delivered the opinion of the Court.
In an action for malicious prosecution the court, without a jury, found for the plaintiff and assessed the damages at $1,000, and this appeal is from a judgment entered in that amount. The appellant contends that the appellee failed to establish two of the essential elements of the tort, that the criminal action in a magistrate’s court was instituted by the appellant without probable cause, and with malice. The amount of the verdict is not challenged, nor the evidence of damages to support it.
The facts are virtually undisputed. The appellant is the owner of a hall where he operates a night club. The appellee, the president of a business and social organization, leased the
What must be shown in order to establish the fact of malicious prosecution is well settled and the rule was clearly stated in the recent case of
Banks v. Montgomery Ward & Co.,
There appears to be no Maryland decision directly in point, although there is a dictum in
Owens v. Graetzel,
In any event, we think the exception is too well settled to admit of doubt. See 1 Harper & James,
Law of Torts,
sec.
4.5;
34 Am. Jur.,
Malicious Prosecution,
sec. 55; 54 C.J.S.,
Malicious Prosecution,
sec. 37. The Restatement,
Torts,
sec. 667, states the rule to be: “The conviction of the accused by a magistrate or trial court although reversed by an appellate tribunal, conclusively establishes the existence of probable cause, unless the conviction was obtained by fraud, perjury or
The appellant argues that there was no evidence of fraud, perjury or corrupt means, and that the only error was that of the magistrate, whose advice he sought. It seems clear, however, that the appellant cannot escape liability by relying upon the advice of a magistrate, as he might if he had sought the advice of an attorney. See
Kennedy v. Crouch,
Zablonsky testified that he never at any time accused Perkins of taking the equipment. But the fact remains that he
If, as we have held, there was shown a lack of probable cause for the institution of the criminal proceeding, despite the conviction by the magistrate that was reversed for want of evidence to support it, the showing raises an inference of malice. See Jannenga v. Libernini, 222 Md. 469, 473 and cases cited. Moreover, there was positive evidence of a purpose other than that of bringing an offender to justice. The question of malice was thus for the trier of the facts.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
