71 Me. 555 | Me. | 1880
This is an action against the defendant for maliciously bringing a civil action against the plaintiif for slander. To show probable cause for that action, the defendant claimed that he consulted an attorney of this court, took liis opinion in good faith and acted upon it.
The case shows that the alleged slanderous words for which the action was brought, related to and embraced the attorney consulted, as well as the defendant, and in substance, charged both with a conspiracy to defraud. The fact was well known to the defendant Arhen he consulted the attorney; and the attorney brought and entered hi court an action for the slander in his own name, at the same term at which he brought and entered the defendant’s action.
Upon this point the judge, in substance, instructed the jury, that if the defendant sought the advice of the attorney in good faith, and the attorney in good faith gave him an opinion that he had a good cause of action, and the defendant acted upon that opinion in good faith in bringing the suit it ivas a good justification therefor.
We think this was error. A party who consults an attorney at law in regard to his legal right to bring an action against another, when the attorney is interested in the subject matter of the suit, and known by him to be so interested when consulted, cannot show the opinion of the attorney as probable cause for bringing the suit, although the opinion is honestly given.
We think the grounds upon which the opinion of an attorney can be shown as probable cause for bringing a suit are, that ho is an officer of the court, held out to the public as one learned in the law ; and that the client has a right to presume that he will give him a fair, unbiased and well grounded opinion as to his legal rights. But when the attorney' is directly interested in the subject matter of the suit, and his interest is known to the client, the client has no right to presume that he will give him an unbiased opinion; and if he takes it and acts upon it, and it turns out to ho erroneous, it will afford him no justification. The client knows that he has not consulted a disinterested and unbiased attorney. Neither a judge nor juror thus interested, would be
But there is another error in the law as given to the jury by the judge in his charge. All the authorities agree that, to make the opinion of the attorney probable cause for bringing the suit, the client must prove that he communicated to the attorney, ail facts within his knowledge or of which he had been informed, or might have learned in the exercise of due diligence, material to the merits of his case. This the charge of the judge did not require the jury to find. It did not require the jury to find that the defendant communicated to his attorney what he knew as to the truth or falsity of the alleged slanderous charge. This was a material element to be considered by the attorney. At most it only required the jury to find "that if Mr. Carr, having certain communications made to him tending to show that Gancelo White had published defamatory and slanderous matter concerning him, in good faith submitted all those facts to an attorney and counselor at law; and in good faith sought the advice, the opinion and judgment of that attorney and counselor at law as to whether all those facts and circumstances afforded a ground for an action of slander and thereupon received an opinion, given also in good faith, that those facts and circumstances did afford a ground for an action,” it was a good justification.
It will be seen that this proposition did not require the jury to find anything more than that the defendant communicated to the attorney what had been communicated to him as to the charge
Exceptions sustained.