9 Colo. App. 220 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
Most suits for malicious prosecution ultimately find their way into the appellate courts. The principles by which the rights of parties are to be measured are therefore tolerably well settled, and our own reports generally furnish adequate precedents to guide us in the examination of a record and the consideration of the judgment. The present is scarcely an exception to this general rule.
The appellee, Kyes, bought out a grocery store in 1898, in Denver, and carried on a retail grocery business for a few months thereafter. During the time he was engaged in this line, he bought goods of. the appellants, Williams & Wood, who were evidently wholesale dealers in that class of merchandise. His last purchase was on Saturday, the 1st of April. On the next day, Sunday, in evident continuation of a bargain commenced on Saturday, Kyes invoiced his store, and sold his stock, including the goods which he had the same day purchased of Williams & Wood, to another party, for cash, and received the consideration. He failed to pay the accounts which he had contracted with sundry merchants in the city, and it led to several meetings between them, to some acrimonious discussion, and to an ultimate criminal prosecution. When Kyes was brought to Williams & Wood’s place, he was confronted with several merchants from whom he had purchased merchandise, and an attorney, and there was a strong effort made to compel a settlement between him and his creditors. He declined to make any bargain or to do anything in that direction, although he admitted that he had sold the goods, and had the money.
At that interview he was shown a report alleged to have been made by It. Gf. Dun & Co., a well-known commercial agency, which attempts to learn all about the financial con
There was some other evidence offered which tended to show the good faith of Williams & Wood in the institution of their criminal prosecution, and they offered some testimony to the effect that they had laid their case before the district attorney of the district, and, on the strength of his advice, had filed the complaint. There was also evidence tending to show the abseuce of express malice, and a good deal of evidence to establish a probable cause to believe that Kyes intended to commit fraud in his dealings with them.
We do not intend to go over the case, and recite the testimony, nor express our opinion about it. This would not, in our judgment, be wise, since the case must go back for a new
When the evidence was concluded, the court, by consent of parties, charged the jury orally. The charge was taken down by the stenographer, copied out, and furnished the jury, and the defendants took exceptions to the various portions of the instructions. They also asked instructions on one topic which really furnishes the only basis on which the case can be reversed. We are so clearly of the opinion the jury were not adequately instructed with reference to what constitutes probable cause that we are quite astute to find error in order that the case may be correctly presented for determination. The charge, as far as it went, was clear, satisfactory, and an accurate statement of the law. All essential matters in the case were stated, and, except in one slight particular, the legal definitions of probable cause and malice were fairly and accurately outlined. The fifth instruction relates to malice, which is correctly defined. This instruction concludes with a sentence that “ a criminal prosecution begun for the purpose of collecting a debt is strong, if not conclusive, evidence of malice.” We quite agree with the learned judge who tried the case. A prosecution commenced for such a purpose furnishes very strong evidence of malice. The case justified that part of the charge, because there was a good deal of evidence in the case which tended to show that the real animus of the prosecution was to force the payment of the appellants’ bill. The court therefore had a right to so charge the jury; but we are inclined to the opinion that this should not be taken or stated to be conclusive evidence, because, although that might have been its ultimate purpose, this purpose might have been conceived and carried out without the presence of malice, according to its general and legal definition. This prosecution may have had a double motive. The parties might desire to punish the offender for a breach of the law in order that it might serve
This error in the charge compels us to reverse the case, and return it for a new trial.
B,eversed.