153 A. 150 | Pa. | 1930
Plaintiff, a salesman of defendant, was arrested for selling its goods and keeping the proceeds. The committing magistrate held him to await the action of the grand jury, by which he was duly indicted, but, on trial, *172 was acquitted. He then brought the present action for malicious prosecution, and now appeals from the judgment entered on an instructed verdict for defendant.
To sustain such an action, malice and want of probable cause must both be established: Cooper v. Wm. R. Hart Co.,
At the trial in the present case, plaintiff testified that it was his duty, as an employee of defendant, to pay over at once all money received by him from sales of its goods, and to ring up such sales on a cash register, the tape of which showed the amount of each sale and by whom it was made. Just prior to his arrest, at an interview with the vice-president of the defendant company, plaintiff was confronted by two of its investigators, who stated to the vice-president, in his presence, that he had made two sales to them, which he had not registered, nor delivered their proceeds to defendant, but, on the contrary, had pocketed the money and never accounted for it. At that interview he recognized one of the investigators as having been a customer to whom he had sold goods at the time specified, and identified the tape from the cash register as one which had been used by him. It did not contain the purchases which the investigators said they *173 had made. He denied that he had taken any of defendant's money, however, but made no attempt to explain the situation further. He also testified that there was no ill feeling or bad blood between him and the vice-president, who, as the result of that interview, immediately swore out the warrant for his arrest, or between him and the two investigators.
It is clear from this statement of plaintiff's own testimony — and there was nothing to qualify or contradict it — that there was sufficient to justify an honest and reasonable belief, on the part of the vice-president, that plaintiff was guilty of the crime with which he was charged; this, and not the question of actual guilt, being the test when determining whether or not an action for malicious prosecution will lie: Smith v. Ege,
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.