the following letter addressed to “Master J. B. Lind-ley, Star Route, Montague, Texas, % Reed”;
“Foard City, Texas, 4 — 14—20.
“Little J. B. Lindley — Dear, Dear Little Fellow: Papa is now fixing to take a hike some place across the other side. I hope you will some day grow to be a man. Always live single. Papa has studied over the way your mother has gone until he is almost crazy. Now, son, my dear little boy, papa hates to leave you to battle in the world, though papa is a man of virtue. Papa loved mama until she went wrong. Papa still loves you, and. papa will die that way. Now, son, papa in a few days will take this hike, and then papa will cross over the river. Papa has just got back from Wichita. Grandma don’t know what I am here for and never will. Papa will have revenge if it takes half of Montague and Belcher. Papa is.fixed now for a big Bear for the edges of hell. Good-bye, son. Papa.
“Papa hears about you every day or so.”
The testimony indicates that the appellant was unable to read writing, and that the letter was delivered to him and thereafter read to him by Mrs. Reed, his wife. The little boy to whom the letter was addressed was unable to read or write. The letter caused much uneasiness in the mind of Mr. Reed, and he went to the county attorney and tried to have Lindley put under a peace bond, but he was informed this could not be done. While on the stand Lindley admitted that he wrote and mailed the above letter, and directed it to Reed because he did not know where little J. B. was; that he did not know whether little J. B. could read or write. He denied that in writing the letter he desired to scare old man Reed, testifying that he did not have in mind Reed when he said he would have revenge if it took half of Montague and Belcher, but that he was going to have revenge on another party, but he did not name such other party; that he did not remember what river he was going to cross, but it was not Red river; that he had not been to Wichita Falls and did not know why he put that in the letter.
Mrs. Ruby Reed, appellant’s widowed daughter-in-law, testified that she passed through Nocona on the 18th of April, 1920, together with two of her cousins and two of her children; that as she passed through No-cona she saw Tom Lindley sitting on some trucks at the depot, and that she so informed appellant, Reed, on the following Monday, before the fire. Upon being informed of the *350 fire, appellant called up the sheriff, and told him that he believed that appellee, Lindley, was the person who burned his house and barn, and requested the sheriff to come over at once so that they might catch him. The sheriff, however, did not go until about 10 or 11 o’clock the next morning. Appellant then went to Nocona and saw the constable or city marshal,- and endeavored to get that officer to take the train going in the direction of Wichita Falls and Foard City to see if Lindley was on it, but the officer said he did not know Lindley, and suggested that appellant himself take the train. He did go, and, together with the conductor and one of the trainmen, went through the train and inspected all parts in the effort to discover Lindley, as he expected he would do, but in which he failed. Appellant then returned to his home, and upon .further investigation found tracks made by a No. 5 or 6 size shoe, the size worn by appellee, with a run-down heel, going toward and returning from the burned house and barn.
One R. B. Price also testified to the effect that after the fire he had occasion to go, and did go, to Foard City, where he met appellee, and.that in a' conversation there had appellee stated that:
“I knew it (the house) was going to be burned * * * but I didn’t bum it. He said they identified the shoe tracks. That he left his shoes there, and that the man who burned the house wore them.”
Appellee, by a number of witnesses living at Foard City, seemed to establish with reasonable certainty that he was in Foard City during the day preceding, and during the night of the fire, and on the following morning, and hence that he could not have been at the scene of the fire, and, further that appellant had been so informed before the service of the warrant of arrest, but notwithstanding that appellant insisted upon its execution. He also introduced a number of witnesses who testified to the effect that they knew his reputation while living in Montague county, and that it was good as a peaceable, law-abiding citizen. Such other parts of the testimony as are deemed material will-be stated in connection with the topics discussed.
The court charged the jury that before they could find for the plaintiff he must show by a preponderance of the evidence: First, that the defendant, Reed, in instituting the prosecution against the plaintiff in the justice court, “was instigated by malice, and, that he acted in said matter without probable cause for believing the plaintiff, Tom Lind-ley, guilty of the charge preferred against him;” second, “that the alleged charge of arson made by defendant against plaintiff was not true;” third, “that the plaintiff has been damaged by reason of said prosecution.”
Probable cause and malice were defined, and the court, in the eighth paragraph of his charge, gave the following instruction, to which error is assigned in this court, to wit:
“It is immaterial in this case whether the plaintiff was guilty or innocent of the charge of arson. If you believe plaintiff innocent of the crime, but believe that defendant had reasonable grounds of suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to warrant a cautious man in the belief that the plaintiff was guilty of the offense, then you will find for the defendant.”
Error is also assigned to the refusal of the court to give a special instruction to the effect that, if the jury believed from the evidence that the plaintiff, Lindley sought to be prosecuted in order to have a pretext for a damage suit, and that in furtherance thereof' he wrote threatening letters and made threats against the defendant, and did other things thereby intending to engender in defendant’s mind the belief that he (plaintiff) had burned the defendant’s house and barn, that then they should find for defendant.
*351
“Malice as used in law and in this charge does not mean personal spite or ill will, and the allegations that an act was maliciously done does not mean that it was done for that reason, or in such spirit, but it does mean an unlawful act, done in reckless disregard of the rights of another and in a spirit of indifference as to whether such other party is injured or not; when an act is done in that spirit and with such malice it is said in law to be done maliciously, or upon legal malice.”
As worded, we think the charge misleading. What the able judge had in mind doubtless was that malice did not necessarily mean spite or ill will, but, as worded, the jury were liable to receive the impression that personal spite or ill will was to be wholly disregarded in considering whether the defendant had been actuated by malice in instituting the prosecution. This view is erroneous. Personal spite or ill will, if any, when proven, is relevant to that issue, and proper for the consideration of a jury in determining whether or not malice existed. If it did exist, and was the motive for the prosecution, and is found to have been coupled with a want of probable cause for the prosecution, it is sufficient. Malice also may be inferred from a wrongful act done in reckless disregard of the rights of another, and in a spirit of indifference as to whether such other party is injured or not, even though there be no personal spite or ill will, in either ease it being for the determination of the jury whether malice in fact existed. See IS R. O. L. p. 2S, § 16 et seq. The defendant’s uncomplimentary expressions to the officer before whom he made the complaint and to others relating to the plaintiff was therefore relevant to and admissible upon the issue of malice, to be considered by the jury for the purpose of determining whether they were the natural results of a feeling of outrage or whether they indicated that spirit of malevolence and evil purpose contemplated by the term malice as used in the legal- definition of that term.
“The action for malicious prosecution is not favored in law, and hence has been hedged about by limitations more stringent than those in the case of almost any other act causing damage to another and the courts have allowed recovery only when the requirements limiting it have been fully complied with. The disfavor with which the action is looked upon is especially marked in cases where the suit is being brought for the institution of criminal proceedings against the plaintiff, as public policy favors the exposure of crime, which a recovery against a prosecutor obviously tends to discourage.”
Numerous authorities are cited in a note to the quotation made, and we think the soundness of the observations made in the quotation will be accepted without further discussion. It is to be noted that by all of the authorities a want of probable cause for the institution of the prosecution must be proven, and the court in this case clearly so charged the jury. See numerous Texas cases cited in 12 Encyclopedic Digest of Texas Reports, p. 59, col. 2.
In a note to the case of Michael v. Matson,
“The general rule of the common law, sustained by the overwhelming weight of authority, both in England and America, is that what facts, and whether particular facts, constitute probable cause, is always a question of law, which the judge must decide upon the facts found to exist in the particular case, and which it is error for him to submit to the decision of the jury.”
For the reasons stated, we conclude that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded.
<@=»For other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
Concurrence Opinion
concur in the reversal and remanding of this cause, without concurring in certain of the statements contained in the opinion.
