46 Minn. 366 | Minn. | 1891
This was an action for malicious prosecution, and, under the issues as presented by the pleadings, defendant having admitted a criminal prosecution by him which terminated in plaintiff’s acquittal or discharge, it was incumbent upon the latter to show that the prosecution was without probable cause, and originated in defendant’s malice. The proof of this want of probable cause, although a negative proposition, was on the plaintiff, as is always the case with such issues. He had been prosecuted for the crime of the lar-ceny of a horse, which he had taken from defendant’s possession under a claim of title. To establish want of probable' cause on defendants part, the plaintiff had shown that about noon of a certain day he proceeded to defendant’s barn in a small village, where he was well known, took the animal out, rode it through the public streets, passing and speaking with several acquaintances, and from thence to his farm, about 14 miles distant. The defendant knew where-he resided, and had been personally acquainted with him for years. Defendant immediately made complaint to a justice of the peace, charging a larceny of the horse, procured a warrant, placed it in the hands of a deputy-sheriff, and before night the deputy had reached the farm, arrested the plaintiff, and with him and the horse was on his return to the village. The officer was one of plaintiff’s witnesses, and, notwithstanding defendant’s objection, was permitted to testify that he found the plaintiff openly at work in his field, hauling flax upon a wagon drawn by a pair of horses, that in dispute being one. The defendant contends that in admitting this testimony the trial court erred, greatly to his prejudice, because, as he insists, his acts and conduct were to be weighed in view of what appeared to him when he made the complaint, and not in the light of facts appearing subsequently; citing Stewart v. Sonneborn, 98 U. S. 187. Even if this evidence was inadmissible, its reception was error without prejudice, for all that it tended to prove was a fact
Order affirmed.