52 Conn. 35 | Conn. | 1884
This is a complaint for the malicious prosecution of a civil suit in favor of a third party against the plaintiff and defendant jointly, but for the sole debt of the defendant, and upon which the property of the plaintiff was attached. The jury found the issues for the plaintiff, and after verdict the defendant moved in arrest for the insufficiency of the complaint. The claimed defects in the complaint are two:—first, in omitting to allege the want of probable cause for bringing the suit which caused the injury, and second, in omitting the allegation that the original suit was terminated in the plaintiff’s favor.
1. Want of probable cause is an essential fact to be alleged and proved; but these precise words need not be used. Under the Practice Act, (sections first and ninth), all that is required is the statement of the facts in plain language and in narrative form. If proof of the facts alleged would necessarily establish want of probable cause, it is sufficient. The complaint, we think, will stand this test. The legal idea of probable cause is a bond fide belief in the existence of the facts essential under the law for the action and such as would warrant a man of ordinary caution, prudence and judgment, under the circumstances, in entertaining it.
Now it seems to us that all the legal elements of probable cause are strongly negated by the facts set forth in the complaint. We find these facts:—The draft in the original suit Avas made at the request of the defendant and maliciously and fraudulently accepted by him in the partnership name, without the plaintiff’s knowledge or consent, Avith the design to charge the plaintiff alone Avith its payment ; it .was not for the benefit of the plaintiff or the firm of which he had been a member, but solely for the benefit of the defendant. Then follow these allegations, which we give in the words of the complaint:—“ On or about the 20th day of July, 1881, said bill of exchange being still unpaid, said Toomey, by false and malicious representations to said H. Webster & Go., and to Charles W. Lawrence, one of said firm of H. Webster & Co., that the plaintiff,
If all this was true, (and it is admitted for the purposes of this discussion,) no other conclusion seems possible than that the defendant had perfect knowledge of the actual facts: that his statements concerning them were consciously and glaringly false; and that malice of the most deliberate and premeditated character on his part induced the bringing of the suit, and even created its subject matter. It would be very difficult to conceive any state of facts that would more effectively negative the possibility of probable eause.
2. As to the omission to allege in the complaint the termination of the original suit, the defect is conceded, but is sought to be avoided in two ways. In the first place, the plaintiff invokes the benefit of what Mr. Chitty, in his Treatise on Pleading, calls “express aider;” that is, an omission to state a material fact, either in the declaration or special plea may be supplied by the pleading of the opposite party. The following eases sustain and illustrate this doctrine : Vinal v. Richardson, 18 Allen, 521, 525; Slack v. Lyon, 9 Pick., 62; Whittemore v. Ware, 101 Mass., 352;
At first blush it may seem that we apply under the Practice Act a technical rule of the common law which the new procedure repudiates. But this is not correct. There is nothing technical or artificial in this doctrine of express aider. On the contrary, it rests on principles of justice peculiarly appropriate to the theory of the new practice. Erwin v. Shaffer, (supra.) The principle upon which the doctrine rests is well stated by Parker, J., in Slack v. Lyon, (supra,) p. 65, as follows:—“When the defendant chooses to understand the plaintiff’s count to contain all the facts essential to his liability, and, in his plea, sets out and answers those which have been omitted in the count, so that the parties go to trial upon a full knowledge of the charge, and the record contains enough to show the court that all the material facts were in issue, the defendant shall not tread back and trip up the heels of the plaintiff on a defect which he would seem thus purposely to have omitted to notice in the outset of the controversy.”
Upon referring to the answer in the case at bar we find it alleged in substance that the defendant himself settled the original suit with Webster & Go., and paid them in full with interest and costs. This was a sufficient termination of the suit. A judgment of the court was not necessary for this purpose. If a suit is ended by the defendant’s own act, it surely ought to be effectual under the circumstances of this ease. In Cardival v. Smith, 109 Mass., 158, it was held that in a civil' action the failure of a plaintiff to enter in court the writ upon which he caused the arrest, is such a final determination of the case as to enable the defendant to bring suit for malicious prosecution. The act of the present defendant in settling the case would make the damages of the plaintiff less than would naturally follow the prosecution of the suit to final judgment, but it cannot atone for the damage already occasioned by attaching the plaintiff’s property. The defendant in his answer sees fit to indicate the motive which induced him to settle the case
But there is another way to obviate the defect complained of. After verdict for the plaintiff it is too late to take advantage of it.
In 1 Swift’s Digest, p. 806, (side p. 778,) we find the doctrine stated as follows :—“ So in an action for a malicious prosecution, it is necessary to allege that the prosecution is at an end. The want of this averment is cured after verdict, but is fatal on demurrer or after judgment by default; for the original prosecution may either be determined, or it may be going on, and the court cannot say which is the fact; but where there is a verdict for the plaintiff, it is a necessary inference that it was proved on the trial that the prosecution was at an end.”
The same doctrine is held in cases cited in Williams’s Notes to the case of Stennel v. Hogg, 1 Saunders’s Reports, p. 263. It was also so held in Weinberger v. Shelly, 6 Watts & Serg., 343, and in some other cases that might be cited.
Although this doctrine has been criticised by Mr. Chitty and some other jurists as not in full accord with the rule, that though the matter be not stated in terms, the pleading should always contain terms sufficiently general to comprehend it by fair and reasonable intendment, yet we are disposed to accept the doctrine as sanctioned by the authorities first cited, especially as it is in furtherance of the spirit of our Practice Act. It is indeed a matter of grave doubt whether the defendant should not have demurred to the complaint in order to take advantage of the defects alleged. The act in terms (secs. 1 and 2,) requires all defenses to be by answer or demurrer and all demurrers to be special. We leave this, however, as an open question, and make the reference in order to say that under an act like this the
As to some other minor defects in the complaint that were commented upon - during the argument, they are so manifestly cured by the verdict as to require no discussion.
There was no error in overruling the defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment.'
In this opinion the other judges concurred.