Chapman v. Nash

89 A. 117, 121 Md. 608, 1913 Md. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 89 A. 117 (Chapman v. Nash) 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
Chapman v. Nash, 89 A. 117, 121 Md. 608, 1913 Md. LEXIS 84 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the defendants’ appeal from a judgment recovered by the appellee against them in a suit for malicious prosecution. The suit was brought against the W. J. Chapman Coal Company, a corporation, Horace Isaac, and the appellants. At the conclusion of the appellee’s testimony the Court in *610 structed the jury to find their verdict in favor of Isaac and the Coal Company, and thereupon the plaintiff submitted to a non-pros as to those defendants and the case proceeded against the appellants.

William J. Chapman is the president of the coal company, and G. Walter Jackson is the secretary. At the conclusion of the whole case the appellants asked the Court to direct a verdict in their favor upon the ground that the plaintiff had offered no legally sufficient evidence of a want of probable cause for the prosecution. The Court rejected this prayer. The first and most important question in the case is the propriety of the ruling upon that prayer. When such a prayer is offered at the end of all the evidence, both for the plaintiff and the defendants, “the Court must consider tiie whole evidence and not that of the plaintiff alone, for that offered by the defendant may supply any defect in the proof of the plaintiff. The Consolidated Railway Co. v. Pierce, 89 Md. 495. The prayer is a demurrer to the whole evidence. The Court in dealing with it will assume the truth of the facts adduced in support of the plaintiff’s case, and it will consider such other facts appearing in the record which have been proved and not contradicted or denied by the plaintiff. The Court upon such a prayer must not assume to decide controverted questions of fact, but will leave all such facts to the determination of the jury. The rule by which the Court will be guided in considering such a prayer, offered after all the evidence is in, is thus stated by Judge Alvey in the case of Bacon v. Baltimore & Potomac R. R. Co., 58 Md. 482:

“For while it is perfectly true that where the plaintiff adduces evidence which, if uncontradicted, will justify and sustain a verdict, no amount of contradictory evidence, however strong, will justify the Court in withdrawing the case from the jury; yet, if it be proved as part of the plaintiff’s case, or if it be otherwise proved, or not controverted or denied by the plaintiff, that the party injured or killed was clearly guilty of negligence in the occurrence of the accident, *611 and that such accident would not have occurred but for the negligence of the party injured, directly contributing thereto — in such case, the defendant is entitled to have the jury instructed that their verdict must be for the defendant. The facts are taken as established, and the question then becomes one of law for the Court, to be passed upon and decided as upon a demurrer to the evidence. There is no office to be performed by the jury unless there is a contest in regard to the material facts involved in the issue or question to be decided, and if the facts, sufficient in themselves to establish clearly the contributory negligence on the part of the party injured,’be either admitted or shown in proof by the plaintiff while attempting to prove negligence on the part of the defendant, the Court is well justified in acting upon such proof as true and in directing the jury accordingly.” This rule was applied in Thelin v. Dorsey, 59 Md. 539, and Hooper v. Vernon, 74 Md. 136, both cases of malicious prosecution. In Thelin’s case, the Court said: “The law controlling a ease of this kind is so fully and clearly expounded by this Court in Boyd v. Cross, 35 Md. 197; Cooper v. Utterbach, 37 Md. 318; Stansbury v. Fogle, 37 Md. 381; Cecil v. Clarke, 17 Md. 508; and Medcalfe v. Ins. Co., 45 Md. 205, that we have only need in this case to reaffirm the principles therein announced. In substance those cases determine, that in order to enable the plaintiff to recover in a suit for malicious prosecution, he will be required, in addition to the fact that he was prosecuted and acquitted, to show that he was prosecuted at the instance of the defendants,” and that such prosecution was both malicious and without probable cause on the part of the defendants.” In is also fully settled in those cases, that “the want of probable cause is a mixed question of law and fact.” “As to the existence of the facts relied on to constitute the want of probable cause — that is a question for the jury; but what will amount to the want of proboMe cause in any case is a question of law for the Court.” “If the evidence adduced be legally insufficient to be submitted to the jury to prove each of the elements of the plaintiff’s case,” his action will *612 “be pronounced groundless and tbe defendant not be called on for his defense.” Boyd v. Cross, 35 Md. 196. All the cases referred to adopt the definition of Judge Wasiiihgtoh in Munns v. Dupont, 3 Wash. C. C. 31, of probable cause. It is:

“Such reasonable ground of suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves, to warrant a cautious man in believing the party accused to be guilty. It is wholly immaterial whether the party was guilty or not, if the facts known to the defendant, and only known to him. were such as would warrant ‘a, cautious man’ in believing the party was guilty.”

In the light of these principles, we will examine the material and uncontradicted facts appearing in the record, and in dealing with them we must, as stated in the case of Hooper v. Vernon, supra,, consider them in the light in which they appeared to -the defendants when they instituted the prosecution.

There was no evidence offered by the defendants which would aid the plaintiff upon the question of the want of probable cause, and that question must be determined upon the undisputed facts in evidence.

The plaintiff is a son of Charles M. Nash, who lived in Baltimore County, about twenty-five miles from the city, and- who was engaged in the business of buying hay in the county and hauling it to Baltimore City and selling it to various purchasers. Among his purchasers was the Chapman Coal Company, to which he had sold hay for about two years prior to August 10, 1911, on which date the occurrenqes took place which led to the prosecution of the plaintiff and his father upon the criminal charge hereinafter mentioned. The plaintiff was then about nineteen years old and had been driving the hay wagon for about two years, and during those years no one else to his knowledge had hauled hay to the Coal Company for his father. The father owned two wagons which he used in hauling, hay to the city; one of *613 these wagons was heavier than the other. The hay carriages of the two wagons were different in color — that of the heavy wagon was bine and that of the lighter one was red.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 117, 121 Md. 608, 1913 Md. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-nash-md-1913.