103 Ga. 193 | Ga. | 1897
The plaintiff in error brought his action against the defendant to recover damages, alleging in his petition, among others, the following facts, on which he relied for a recovery : On October 20, 1896, the defendant swore out before Wm. B. Moore, N. P. & Ex. Off. J. P., a warrant charging pe-. titioner with the offense of perjury. He was not guilty of said offense, and the charge was untrue. There was no probable.
A right of action is given by our code only for “a criminal prosecution maliciously carried on.” Civil Code, § 3843. Not where the criminal law has been put in force, nor where a proceeding has been instituted, but only when a criminal prosecution has been “carried on”; that is, where by the act of the defendant something more than putting the law in motion, or the institution of a criminal proceeding, has been done. It. must be a prosecution carried on, as the antithesis of a prosecution instituted. But our code goes still further. It fixes and declares what kind of a prosecution is sufficient to sustain the action (§3849). Under the title “Malicious Prosecution,” and in the chapter dealing with that title, it is expressly provided that “an inquiry before a committing court or a justice of the peace amounts to a prosecution.” The meaning of this section is that any criminal proceeding or action had, which is not carried to the extent of having an inquiry before a committing court, is not sufficient to sustain an action to recover damages for a. malicious prosecution, because in defining this right of action, and declaring when it exists, the provision of the common law, that the institution of a proceeding is sufficient to sustain the action, has been changed, and it only lies when the prosecution is “carried on”; that is, when instituted, the prosecution has been carried on so far as to bring the person charged before some offifeer, body or authority invested by law with the power and duty of inquiring into the merits of the charge. The suing out of a warrant maliciously and without probable cause is a wrong; but whatever redress the person
Affirm,ed.