Gattshall v. Sizemore

281 P.2d 400, 71 Nev. 106, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 67
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1955
Docket3835
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 281 P.2d 400 (Gattshall v. Sizemore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gattshall v. Sizemore, 281 P.2d 400, 71 Nev. 106, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 67 (Neb. 1955).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment for plaintiff for damages for defendant’s malicious prosecution of him *107 on a charge of burglary. The main question presented is whether the evidence supports the trial court’s finding of lack of probable cause and its inference of malice.

On Gattshall’s criminal complaint Sizemore was arrested on a warrant charging him with first degree burglary of Gattshall’s premises near Fallon, Churchill County, Nevada, and stealing therefrom a saddle and other personal property. At the preliminary hearing Sizemore was dismissed. Thereafter he commenced his action against Gattshall in the district court for damages for Gattshall’s alleged malicious prosecution, and recovered a judgment of $417. This sum included items of expense of transportation from his camp in Berniece Canyon to the justice’s court, the loss of six days’ mining operations of a profitable antimony property, expense of board and room while attending the preliminary hearing, and sundry other trial expense, all totaling $416. To this the learned district judge added the sum of $1 for that Sizemore was filched of his good name and made poor indeed. Gattshall feels aggrieved at being ordered to pay these sums — not indeed because of Size-more’s vindication but because of Gattshall’s lack of malice in the prosecution — because, in short, Sizemore had not proved lack of probable cause for his accusation. Out of this accusation an involved and dramatic sequence of events developed.

In February, 1952, a utility room on Gattshall’s premises neár Fallon was burglarized, and property stolen therefrom included Gattshall’s valuable saddle. Late in ■1953 Gattshall received word through a friend, Willie Harrison, that a saddle of similar description had been seen in Austin, Nevada, the preceding summer. Gattshall went to Austin and asked the sheriff to investigate. The sheriff did so and, in a letter, communicated the results to Gattshall. This was to the effect that the ranch owner contacted by the sheriff had seen the saddle in the possession of an employee, who was later identified as Max Aldrid. In a second letter the sheriff gave his version of what happened — that Aldrid had got the saddle on a *108 trade from Sizemore; that in trade for the saddle Aldrid traded to Sizemore a horse belonging to Marvin Gandolfo. Now this at first blush would appear to indicate a rather highhanded dealing with other people’s property. But so far no one had verified a single one of the essential facts. Gandolfo’s horse never again came into the picture. Neither did Gandolfo. Aldrid, it is true, had a saddle. And here is the description furnished by Willie Harrison that satisfied Gattshall that the Aldrid saddle was the Gattshall saddle. The quotation is from Gatshall’s testimony: “Exceptionally well made saddle, out of extra good leather, custom made saddle, * * * type of leather * * * type of skirts and rigging.”

We may be pardoned for dwelling on this description, for it was what satisfied Gattshall that the saddle was his. Unless this Aldrid saddle, obtained in a trade from Sizemore, was the Gattshall saddle, any suspicion of Sizemore’s connection with the burglary was entirely without any basis or foundation of any kind whatsoever. So we take first and discard as of no identifying value the fact that it was made of extra good leather. Thousands of saddles are so made. We next take and likewise discard the fact that the saddle was exceptionally well made. Thousands will meet that description. We examine next the fact that it was a custom-made saddle. Now the learned district judge, like most of us of the bar and bench of Nevada, was a product of the cow country. He undoubtedly knew that in times past it was the ambition of every $40 a month cowpuncher to own a custom-made saddle, for which he was willing to pay a month’s wages, and that if cowpunchers are now getting $200 a month, the $40 saddle of earlier days probably costs $200; that the mere fact that a saddle is custom made is not an identification; that if the fact that it was custom made had any significance it was in the fact that a custom-made saddle might well bear the owner’s initials tooled in the leather of the cantle. An example of this lies in the fact that the Aldrid saddle, traced to the *109 original ownership of J. Elmer Williams, had the initials J.E.W. on the cantle. And the district judge undoubtedly knew that a custom-made saddle invariably bears the stamp of the maker — by no means identification of an individual saddle, but certainly limiting the field; that Visalia Stock Saddle Co., D. E. Walker, G. S. Garcia, J. M. Capriola and others are bynames for custom-made saddles in Nevada and throughout a large part of the West. But it appears that Willie Harrison also described the type of skirts and rigging. Now both of these items are of importance to one having his saddle custom made. Like Hebrew scholars arguing for hours over the meaning of a sentence of the Talmud, a pair of western cowmen will hold forth on the merits and demerits of a square-skirted saddle and a round-skirted saddle, respectively. The end result, as probably catalogued by the learned district judge, is that there are about as many square-skirted saddles as round-skirted saddles. That the skirts would supply a distinction is undoubtedly true. One seeking a square-skirted saddle would know that a round-skirted saddle discovered in his search would not be the saddle sought. And vice versa. But that a certain saddle was the one sought by him because, forsooth, it had round skirts, as did his, is no more convincing than that a cow was his because it was brockle-faced or because it was red. That the “rigging” was described is likewise without value as an identification. As the district judge probably knew, in the range country of Nevada a saddle is “single rigged” if it is equipped with one cinch and “double rigged” if it is equipped with two cinches. Styles change and preferences change and double-rigged saddles come and go. Like the shape of the skirts, the merits and demerits of single-rigged and double-rigged saddles are the subject of much argument. 1 Even if one credits Willie Harri *110 son’s description of the rigging to have been more technical — to have fixed the location of the single rig as either “three-quarter” or “center-fire,” the most we have is limitation to a class and not identification of an individual. We do not even know what Willie Harrison said about the rigging. And though Willie Harrison described the leather as “extra good,” he made no mention of the design stamped thereon — whether it was the familiar flower design, or basket design, or plain with only a border design. We emphasize these matters in view of the fact that Gattshall was repeatedly asked for the *111 “description” given him by Harrison, to “go in detail and describe it,” to tell if there were “any distinguishing characteristics.” The district judge heard these questions and the entirely unsatisfying answers. But Willie Harrison apparently knew Gattshall’s saddle. He knew that it was a custom-made saddle.

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Bluebook (online)
281 P.2d 400, 71 Nev. 106, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gattshall-v-sizemore-nev-1955.