Grant v. Deuel

3 Rob. 17
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 3 Rob. 17 (Grant v. Deuel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Deuel, 3 Rob. 17 (La. 1842).

Opinion

Garland, J.

This is*an action to recover damages- for a malicious prosecution, and for the injury sustained by the plaintiff’s character and health in consequence of it, and of his confinement in prison at an inclement season of the year. There was a judgment rendered on the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

At the November Term, 1841, of the District Court in the parish of St. Landry, the plaintiff was indicted and tried, with another person, for stealing some hogs, alleged to have belonged to the defendant, and acquitted of the charge. Being unable to give the bail required for his appearance, the plaintiff was confined in prison for several days previous to his trial, in cold weather, where it appears that he suffered considerably from the want of sufficient bedding and clothing; and it is shown that he was after-wards much indisposed in consequence of the exposure and confinement. The prosecution was commenced at the instance of the defendant, who called on the District Attorney, told him that he had been informed that the plaintiff and another person had been stealing his hogs, named the witnesses by whom the crime could be proved, and requested the attorney for the State to lay the matter before the Grand Jury.

To maintain this action, it is necessary to prove ; first, that the plaintiff was prosecuted ; second, that the defendant was the prosecutor ; third, that the defendant was actuated by malicious motives; and fourth, that there was no probable cause for the prosecution.’

That the plaintiff is the person who was prosecuted is not.denied. That the prosecution was commenced in consequence of the complaint made by Deuel to the District Attorney is unquestiona[19]*19ble. He was not, perhaps, a prosecutor, in the legal meaning of the term in England and in many of the States where the common law prevails, yet he was the actor or moving cause in the prosecution, and is liable in damages for any injuries the plaintiff may have sustained, unless protected by law. 2 Starkie on Evidence, 908. 2 Bouvier’s Law Dic. 306. 1 Chit. Cr. Law, 1 to 10.

The malicious intention of the defendant may be established in two modes ; first, by proving express malice ; second, by showing that there was no probable cause for the prosecution. If the first be proved, still some evidence of want of probable cause must be given; but, slight evidence will be sufficient. 2 Starkie on Ev. 914. 1 Camp. 203. The fact of malice is usually inferred from the want of any probable cause or excuse for the prosecution. 2 Starkie, 912. 1 Salkeld, 14. 1 Lord Raymond, 374. Addison’s Rep. 270.

The plaintiff has endeavored to prove express malice in this case, in which we think he has not succeeded. His counsel, urges, that malice is shown from the conversation which took place between the parties in presence of the witness Thayer. The purport of this conversation was, that defendant told the plaintiff he had understood that he (plaintiff) had been stealing some of his (defendant’s) hogs, which he had purchased from Caswell, and threatened to prosecute him for it. Deuel said he would have his hogs or he would prosecute. He told Grant in what way he got the hogs, and said that he would prosecute any one who should take them. Grant admitted he had killed some hogs for Caswell or his wife, and something was said about selling the hogs. In these remarks, we cannot discover that wicked and perverse disposition which shows a heart regardless of social duty, and bent on mis-( chief. They indicate that state of feeling, which would arise in | the bosom of most men when informed that their property had.| been unlawfully taken from them, and when they saw the suppos- 1 ed wrong-doer before them.

It is further urged, that the defendant entertained malicious feelings towards the plaintiff, because he had failed in his impro-, per designs upon the person of a married daughter of Caswell’s wife, and- in consequence of the not very delicate remarks made. [20]*20to him by the plaintiff. It appears to us that this is rather a strained conclusion. The plaintiff is not in any manner connected with the two females in question. He does not appear to have been informed of the designs of the defendant, or to have interfered in any manner with his purposes ; it is, therefore, difficult to believe that the defendant, on that account, entertained towards him any such malicious feeling as would induce the commission of an unlawful' and wicked act. The plaintiff and defendant had never had any difficulty previously. They lived a considerable distance apart, and were but slightly acquainted with each other. If the defendant entertained any malicious feelings, in consequence of his alleged disappointment, they would most probably have been vented upon Caswell’s wife, as it is shown, that she was the person who employed the plaintiff to kill the hogs, and received the fruits of his labor.

The inference of malice is involved in the question of probable cause, which we will now consider. This is a question of law, arising out of the facts.

Where a party prosecutes another on a criminal charge, it is a well settled rulé of law, founded on principles of policy and convenience, that the prosecutor shall be protected, though his private motives may have been malicious, provided he had probable cause for preferring the charge. 1 Term Rep. 520. 1 Salkeld, 14, 15, 21. This protection is not only one of convenience, but of jus(tice and necessity ; and if proof of want of probable cause were 1 not required on the part of a plaintiff, every prosecutor would be exposed to an action, in every case of acquittal. There must be some positive evidence to show that the prosecution was groundless. 2 Starkie on Ev. 913. 15 La. 279. 2 Wash. C. C. R. 465. 1 Peters’Dig. 62, Nos. 300, 301.

It is not sufficient, on the part of the plaintiff, to show that he was acquitted of the charge ; he must prove that there was no reasonable ground for it. 9 East, 361, 363. It is not necessary, in the present case, to detail all the evidence given on the trial, to show that there was no probable cause for the indictment. It was, in our opinion, sufficient to authorize the acquittal of the plaintiff; but it "is not every verdict of “ not guilty”, nor even subsequent proof of complete innocence, that shows a want of proba[21]*21ble cause in the incipient stages of a prosecution. A man’s conduct may, from his folly, his neglect, or his ignorance, be such as to justify a suspicion of guilt, and produce a prosecution in the course of which it may be made to appear that he is clearly innocent; but this will not authorize an action for a malicious prosecution. But independent of the facts of a case, there are certain acts on the part of the tribunals, which the law says go very far to show probable cause. If it appear that the jury, on the trial of the plantiff, entertained doubts about the evidence, and deliberated as to his guilt after the case was concluded, it seems to be evidence of probable cause. 2 Starkie on Ev. 916. 3 Esp. R. 7.

In Massachusetts it has been held that the conviction of the plaintiff by a justice having jurisdiction of the offence, is conclusive evidence of probable cause, although he was acquitted on appeal. 15 Mass. 243.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Rob. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-deuel-la-1842.