Beiswanger v. American Bonding & Trust Co.

57 A. 202, 98 Md. 287, 1904 Md. LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 57 A. 202 (Beiswanger v. American Bonding & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beiswanger v. American Bonding & Trust Co., 57 A. 202, 98 Md. 287, 1904 Md. LEXIS 39 (Md. 1904).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action to recover damages for a malicious prosecution. It was instituted in the Superior Court of Baltimore City by the appellant, Beiswanger, against the appellee, The American Bonding and Trust Company. The declaration alleges in substance that on the 20th of January, 1900, the Bonding Company falsely and maliciously and without any reasonable or probable cause procured the plaintiff to be ar *289 rested and brought before Eugene E. Grannan, a Justice of the Peace, at the Central Police Station, for a hearing upon the false charge of the embezzlement of the sum of $400 trust funds belonging to the estate of the E. A. Jones Paper Box Manufacturing Company, and that he was held for trial and was presented by the grand jury, but that the grand jury thereafter reconsidered its action and finally dismissed the plaintiff from custody and discharged him from the Baltimore City Jail wherein he had been incarcerated for a number of days. The appellee, the defendant below, pleaded to this declaration that it did not commit the wrongs therein alleged. Issue was joined on this plea and the case proceeded to trial before a jury. Upon the conclusion of the evidence on both sides, the appellant, the plaintiff below, presented three prayers for instructions to the jury and the defendant offered one.. Those proffered by the plaintiff were rejected; whilst the one which the defendant asked was granted. By the granted instruction the jury were told that there was no evidence legally sufficient to prove that any of the officers or agents of the defendant corporation were authorized by the company to have the plaintiff arrested, and that there was no evidence legally sufficient to show that the company subsequently adopted and ratified the acts of its officers or agents in connection with that arrest, and that, therefore, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover and the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant. In obedience to that instruction, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant, the appellee here, and upon the verdict a judgment was duly entered. From that judgment the pending appeal was taken.

If the action of the Superior Court in taking the case from the jury for the want of legally sufficient evidence to entitle the plaintiff to recover, was right, there will be no occasion to consider the rejected prayers which the appellant asked the Court to grant but which were refused, as has just been stated. There is but one bill of exception in the record. There are no questions respecting the admissibility of evidence. The inquiry with which we have first to deal is whether there *290 was legally sufficient evidence to go to'the jury and the solution of this inquiry requires that we should state somewhat in detail the evidence which the record contains.

It is not disputed that the appellant was arrested on the 21st of January, igoo, on a warrant, sworn out before Justice Grannan by Millard Leonard, who was the Chief Clerk of the Judicial Department of the Bonding Company, charging the appellant with the embezzlement-of $400 of the trust funds of the E. A. Jones Paper Box Company. On the 24th of January, the charge against the appellant was heard by Justice Grannan and according to the testimony of the Justice, the appellant prior to the hearing admitted that he had misappropriated the trust funds, and that the Justice held the case for several days to enable the appellant and his brother to raise the money to make good the deficit. On January 24th, the shortage not having been made good, the appellant was committed to jail in default.of $1,000 bail, and on February 6th, the grand jury finally dismissed the charge of embezzlement and he was released from custody. It appears from the docket entries and the papers in the proceeding wherein the appellant had been appointed trustee for the benefit of the creditors of.the Jones Paper Box Company that an auditor’s account had been -finally ratified in April, 1897, and that therein the sum of $5,551.02 had been distributed amongst the creditors of that company. It further appears that in August, 1899, a petition was filed on behalf of some of the creditors of the Paper Box-Company, wherein it was alleged that the appellant, since filing his first account, had collected certain other funds of the Paper Box Company, but had failed to state an account thereof; and the petition prayed that he be required to file a statement of the sums collected since the former audit, and that the papers be referred to an auditor so that a distribution of these subsequently collected funds might be made. Thereupon the appellant did file a statement showing that he had collected the sum of $568.15 and the papers were then referred to Mr. Robert -F. Brent to report an auditor’s account. In December, 1899, another petition was filed *291 wherein it was alleged that the papers had been in the hands of the auditor for about four months ; that the appellant had refused to pay the auditor’s fees, and the account had therefore not been filed; and the petition prayed that the appellant be required to pay said fees and file said account. On the 22nd of January, 1900, an auditor’s account distributing the sum of $568.15 was filed and on the 2nd of February following it was finally ratified. On the 17th of the same month the appellant paid over to the creditors of the Paper Box Company the-said sum of $568.15. According to the testimony of Mr. Brent, the auditor, the appellant admitted that he did not have the trust funds in hand and asked the auditor whether he would not file the account and wait for the fees, whereupon Mr. Brent replied that if the appellant could not íaise the money to pay the auditor’s fees and the account should be filed, the appellant would “be up against the creditors in ten days,” and would have to make their claim good, and if he could not raise the money to pay the fees, the witness did not see how, he, the appellant, could raise the money to pay the creditors, nor how the filing of the account would benefit him, and that the appellant agreed to this. When the account was ultimately filed the Bonding Company, the appellee, paid the auditor’s fees. Mr. Curries Willis Haines, a member of the bar who represented some of the creditors of the Paper Box Company, testified that he saw the appellant several times about stating his account distributing this balance of $568.15; that at one of these interviews the appellant offered the witness his individual check, post-dated, and requested the witness to take the check in settlement of the claims which he, the witness, represented and further requested the witness to hold the check until its date, at which time he, the appellant, would have the money in bank to meet it, as he intended getting the funds from his brother in New York. Mr. Haines refused to accept the check, because no account had been stated and he did not know whether the check covered the amount to which he was entitled. The record does not indicate that the testimony of Justice Grannan, *292 Mr. Brent, and Mr. Haines was contradicted in any particular by the appellant. Its admissibility has not been challenged by any exception. It stands therefore unimpeached and unexcepted to, and must be given credit.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A. 202, 98 Md. 287, 1904 Md. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beiswanger-v-american-bonding-trust-co-md-1904.