Carpenter v. Ashley

115 P. 268, 15 Cal. App. 461, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 333
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 800.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 P. 268 (Carpenter v. Ashley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Ashley, 115 P. 268, 15 Cal. App. 461, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 333 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action was brought by an attorney at law against two other attorneys for malicious prosecution and conspiracy, whereby, it is alleged in the complaint, said defendants "corruptly, maliciously and without probable or any *463 cause prosecuted plaintiff before the grand jury and before a trial jury in the superior court for the crime of perjury,” securing an indictment for said offense and subjecting the defendant therein to the expense, annoyance and ignominy of a public trial lasting five days and resulting in his acquittal. Every allegation in the complaint impugning the motive or challenging the good faith of defendants or charging the want of probable cause for said prosecution is denied in the answer. There was a demand and motion for a change of venue on the part of plaintiff, supported by his affidavit, in which some startling and rather grotesque accusations are made against the defendants, to the effect that “they are and were skilled in the art of securing verdicts and manipulating the members of the panel, and aside from such skilled manipulations, they exercised such influence and power over the citizens who were or might be called to pass upon their conduct as to make it impossible for plaintiff or anyone else to get a fair trial where they were parties to the action.” But, conceding that plaintiff’s strange averments are not inherently improbable and that his affidavit should be accorded the same consideration as that of any other person, it is sufficient to say that every suggestion therein of improper influence is positively denied and every implication of bias or prejudice on the part of the citizens of the county is expressly negatived in the counter-affidavits filed by defendants and used at the hearing of the motion. Under the familiar rule of conflicting evidence, therefore, it is unquestionable that the order denying the application for a change of the place of trial cannot be disturbed.

It is stated by appellant that “after the denial of said motion the plaintiff, having had the personal experience of the defendants’ skill in securing verdicts, waived a jury, and the case was tried by the court, who promptly gave judgment to the defendants on their motion for a nonsuit.” Appellant does not complain, apparently, so much that the judgment was given “promptly” as he deplores the mistake he made in assuming that the great skill of defendants could not influence the court to decide at all against the law and the evidence.

Be that as it may, the legal principles involved are well established, and may be stated in the language of the supreme *464 court, as they have been thoroughly considered and clearly enunciated in the three following cases: Ball v. Rawles, 93 Cal. 222, [27 Am. St. Rep. 174, 28 Pac. 937] ; Davis v. Pacific Tel. etc. Co., 127 Cal. 312, [57 Pac. 764, 59 Pac. 698], and Booraem v. Potter Hotel Co., 154 Cal. 99, [97 Pac. 65]. “It is incumbent upon the plaintiff, and the burden of proof is upon him in an action of this kind, to prove both malice and want of probable cause.” “Probable cause is a suspicion founded upon circumstances sufficiently strong to warrant a reasonable man in the belief that the charge is true.” “What facts and circumstances amount to probable cause is a pure question of law. Whether they exist or not in any particular ease is a pure question of fact. The former is exclusively for the court, the latter for the jury.”

With these elementary principles in view, we deem it unnecessary to go beyond an examination of the question of probable cause for said prosecution.

The evidence introduced by plaintiff included his indictment by the grand jury on June 10, 1901, for perjury alleged to have been committed on May 31, 1900, and the record of his trial thereon resulting in a verdict of not guilty. The indictment was based upon the testimony of plaintiff given at the trial of the cause of McGorray v. Robinson in the superior court of San Joaquin county, to the effect that “he the said A. H. Carpenter, on or about the blank day of January, 1892, sent by mail to Bernard McGorray at Rochester, New York, the deed, meaning thereby a certain deed”—describing a deed to the property, the title to which was involved in the said suit of McGorray v. Robinson, said deed purporting to convey said property to Bernard McGorray by Stephen W. McGorray and " signed, sealed and delivered in the presence" of A. H. Carpenter,” and acknowledged before J. H. Tam, a notary public, on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1891. The pleadings in said cause of McGorray v. Robinson, consisting of the complaint, answer and cross-complaint and answer to the cross-complaint, were then offered by plaintiff and received in evidence. The verified complaint therein was filed, it appears, on November 15, 1899, and therein it was alleged that “plaintiff is now and for more than seven years last past has been the owner in fee” of the land described. The verified answer and cross-complaint was filed December *465 21, 1899, in which, among other things, it was denied that plaintiff ever had been the owner of any of the property described in the complaint. To the cross-complaint the plaintiff, on January 20, 1900, filed an answer in which he alleged that “he is now and always has been since the twenty-ninth day of December, 1891, the owner in fee of all the real property described in the complaint.” It was further shown herein by the evidence that at the trial of the said McGorray case, H. T. Fee, a deputy county recorder of San Joaquin county, produced and read in evidence, from volume 72 of deeds of said county, the record of the deed set out in the indictment; that Bernard McGorray, who was plaintiff in that case and grantee in said deed, and who was a client of plaintiff herein, testified that the recorded deed had been sent by its grantor (Stephen McGorray) to and received by him (Bernard) through the mail, at Rochester, New York, in 1892; that he then and there saw upon it the recorder’s marks or certificate and the acknowledgment certificate of the notary; “that he knew the deed was made in December, 1891, and his only manual receipt thereof was so by mail”; that thereafter, at the said McGorray trial, Carpenter (plaintiff herein) testified that he drew the deed and witnessed it; that he had it recorded; that furthermore he testified: “I am sure of this, that the envelope—it was inclosed in a long envelope, and it was my envelope, and I am sure that I backed it and Mr. McGorray may have put it in a letter, in with the deed, I don’t know, it is so long ago, have forgotten,” and he was sure that it was sent to McGorray at Rochester; that thereafter the cross-complainants called Deputy Recorder Eschbacb, who brought with him said deed and testified that it had not been out of the recorder’s possession after it was filed for record. Afterward Mr. Carpenter had himself recalled, and he testified that the deed he sent might have been a prior deed executed in 1883, but it appeared that the said deed of 1891 was the only one that had ever been recorded. It is true that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
115 P. 268, 15 Cal. App. 461, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-ashley-calctapp-1911.