107 Cal. 432 | Cal. | 1895
This is an action for malicious prosecution, the complaint alleging that defendants, maliciously and without probable cause, procured plaintiff to be arrested and prosecuted upon a charge of arson before a justice of the peace; and, as a second count, charging that defendants in like manner, maliciously and without probable cause, procured and induced the district attorney of Contra Costa county to bring the same charge before the grand jury of said county with a view and purpose of having plaintiff indicted for said offense.
Plaintiff had a verdict, and from the judgment entered thereon and an order denying their motion for a new trial defendants appeal.
A number of errors are assigned as grounds for reversal.
1. It is urged that the evidence is wholly insufficient to sustain the verdict in that: 1. It does not tend to show that the prosecution of the plaintiff, either before the committing magistrate or the grand jury, was by or at the instigation or procurement of defendants, or any of them; and 2. That it does not appear that the prosecution, by whomsoever instigated, was either malicious or without probable cause.
We will first consider the second ground upon which this contention rests, since the first can be more conveniently disposed of in connection with another point. It appears, without substantial conflict, in fact largely from the evidence adduced by plaintiff on his affirma
The estate of plaintiff’s deceased wife, of which plaintiff was the administrator, was the owner of two connecting houses in the town of Crockett, in Contra Costa county, a small village situate on the line of the railroad between Port Costa and Oakland, and about two miles distant from Port Costa, upon which there was insurance in the sum of seventeen hundred dollars in the defendant companies. On the night of Monday, May 25, 1891, between 9 and 10 o’clock, the insured property was destroyed by fire under circumstances strongly indicative that the fire was of incendiary origin. The buildings were, and had been for some time, vacant. The fire originated after dark on the inside of the houses, and, upon the arrival of persons who had observed the smoke, it was found that the outer doors were locked and the escaping smoke was laden with a strong odor of burning oil or “ dope.” The plaintiff was a carpenter, and for some little time had been working in Oakland, but his children still remained in Port Costa, and plaintiff was in the habit of coming up to see them Saturday evenings and returning to Oakland on Sunday. On this occasion he did not return Sunday, remaining, instead in Port Costa over Monday. He had been seen on the day before the fire by Mr. Cavanaugh, the next door neighbor, peering about the houses in what the latter considered a peculiar and suspicious manner; to such an extent, in fact, were the suspicions of Cavanaugh aroused that when the fire occurred, which also burned the residence of the latter, and the manner in which the fire started became known, he immediately suspected that plaintiff had set the houses on fire. About twenty minutes before the fire was discovered a witness living in Crockett, who was well acquainted with plaintiff, saw a man at the east end of the town, on the county road, walking pretty fast toward Port Costa, whom he took at the*435 time to be the plaintiff. Between 9:80 and 10 o’clock one Bartlett, living in Port Costa, whose wife had just called his attention to the fire, came out of his door and met plaintiff on the street in Port Costa. He told plaintiff of the fire and said: “ I am going right down there. That is your building; let us go right down.” Plaintiff answered that it was not much use hurrying. On the way over Bartlett hurried, but plaintiff lagged behind and did not go all the way to the burning houses, but left Bartlett at the foot of some stairs leading up the side of the hill at the east end of the town, and the latter did not see him again that night. Another witness saw plaintiff in a saloon in Port Costa the night of the fire. He appeared warm and excited, or scared, and was sweating. C. W. Rodgers, the sheriff of the county, asked plaintiff, two or three days after the fire, how it occurred. Plaintiff told him it started in some straw in an alleyway between the buildings. The sheriff asked him if he had any insurance, and he said “ about six or seven hundred dollars.” There was a matured and unpaid mortgage upon the property for some three hundred and fifty dollars, and a demand against the estate for some two hundred and sixty-five dollars borrowed by the wife of plaintiff in her lifetime. Besides these amounts plaintiff was owing money on his own account. The appraised value of the burned premises, as returned in the estate, was eighteen hundred dollars. There was nothing to indicate a motive on the part of any one other than plaintiff to burn the buildings; and, when the circumstances of the fire became known, not only the sheriff of the county, but a considerable number of the residents of Crockett and Port Costa, believed and expressed the opinion that plaintiff had fired the-buildings; and the prosecuting witness so believed when he swore to the complaint.
It further appeared that before the prosecution was commenced all the circumstances of the case were fully and fairly laid before the district attorney of the county; that the district attorney advised that it was a proper
No principle is better established than that in actions for malicious prosecution the plaintiff must, in order to recover, establish not only malice, but want of probable cause. These two elements are essential, and they must concur or the action will not lie. (Potter v. Seale, 8 Cal. 220; Anderson v. Coleman, 53 Cal. 188.) “ The primary question to be considered in this class of cases, as was said in Grant v. Moore, 29 Cal. 644, is the want of probable cause for the prosecution complained of, and this must be established before plaintiff can recover; and the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff.” (Jones v. Jones, 71 Cal. 91.) Reasonable or probable cause has been defined to be: “A suspicion founded upon circumstances sufficiently strong to warrant a reasonable man in the belief that the charge is true.” (Potter v. Seale, supra, and cases there cited.) In view of these principles, and applying them to the foregoing facts, we are at a loss to understand upon what theory the learned judge of the court below denied defendants' motion for a nonsuit. We cannot readily conceive of a state of facts better calculated to arouse in the mind of any reasonable man a strong suspicion of guilt than was furnished in this case. It cannot be doubted that if, upon these acts, the plaintiff had been tried and convicted of arson in the burning of the buildings destroyed, it would be impossible to say that there was not evidence to sustain such conviction. They not only disclose a case of probable cause, but, in our judgment, they wholly negative the idea of malice. (See Jones v. Jones, supra.) Upon such
2. The court admitted over defendants’ objection evidence as to the declarations of one McCarthy, a detective, to the effect that he was in the employment of defendants for the purpose of working up the case against plaintiff and having him prosecuted for burning the houses. This was clearly erroneous. No other evidence was offered by plaintiff, aside from these declarations, to establish McCarthy’s employment by, or agency for, defendants in the premises, and the very purpose of introducing such declarations would seem to have been to prove such agency. The declarations were inadmissible for such purpose. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to first establish the fact of agency before the declarations of the agent became admissible to bind his principal. (Grigsby v. Clear Lake Co., 40 Cal. 396; Savings & Loan Soc. v. Grichten, 64 Cal. 521.)
The defendants denied any responsibility for, or connection with, the prosecution of plaintiff, or that McCarthy was their agent or employee for any such purpose; and, inasmuch as the evidence of such declarations was the only evidence tending directly to connect defendants with the prosecution, its admission was prejudicial error.
3. The action of the court in giving certain instructions and refusing others requested is complained of. The questions involved in the instructions given and refused are covered by what has been said above on other features of the case, and wherein the court erred
4. The objection that the damages are excessive need not be considered at this time, as the question may not arise upon another trial.
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.