Lead Opinion
Thе appeal in this case was prosecuted to this court, hut was thereafter transferred by it to the Springfield Court of Appeals under the provisions of the act of the Legislature, approved June 12, 1909. [See Laws of Missouri, 1909, p. 396; see, also, section 3939, R. S. 1909.] In due time the cause was disposed of by the Springfield Court of Appeals through an opinion prepared by Judge Gray of that court, as will appear by reference to Wilkerson v. McGhee,
The case has been argued and submitted here and duly considered. Upon reading the record and considering the arguments, we аre persuaded that the opinion of the Springfield Court, above referred to, properly disposes of the controversy, and it is adoрted
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION.
I cannot agree to the opinion or conclusion of the Springfield Court of Appeals, adopted by my learned associates as the opinion of our court.
I think that Brown v. The City of Cape Girardeau,
In the case before us it is averred that defendant., maliciously intending to injure plaintiff, “аnd without reasonable or probable cause therefor appeared before the grand jury . . . and did' then and there make complаint of and charge this plaintiff with having committed a misdemeanor,” etc., and that defendant “was instrumental in instigating, instituting, presenting, pressing and continuing this charge against her before the said grand jury, and that he maliciously, wantonly and without probable or reasonable cause therefor produced аnd furnished the names of witnesses that came before the grand jury and that upon the testimony so furnished and produced by him, the said Andrew J. McGhee, the grand jury fоund and returned to the circuit court of Cape Girardeau county,
"While in many cases it may be sufficient to plead that the prosecutiоn or arrest was “without probable cause,” when the pleader, as here, expressly avers as. a fact that an indictment was returned by the grand jury, that indictment is in itself prima facie probable cause. • To overcome this the pleader should aver and prove that the indictment was procured on false testimony offered by defendant, defendant knowing it was false, or at least, having no probable cause to believе it true. To let in this proof I understand the rule to be that the facts, not mere conclusions on the facts, must be set out in the petition.
That old and aсcepted authority, Buffer, Law Relative to Trials at Nisi Prius, holds, p. 12, that the very foundation of the action for malicious prosecution is lack оf truth. “If his suit be utterly without ground of truth, and that certainly known to himself, I may have case against him, for the undue vexation and damage that he putteth me unto by his iff practicе.” That author further says (p. 14): ‘ ‘ The plaintiff must produce and prove a copy of the acquittal on record, and the substance of the evidence given on the indictment is material, and the charges of the acquittal, and the circumstances which shew the prosecution was maliciоus and without probable cause: he may likewise give in evidence the circumstances of the defendant, in order to increase the damаges. . . . But though an action do lie for a malicious prosecution, yet it is not to be favoured; and therefore if the indictment be
In Byne v. Moore, 5 Taunt. 187, l. c. 188, the form of the count in the declaration there given is that defendant “falsely and maliciously, and without any reasonable or probable cause whatsoever, at the said sessions exhibited and preferred the said indictment against the plaintiff to the jury of the grand inquest, . . . and then and there maliciously and falsely gavе evidence before the same jurors, of and concerning the matters contained in that indictment, . . . when in truth the whole matter contained in that indictment was false, scandalous and contrary to truth.”
Here the plaintiff has rested on the bare statement that defendant acted “without probаble cause,” a mere conclusion, says Judge Rat, in the Brown case, supra. The malice of defendant is averred, but there must be more than mаlice. If defendant acted on probable cause, it is immaterial that he acted maliciously. [Loewenberg v. DeVoigne,
It is averred that the indictment was quashed and plaintiff аcquitted. While quashing the indictment ends that prosecution and allows this action (Kennedy v. Holladay,
For these reаsons, I think the demurrer was properly sustained and that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed.
Deeming the judgment of reversal rendered by my brethren contrary to the decision of the Supreme Court in Brown v. The City of Cape Girardeau,
