58 P. 380 | Cal. | 1899
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *80 Action for malicious prosecution. Trial by jury, and plaintiffs had the verdict with damages assessed at two thousand dollars, for which amount and for costs of suit, taxed at one hundred and sixty-two dollars and eighty cents, plaintiffs had judgment. Defendant appeals from the judgment in L.A. No. 514, and from an order denying motion for new trial in this transcript, L.A. No. 611. The two appeals will be considered in this opinion.
It is sought to have the judgment and order reversed on the grounds: 1. Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; 2. That the judgment and verdict are against law; 3. Errors of law occurring at the trial; 4. Excessive damages given under the influence of passion and prejudice.
1. Appellant demurred to the complaint for uncertainty, and now urges this as ground for reversal of the judgment (L.A. No. 514). In the first three paragraphs of the complaint it is alleged that: Plaintiffs are husband and wife; on June 12, 1897, at the city of Santa Barbara, defendant made complaint before the judge of the police court of that city, charging plaintiffs with the crime of grand larceny, and then and there procured said judge to issue a warrant of arrest of plaintiffs upon said charge; in making said complaint and procuring said warrant to issue defendant acted maliciously and without probable cause. In the remaining portions of the complaint it is charged that plaintiff, Mrs. Williams, was arrested on said warrant at Los Angeles, on June 14, 1897, by the sheriff of Santa Barbara county, and was imprisoned thereunder in the county jail of Los Angeles county, and was taken thence by said sheriff to Santa Barbara, and was there detained in his custody, under said warrant of arrest, until June 17, 1897, when she was allowed to go without bail to appear for her examination before said judge upon said charge until June 18, 1897, on which day her preliminary examination was commenced and the hearing thereof continued until June 19, 1897, on which last-named day she was fully acquitted. It is then alleged that, by reason of the aforesaid malicious and wrongful acts of the defendant, the plaintiff, Kate Sonoma Williams, was obliged to expend the sum of thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents as attorney's fees in defending said proceeding, was put to loss of time during *82 the time of said arrest and detention, to her damage in the sum of fifty dollars, and was otherwise damaged thereby in the further sum of ten thousand dollars, no part of which sums has been paid. The uncertainty alleged of the complaint is: 1. It is impossible to ascertain therefrom whether the ten thousand dollars damages is by reason of the arrest of Mrs. Williams, or by reason of the filing of the complaint against both Mr. and Mrs. Williams; that it is impossible to ascertain therefrom what portion, if any, of said damages were incurred by reason of filing the complaint against Mr. Williams, and what portion, if any, by reason of the arrest of Mrs. Williams; or whether the damages alleged are, by reason of the filing of a joint complaint against both husband and wife, or whether the damage is for the separate arrest of Mrs. Williams; that it is impossible to determine therefrom in what proceeding Mrs. Williams "expended the sum of thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents as attorney's fees in defending — whether said joint complaint against both said plaintiffs or in the matter of the arrest of Kate Sonoma Williams." A misjoinder of parties plaintiff is alleged in this, that Mrs. Williams seeks to recover fifty dollars damage for loss of time to her, and it is sought in the same complaint to recover on a joint cause of action upon the arrest of both Mr. and Mrs. Williams. The verdict was that the jury "find for the plaintiffs and assess their damages at the sum of two thousand dollars," and the judgment was that "Kate Sonoma Williams and her husband, I.B. Williams, have and recover from said J.W. Casebeer," et cetera.
There was a right of action for malicious prosecution in each of the plaintiffs, but they could not unite their separate causes of action in one complaint and sue jointly; each was compelled to bring a separate action; but Mrs. Williams could not sue without making her husband a party plaintiff. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 370;McFadden v. Santa Ana etc. Ry. Co.,
The allegation as to the thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents paid as attorneys' fees shows that the money was expended by Mrs. Williams, and that in alleging that it was "in defending said proceedings" reference was made to the proceedings upon the preliminary examination as to her. It does not appear in the complaint that her husband was ever arrested or was ever called upon to make any defense.
2. Appellant claims that the evidence does not justify the verdict. This point is not specially relied on, and we do not feel called upon to review the evidence in the case.
Counsel for defendant do not, in their brief, attempt to show wherein it is insufficient to sustain the verdict. We have, however, given the transcript careful examination, and think the evidence fully warrants the verdict of want of probable cause for the arrest and the subsequent prosecution of plaintiff.
3. Appellant assigns certain errors of law in the admission or exclusion of testimony. We will notice these briefly. It was competent to prove by the witness, Mrs. Williams, that defendant admitted at the preliminary examination the authorship of a letter and telegram caused to be written by defendant and sent to plaintiffs June 11, 1897. The shorthand notes of the examination were not the only competent evidence of the fact. If witness heard defendant make the admission, she could so testify.
Copies of the two deeds alleged to have been stolen were admitted in evidence over defendant's objection. One of these deeds was made by defendant in 1895 to a minor daughter of plaintiffs, the consideration being love and affection, and was recorded some months before plaintiffs were arrested. The other is a deed from one Robinson to I.B. Williams, one of plaintiffs, and was recorded at the request of defendant. It is claimed by defendant that possession alone of the original deeds, charged to have been stolen, was at issue, and that it was immaterial whether the deeds had been recorded or not. *85 The record of these deeds, which were recorded some time before this trouble, was admissible as tending to show ownership in some person other than defendant — not conclusive by any means — but in some degree showing that he acted maliciously in charging larceny of property not belonging to him.
Defendant, as a witness for himself, had testified that he got no answer to his letter and telegram sent plaintiffs June 11th, and added: "I went to the office, and the lady operator told me that it had been delivered." On motion of plaintiffs, the remark of the operator was stricken out as heresay. Defendant claims that this was error. The answer was not in response to the question, but the objection was not made on that ground. It may be, as claimed by plaintiffs, that if the evidence was not admissible, the court could, on its own motion, strike it out, though the ground of the objection was not sufficient. But the court did not so act; it granted the motion as made, and it must be presumed on the ground stated. We think the evidence was admissible. It in some degree tended to rebut the charge of malice, and also bore the question of probable cause. Defendant had informed plaintiffs that he would act upon their failure to reply, and we think it was competent for him to show that before he acted he was informed that the telegram had been delivered. The evidence, however, was not of such significance or importance as that its rejection would warrant a reversal of the judgment. We cannot see that defendant was prejudiced because this fact was withheld from the jury. It appeared by the evidence of plaintiffs that the telegram was received before their arrest, and that plaintiffs did not in fact answer it, and the undisputed testimony of defendant was that he did not lodge his complaint with the police court until after he was led to believe that the message had been delivered, and not until on the next day, and after he had advised with an attorney. Under these circumstances, it would not seem reasonable to assume that the jury were in the slightest degree influenced to defendant's prejudice by the ruling of the court upon the matter in question.
Defendant offered evidence of certain transactions between the parties and their relations ten years before this arrest. Counsel stated that it was "for the purpose of showing the *86 condition, a similar condition to that which existed at the time of this occurrence, thereby showing motive and right upon the part of the complainant in this criminal action to assume that the going was of the same character as of that time."
Defendant claims that this evidence should have been admitted upon the principles laid down in Lyon v. Hancock,
Defendant's attorney testified that some time after this action was commenced defendant delivered to him certain of the papers he had charged plaintiffs with stealing. The court refused to allow the attorney to testify to statements made by defendant to his attorney at that time in the absence of plaintiffs. The ruling was correct. Defendant could not strengthen his defense in this manner. His declarations to his attorney were self-serving and in admissible.
4. The exception taken to the instruction given at the request of the plaintiffs was as follows: "To all of which instructions defendant duly excepted." Respondents make the point that the exception was insufficient because it was general. The rule relied upon applies only to the charge of judge, and does not apply to the special instructions asked by the parties and given or refused by the court, concerning which a general exception is sufficient. (Cavallaro v. Texas etc. Ry. Co.,
5. Appellant questions the correctness of certain instructions given, and objects that a certain instruction asked by him was refused.
Several instructions were given as to the law touching defendant's liability in view of his having consulted counsel before causing the arrest of plaintiffs. In one of these the court said: "Before the defendant can shield himself by the advice of counsel, it must appear from the evidence that he made, in good faith, a full, fair, and honest statement of all the material circumstances bearing upon the supposed guilt of the plaintiff, Kate Sonoma Williams, which were then within the knowledge of defendant, to a respectable attorney in good standing, and that the defendant, in good faith, acted upon the advice of said attorney in instituting and carrying on the prosecution against plaintiff."
Appellant contends that the instruction puts upon the defendant and the jury the necessity of trying the respectability and standing of the attorney; and that the instruction goes beyond the institution of the action and "requires the same careful disclosure of all the facts in `carrying on' the prosecution, to a `respectable attorney of good standing.'" The instruction does not require that defendant shall continue to take advice of counsel during the subsequent prosecution; it requires that he shall subsequently act in good faith upon the advice given, after first having fully and fairly stated to the attorney all the material facts then known to defendant; and this he should do, or the advice will not shield him. Conceding error in other respects — which we by no means wish to be understood as deciding — it was without injury, for it appeared defendant consulted a former district attorney, Mr. A.E. Putnam, who testified: "My occupation is attorney at law; have been engaged in the profession of attorney at law about fifteen years." He could not be district attorney without having been admitted to practice in the superior court, and, as the code formerly provided (and now provides) he could not be admitted to practice in the superior court except "upon strict examination in open court, . . . . and upon testimonials of good character." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 276, prior to the amendments of 1895.) It sufficiently appeared that the requirements of the instruction were supplied by the *88
evidence, and, as it was undisputed, we do not think the jury could have been mislead to defendant's injury, even if they understood the instruction to mean what defendant claims for it. There was some evidence tending to show that Mr. Putman was a respectable attorney in good standing, and, as no other conclusion could be arrived at upon the evidence, the instruction, if error, will not jutify a reversal. (Pico v.Stevens,
It was proper to instruct the jury that the burden of proof was upon defendant to show that he "fully and fairly and in good faith stated to his counsel all the material facts," et cetera. There was no conflict between this instruction and a previous one where the court had charged that it was encumbent upon plaintiffs to show, by preponderance of evidence, that the plaintiff, Mrs Williams, was maliciously and without probable cause prosecuted and caused to be arrested, et cetera.
Defendant asked and was refused the following instruction: "Taking the advice of the police judge, particularly where he is also a practitioner of the law, under the same circumstances as heretofore stated, before filing the complaint in the action in the police court, is to be considered by you in the same manner and with the same weight as consulting an attorney at law."
It is claimed upon the authority of Hahn v. Schmidt,
6. We do not think the judgment should be reversed as excessive. There is nothing in the evidence which shows the verdict to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice. The evidence tends to show that the arrest was made after a hasty and imperfect search for the property alleged to have been stolen, and that the criminal proceeding was prosecuted with much bitterness by defendant, and that he withheld from the court the fact that he had found some of the property after the arrest, and had it in his possession at the trial. He permitted the impression to go out that he had not found the property; and, in the course of his examination as a witness, declared with much emphasis: "There is not anything I would not do that would injure them except to commit perjury."
There was evidence tending to show that he had purchased the sewing-machine for and had given it to his daughter; that the chickens were her own, either bought with her own money or raised by her; that the deeds to which he attached the value of four thousand eight hundred dollars were in his possession before and at the trial of the criminal action, but the fact was withheld from the jury. And it appeared at this trial that he, subsequent to the criminal trial, found the notes and mortgages which he charged plaintiff with stealing.
I advise that the order refusing motion for new trial be affirmed.
Britt, C., and Gray, C., Concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order refusing motion for new trial is affirmed.
Henshaw, J., McFarland, J., Temple, J. *90