Bailey v. Gollehon

85 S.E. 556, 76 W. Va. 322, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 123
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 556 (Bailey v. Gollehon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Gollehon, 85 S.E. 556, 76 W. Va. 322, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 123 (W. Va. 1915).

Opinions

Poffenbarger, Judge:

The judgment of which complaint is made on this writ of error rests on a verdict affirming the charge of malicious prosecution and assessing the damages at the sum of $250.00. Rulings on instructions, the motion to set aside the verdict and the admission and rejection of evidence constitute the grounds of the principal assignments of error.

The plaintiff in error, a justice of the peace, accused Bailey of having abstracted from the pocket of Harman, a constable, a package of papers, consisting of executions and other writs, and put it in a stove and caused it to be consumed by fire, while they and others were assembled in the 'justice's office. Soon afterward, he signed and swore to a complaint upon which a warrant for Bailey’s arrest was issued. On the hearing following his arrest, Bailey was discharged by the justice before whom he was taken. Then Gollehon appeared before the grand jury and caused him to be indicted for the alleged abstraction and burning of the papers. The court having quashed this indictment, the issue of fact tendered by it never was consummated or determined.

Nevertheless, the particular prosecution terminated with [324]*324this action of the court. No further steps could thereafter be taken in it. Any further proceeding would have involved the finding of a new indictment. Not a vestige of the prosecution in which the judgment took place remained. As the purpose of the rule requiring termination of the prosecution as a condition precedent to the action for damages is avoidance of the pendency of two inconsistent and contradictory proceedings at the same time, not a test of the guilt of the accused, it is obvious that this action was not prematurely instituted. Waldron v. Speery, 53 W. Va. 116; Harper v. Harper, 49 W. Va. 661; Jones v. Finch, 84 Va. 207.

As to many of the facts out of which the criminal prosecution and this action arose, there is no controversy. Gollehon, Harman and Ií. C. Peery, an execution -debtor, were all together in Gollohon’s- office, when Bailey came in to see Har-man about some matter. Finding him engaged with Peery in the settlement of the amount due on two executions, Har-man sitting at a table and Peery standing just to his right, he took a seat behind them. On the opposite side of the table from Harman and Peery sat Gollehon. Peery paid off one of the executions with his cheek, but some question arose as to the other one, which necessitated the calling in of O. A. Bradshaw, manager of a company in whose favor the execution was. Near the time of the arrival of Bradshaw, Bailey went out, calling Harman to the door or just out side, for a conversation, consisting of a question and an answer. Immediately afterwards, one Robert E. Moore came into the office. For the purposes of his settlement with Peery, Har-man had taken out of the bunch of papers he had the two executions against him and replaced the package in his pocket. 'When he went to the door or just out side with Bailey, he left the unsatisfied execution against Peery lying on the table. On his return he picked it up and reached for the package of papers in which he intended to replace it and found it was gone. Thereupon he announced the loss and Gollehon told him he had- seen Bailey take the papers from his pocket and place them in his own, but that he had said nothing about it, supposing they had been taken in a spirit of playfulness and as a prank and would be returned. Har-man immediately sought Bailey and communicated to him [325]*325Gollehon’s statement. Thereupon he denied the charge and Harman returned to the office and informed Gollehon of the denial. Gollehon repeated his assertion, adding that he had seen Bailey open the stove door, and suggested that he might have put the papers in the stove. Opening the stove, he found the embers of the bunch of papers and pointed them out to Harman, Bradshaw and Moore, after which he removed and preserved them. Harman having gone out again and communicated. to Bailey Gollehon’s repetition of the charge, Bailey returned to the office and emphatically denied it. Gollehon reiterated it, telling Bailey he had seen him take the papers from Harman’s pocket. After a somewhat heated altercation between them, Gollehon called up the assistant prosecuting attorney to whom he made a statement of the transaction by telephone. Later this official came to Gollehon’s office and, after having discussed the matter with him prepared a warrant for the arrest of Bailey and directed Gollehon to go to Chambers, another justice of the county, and have it issued and placed in the hands of a constable, after having made a complaint in accordance with the charge set forth in it. This having been done and Bailey notified of the issuance of the warrant, he voluntarily came to the office of the justice, where, on a hearing, he was discharged. This occured on Saturday afternoon and on the following Monday a grand jury of the county sat at Princeton, the county seat, situate several miles from the city of Bluefield in which Gollehon’s office was. Near the adjournment of the grand jury, Gollehon, without having been summoned as witness, but with the permission and consent of the assistant prosecuting attorney, appeared and testified against Bailey and so caused an indictment to be made.

Both proceedings, the one before the justice and the one before the grand jury, had the sanction of the assistant prosecuting attorney. After having heard Gollehon’s statement, he with another attorney examined the statutes for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not, if the statement was true, an offense had been committed, came to the conclusion ■that it had and so advised him.. On Bailey’s arraignment before the justice, he appeared on behalf of the state, examined the witnesses and insisted upon a commitment. [326]*326Just before the adjournment of the grand jury, he met Gollehon and informed him it was about to adjourn and said “Let’s go up now and give your evidence in before the grand jury.” After they reached the court house, he directed the clerk to issue a ticket for Gollehon’s admission to the' grand jury room, explaining that he was appearing without a summons. The summons or subpoena was omitted on account of lack of time. Though the prosecuting witness thus proceeded with the assent of the prosecuting attorney, and under his opinion as to the legal effect of the evidence, he was not specifically directed or required to make the complaint or to present the matter to the grand jury. After Bailey’s discharge by the justice, Gollehon took away from the justice’s office the embers of the package of papers, for use in the presentation of the case to the grand jury. Nevertheless he says he was at Princeton on the occasion of his visit to the grand jury, for the purpose of making abstracts of title and not merely to indict Bailey.

Bailey and Peery say there were two or more other men in the office when they entered, but that they left in a few minutes. Peery says they were there on some business relating to a deed. Their testimony as to the positions they occupied while in -the room varies slightly from that of Gollehon and ITarman. Bailey says Peery stood between him and Harman so that, to get the papers, it would have been necessary for him to reach around Peery, but he admits they were within his reach. Peery says Bailey could not have taken them without his knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 556, 76 W. Va. 322, 1915 W. Va. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-gollehon-wva-1915.