97 Kan. 163 | Kan. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Wert Bartlett caused the arrest of Joe Tucker upon the charge of setting fire to his barn. A preliminary examination was held before a justice of the peace, and Tucker was discharged. He brought an action against Bartlett for malicious prosecution, and recovered a judgment, from which this appeal has been taken.
(1) The defendant maintains that there was no evidence either of the want of probable cause or of malice. The weight of authority supports the rule that the discharge of an accused
(2) The defendant relied largely upon evidence that two bloodhounds were put upon a trail at the bam, and followed it to the plaintiff’s home. Just what the dogs did, and what inference could reasonably have been drawn from their conduct, were matters of proof, and it can not be said that the facts in that regard were conclusively established. Moreover the defendant was shown to have had knowledge that the plaintiff claimed to have been at church at the time of the fire, and there was room for an inference that he had not made reasonable inquiry to learn the truth in that regard prior to causing the arrest. Testimony was given of statements made by the defendant that he would hate to send an innocent man to the penitentiary, and that he was surprised at the action of the dogs, as he had not previously suspected the plaintiff. This evidence tended, to show the absence of malice, but can not be said to be necessarily controlling. The defendant was advised in his course by competent attorneys, but the jury specifically found that he had not made a full disclosure to them of the known facts. We conclude that the case was rightly submitted to the jury.
(4) Complaint is made of this language in an instruction: “Whatever is done purposely, if it be at the same time wrongful, and is done without just cause, is maliciously done.” This is substantially the same as was said in an instruction approved in Leicester v. Hoadley, 66 Kan. 172, 71 Pac. 318: “A malicious act is ‘an unlawful act done intentionally, without just cause or excuse.’ ” (p. 174.) The sentence objected to was preceded by this: “Malice in the legal sense consists in the wilful doing of an unlawful act, without a just cause or excuse for the doing it.” A knowledge that the act in question is wrongful or illegal is sometimes included as one of the elements in a definition of malice, as the word is used in this connection. (26 Cyc. 49.) But if one intentionally does that which the law condemns, the circumstance that he is not aware of such condemnation does not affect the legal quality of the act. The definition given by the trial court is substantially that approved by the authorities. (Note, 21 Ann. Cas. 756, 758.) Therefore no error was committed in this regard.
(5) The defendant maintains that the judgment should be reversed because the jury were told that “probable cause is such reasonable grounds as will cause in the mind of an ordinarily careful and prudent person an honest belief in the criminal guilt of another.” Standing by itself such an instruction has been held to be erroneous because it treats the question of what constitutes probable cause as one of fact in
The judgment is affirmed.