Opinion by
Plaintiff brought an action against defendant for false arrest and malicious prosecution. The jury rendered a verdict in his favor and this appeal is from the judgment entered thereon. The errors assigned are the disaffirming of a point for binding instructions and the refusal to enter judgment for defendant non obstante, veredicto. Therefore all the evidence and inferences therefrom favorable to plaintiff must be taken as true and all unfavorable to him must be rejected. Viewed in this light, the testimony warrants the following statement of faсts: In June, 1919, at about 6:30 a. m. plaintiff was waiting to become a passenger on a car of defendant at Fortieth and Market streets, Philadelphia. At that time and place there were many persons waiting to enter the cars of defendant to go to their place of employment. De
• In determining such a question each case must stand on its own facts and frequently the question will be one of serious difficulty and doubt. A principal may be held liable for the act of his agent in instituting a malicious prosecution, but the inference of authority to arrest or prosecute does not arise from the mere fact of agency: Markley v. Snow,
In Canon, Appellant v. Sharon & Wheatland St. Ry. Co.,
In Markley v. Snow,
In Duggan, Appellant, v. B. & O. R. R.,
• In Rohrback v. Penna. R. R. Co.,
The case before us, up to the point of the prosecution following the arrest, is on principle strikingly similar to the McFarlan case, because up to that time the defendant’s employee was acting in the performance of his duties. Plaintiff was an intending passenger in the act of entering the car. He was within the authority and control of the starter in the course of his employment, which was to oversee the loading of the cars and enforce the regulations regarding the same. It was the company’s duty to protect a passenger against the assaults of its servants while engaged in their assigned and appropriate duties. The act of the starter in pulling plaintiff from the car resulted from plaintiff’s act in stepрing out of the line of intending passengers and passing out of turn onto the car. For any undue violence inflicted by the starter under such circumstances, defendant would be liable. The starter’s act was done in attempting to perform the service which the master had em
The judgment here is upon a verdict for damages resulting both from the arrest and the malicious.prosecution. For the reasons herein set forth, defendant is not liable for any damages which may have been awarded for any injury which flowed from the malicious prosecution. The error can be reached by the second assignment based on the refusal of judgment n. o. v. j in such case a new trial may be ordered in appropriate cases on appeal: Northern Tr. Co., Exr., v. Huber,
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
