Bickford v. Lantay

394 A.2d 281, 1978 Me. LEXIS 1013
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 21, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 394 A.2d 281 (Bickford v. Lantay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bickford v. Lantay, 394 A.2d 281, 1978 Me. LEXIS 1013 (Me. 1978).

Opinion

WERNICK, Justice.

Plaintiff Karen T. Bickford brought a civil action in the Superior Court (Piscata-quis County) alleging that defendant George S. Lantay had injured' her by tor-tiously subjecting her to a malicious prosecution. A trial was held in early August, 1977, and the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff. Defendant has appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict. He asserts that the presiding Justice erroneously denied his motion for judgment n. o. v., properly made in accordance with Rule 50(b) M.R.Civ.P. The claimed grounds of error are that the evidence failed to establish at least one (if not all) of the following essential elements of the tort of malicious prosecution: (1) that the nolle prosequi shown by the evidence to have been entered in a prior criminal prosecution instigated by defendant against plaintiff (as the accused) did not effect an outcome of the criminal prosecution favorable to the accused; (2) that probable cause for the criminal prosecution was lacking; and (3) that defendant was motivated by actual malice towards plaintiff in causing her to be subjected to the criminal prosecution.

We deny the appeal.

On January 19,1977 plaintiff was operating an automobile along icy roads in Newport, Maine. Plaintiff’s immediate destination was a co-operative food store where she was accustomed to shop. She was proceeding to the store when she made a right turn onto a street known as Mill Street. Suddenly, defendant appeared on plaintiff’s *283 left. Acting barely in time, plaintiff narrowly avoided hitting defendant. Immediately after the incident plaintiff and defendant engaged in a brief, but acrimonious, encounter. Subsequently, defendant approached the Chief of Police of the town for the purpose of inducing him to initiate a criminal prosecution against the plaintiff. Defendant had several more meetings with him, as well as two visits with an Assistant District Attorney. Defendant also consulted a private attorney. Ultimately, after continued prompting by defendant, the prosecution authorities issued a traffic ticket charging plaintiff Bickford with the criminal offense of driving to endanger.

On the day set for trial of the criminal charge, the Assistant District Attorney assigned to handle the case refused to continue with the prosecution. With leave of court he caused a nolle prosequi to be entered.

1.

Defendant contends that the entry of a nolle prosequi as the termination of the criminal prosecution against plaintiff is not sufficient to prove an outcome favorable to the accused, which is an essential element of the tort of malicious prosecution.

Defendant relies on the decision in Garing v. Fraser, 76 Me. 37, 42 (1884) that a pleading that the

“county attorney entered on the records of the court a nolle prosequi to . [an] indictment”

is insufficient as an allegation of the essential element of the tort of malicious prosecution that the criminal proceeding has been

“determined in favor of the plaintiff or . finally abandoned.”

This Court further stated in Garing v. Fraser, however, that it was expressing no opinion on whether an allegation that the nolle prosequi had been objected to by plaintiff would be sufficient.

In the case at bar we need not determine whether to follow, or overrule, the holding in Garing v. Fraser. 1 We decide the issue now before us by addressing the question left open in that case. We now settle as the law of Maine that in a tort claim for malicious prosecution a showing that the criminal prosecution in which the plaintiff was the accused terminated with the entry of a nolle prosequi over the objection of the accused is sufficient to prove the essential element of the tort that the criminal prosecution terminated in an outcome favorable to the plaintiff.

With the law thus clarified, we conclude that as to the essential element now under consideration, the evidence adduced at trial required denial of defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v. We reach this conclusion not on the usual basis that the critical determination was as to a fact and that as such it was exclusively for the jury. Rather, we find that even though the inquiry whether the accused objected to the entry of nolle prosequi was directed to a fact, the evidence as to that fact happened to be of such nature that it was the function of the court, not the jury, to make the determination.

The sole evidence on the issue was a written document: a traffic citation and complaint on which the District Court judge had made various handwritten notations. The interpretation of the meaning conveyed by the contents of this written document was for the court, not the jury, to decide. See Fuller v. Smith, 107 Me. 161, 168, 77 A. 706 (1910); IX Wigmore on Evidence, 3d ed. § 2556. This being so, even though the record does not plainly indicate whether the presiding Justice undertook to interpret the meaning of the written document, the document is before us, we are in precisely the same position as the presiding Justice to exercise the court function of interpreting the correct meaning of that written instrument. See Beaulieu v. Francis Bernard, Inc., et al., Me., 393 A.2d 163 (1978). We are satisfied that the statements in the *284 written document signify that the entry of a nolle prosequi was made despite the request of the accused’s attorney for trial. In legal effect, this is the entry of a nolle prosequi over the objection of the accused.

The evidence thus definitively established the essential element of the tort of malicious prosecution that the criminal prosecution (relied upon as the gravamen of the tort claim) terminated in an outcome favorable to the plaintiff, as the person who was the accused.

2.

The second of defendant’s points on appeal is that the evidence failed to prove, as one of the essential elements of the tort of malicious prosecution, that defendant acted without probable cause in subjecting plaintiff to a criminal prosecution.

Some of the evidence bearing on this question was conflicting. According to some witnesses, plaintiff was driving at “5 miles an hour” or “at a snail’s pace.” Defendant’s version was that plaintiff’s speed was approximately 20 miles an hour. Witnesses offered by plaintiff testified that defendant darted out between two parked cars; defendant’s version was that he was crossing a street in a pedestrian crosswalk. It was the jury’s province to resolve these evidentiary conflicts. Since the jury could reasonably have believed the witnesses offered on behalf of plaintiff, it was open to the jury to find plaintiff blameless regarding the danger to which defendant was exposed when plaintiff’s automobile narrowly missed hitting him.

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Bluebook (online)
394 A.2d 281, 1978 Me. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bickford-v-lantay-me-1978.