Brooks v. Bradford

4 Colo. App. 410
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Colo. App. 410 (Brooks v. Bradford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Bradford, 4 Colo. App. 410 (Colo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit for malicious prosecution, brought by John A. Bradford, as plaintiff, against H. C. Brooks, Jr., James Cannon, Jr., and the Bradford Coal Co., as defendants. The plaintiff had verdict and judgment for $2,500.

On the 28d day of November, 1891, H. C. Brooks, one of the 'defendants, made complaint before a justice of the peace of Arapahoe county, charging that on November 16, 1891, the plaintiff, as agent of the Bradford Coal Co., collected $200 of the money of that company which he feloniously embezzled, and converted to his own use.’ A warrant was issued by the justice, and the plaintiff arrested and brought before him. A hearing upon the information was afterwards had by the justice, which resulted in the plaintiff’s discharge. The plaintiff in his complaint here charges all the defendants named with the criminal information, and the procurement of his arrest; and avers that they acted maliciously, and without probable cause. The answer admits that the defendants caused the information to be filed, and the plaintiff arrested, but denies the charges of malice and want of probable cause.

Prior to October 28, 1891, plaintiff had been in the coal business, either alone or in connection, at different times, with the firm of J. A. Bradford & Co., Bradford & Berry, and the Bradford Coal Co.; on that day he -was indebted to the United Coal Co., of which the defendant, Cannon, was president, in the sum of $4,700, on account of coal purchased, and other matters of dealing between him and that company; and it's officers, not being satisfied with the existing situation, procured from him an assignment to the company of all the book accounts and claims of every description of J. A. Bradford & Co., Bradford & Berry, the Bradford Coal Co., and J. A. Bradford, to secure the payment of its claim. On the next day, at the instance of the defendant Cannon, a corporation was organized, called the Bradford Coal Company, to which, after its organization, the plaintiff transferred the [412]*412horses, coal wagons, tools, scales, book accounts, claims, and other property belonging to him and pertaining to his coal business. The Bradford Coal Co., heretofore nientioned, was simply a firm name, and must not be confounded with this, which was a corporation. The incorporators were the plaintiff, the defendant Brooks, and a Mr. Frost. The capital stock consisted of fifty shares, one of which was issued to Brooks, one to Frost, and forty-eight to the plaintiff, who thereupon assigned forty-seven of his shares to the United Coal Co. to secure the indebtedness which has been mentioned. By consent of all parties, the transfer of property by plaintiff to the Bradford corporation included the accounts and claims which had been previously assigned to the United Coal Co., and Bradford agreed with the latter company that the entire net profits of the Bradford corporation might be paid to it in liquidation of its claim against him. The plaintiff was then employed by the Bradford Coal Company to sell coal and collect money. In the course of his employment he collected the $200 mentioned in the information, which he refused to turn over to his company.

It appears that when the plaintiff transferred his property to the Bradford company, there were outstanding claims against him amounting to $200 or $300, which, he testified, that company assumed and agreed to pay. He further stated that, prior to this collection, he had been collecting monejr and turning it over to the company daily, and that it had received upon his old accounts, as he thought, $1,100 or $1,200, but had not paid the claims against him which it had assumed. The holders of these claims were pressing him, and among them a Mr. Wilson, who had threatened suit against him. He stated that on the same day on which he received the money in question, which was a few days before the arrest, he went to his company’s office, told the persons in charge that he had collected the money, and asked whether the Wilson bill and the other bills had been paid; and offered to turn over the money upon payment of the bills, or upon receiving satisfactory evidence that they would be paid; and [413]*413also, that on the day of the arrest, and before it was made, he had a conversation on the subject with the defendant Cannon, in which he said that he had this money to pay over when those bills were paid; that if they were not paid he would pay them himself; but that if he received something to show that they were paid he would deliver up the money. He was then arrested. The testimony of the defendant Brooks, upon whose information the plaintiff was arrested, as taken at the examination before the justice, was read in evidence. H.e testified that he was secretary and treasurer of the Bradford Coal Company; that four or five days before he made the complaint, the plaintiff came to his office and said that he had the money, but would not turn it over because certain bills which the company had promised to pay had not been paid; that lie laid great stress upon the Wilson bill, saying that Wilson wanted his money. Mr. Brooks further testified that the company had agreed to pay these bills, and had instructed him to pay them; that the Wilson bill was one which the company had agreed to pay; that he did not think the amount of the bills exceeded $300; and that the company bad collected $800 or $900 upon the plaintiff’s accounts. The plaintiff, in his testimony, stated that the agreement by which the company assumed the indebtedness against him was in writing, a copy of which was delivered to each party, but that his had been lost. Mr. Howard testified that the plaintiff, had once shown him the agreement in a consultation with him concerning it, and he made a brief memorandum of it. From this memorandum and from his recollection he undertook to reconstruct the agreement, and the document which he prepared was admitted in evidence against the objection of the defendants. The propriety of the court’s ruling upon this may well be doubted, but if the admission of the paper was error, it was not one of much importance. The question whether the agreement was in writing, or even whether in law it would bind the company, was not material to any issue in the case. The questions to be determined were: “What was the intention of plaintiff [414]*414in withholding the money?” “What reason had the defendants to believe that the intention was unlawful? ” and “ What were the motives of the defendants in procuring the arrest?” As bearing upon these questions, the fact that such an agreement was made could have been proven by parol, even if the agreement itself was in writing. It was this fact, and not whether the agreement was written or verbal, that was important. The testimony of Mr. Brooks is conclusive that there was such an agreement, and that fact being established by evidence whose competency is not challenged, the questions relating to the intention are not affected by the form in which the fact was presented.

At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendants moved the court for a nonsuit; the motion was denied and the ruling upon it is one of the grounds upon which this appeal is based. To maintain an action for malicious prosecution it is incumbent upon plaintiff to show that, in putting the criminal law in force against him, the defendant acted maliciously, and without reasonable or probable cause. Any motive, other than a desire to bring an offender to justice, is a malicious motive ; and, if it is clear from the evidence that no reasonable or probable cause existed, malice may be inferred. Whitehead v. Jessup, 2 Colo. App. 76.

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17 Colo. 437 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1892)
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Bluebook (online)
4 Colo. App. 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-bradford-coloctapp-1894.