Haddad v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.

88 S.E. 1038, 77 W. Va. 710, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 216
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 88 S.E. 1038 (Haddad v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haddad v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 88 S.E. 1038, 77 W. Va. 710, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 216 (W. Va. 1916).

Opinion

LyNch, Judge:

Plaintiff complains of the rulings of the trial court' upon defendant's demurrer, sustained, to her declaration, and nil capiat judgment, she having elected to stand on the averments of the first count thereof and declined to amend it. The action is trespass on the case for malicious prosecution. "The declaration charges, in extenso, that defendant, without probable cause, maliciously procured the arrest, indictment and conviction of plaintiff in the intermediate court of Kanawha county for larceny, reversal of the judgment and award of a new trial on writ of error to the circuit court of the county, . her subsequent discharge from custody and dismissal by nolle prosequi from further prosecution. The reason alleged for the reversal was the trial court’s misconception of the law of the ease, and the resultant misdirection of the jury that rendered the verdict in the criminal proceeding.

To recover in an action for malicious prosecution, plaintiff must aver and prove malice, and want of probable cause for the criminal or civil proceeding alleged to be malicious. Although both elements are essential, yet if defendant in a civil action had probable cause for the criminal prosecution the malice prompting it thereby becomes immaterial,'for reasons of public policy.

No invariable rule has been or can be prescribed for determining what facts or circumstances may authorize an inference of probable cause in any given ease. Generally, however, when limited to criminal offenses, it may be said that probable cause arises out of facts and circumstances sufficiently cogent and persuasive to induce a prudent and cautious man, acting in good faith and from justifiable motives, to believe the accused guilty.

This inference of guilt is re-enforced by each successive [712]*712stage of the proceeding until it finally results in a conviction. The issuance of a warrant of arrest, the commitment or requirement of bail to answer an indictment, and presentment by a grand jury tend to strengthen the presumption or inference of the probability of guilt. Of this generally recognized proposition it is said in Sheffington v. Eylward, 97 Minn. 241: “Ordinarily if a court having jurisdiction has, upon a full and fair trial, proceeded to conviction it must have had before it such evidence as would convince a prudent and reasonable man of the guilt of the accused. Therefore, while a subsequent reversal may show that the accused was in fact innocent, yet it does not show there ivas no probable cause for believing him guilty”. And an unreversed judgment of -conviction is conclusive evidence of probable cause, and prevents recovery in an action for malicious prosecution.

But what effect shall be given in such action to a verdict and judgment which on appellate process are reversed and "the accused discharged from further prosecution on the remand of the case, is a question as to which exists a great ■variety of discordant views. The courts of some jurisdictions. have held that, when it appears from the allegations in the ■declaration, admitted to be true on demurrer, the conviction resulted from a misconception of the law of the ease, as ■averred in this action, while not restoring plaintiff to her status before the trial under the indictment, the conviction is prima facie proof of probable cause, and, unless overcome by testimony of such preponderant weight a.s to establish in the mind of the court want of probable cause, the burden ■of which devolves on plaintiff, the presumption will defeat recovery by her. According to Sheffington v. Eylward, .supra, “in an action for malicious'prosecution a conviction of the plaintiff which was reversed on appeal is not conclusive, but strong prima facie evidence of probable cause, which may be rebutted by evidence tending to show that the conviction was procured by fraud or perjury, and also by any competent evidence which satisfies the jury that the prosecutor did not have probable cause for instituting the prosecution”. This conclusion finds approval in Goodrich v. Warner, 21 Conn. 432, holding conclusive a conviction by a justice until reversed, and thereafter prima facie evidence of probable cause [713]*713and as such “entitled to great'consideration”; in Olson v. Neal, 63 Ia. 214, and Miller v. Runkle, 137 Ia. 155, holding a reversed judgment of a magistrate prima facie and not conclusive evidence of probable cause, subject to contradiction by proof sufficient to show want of probable cause or that the judgment was without foundation in law, and that if not so contradicted Or impeached the judgment will of itself establish the existence of probable cause and thereby defeat recovery in the subsequent action; in Maynard v. Sigman, 63 Neb. 590. holding that the presumption -arising from the reversed judgment of conviction rendered by a justice may be rebutted bjr evidence which destroys the natural probative force of the verdict or judgment; and in Nicholson v. Sternberg, 70 N. Y. S. 212, holding that a like inference based on a judgment of conviction by a justice may be destroyed by proof of fraud in its procurement or of anjr other facts and circumstances bearing on the subject,'thus making the question of probable cause one of fact for the jury upon all the evidence in the case.

In New York it is to be observed from Nicholson v. Sternberg, supra, and Francisco v. Schmeelk, 141 N. Y. S. 402, the court, while giving a conclusive effect to a conviction in a tribunal having general jurisdiction, concedes only a prima facie quality to a conviction by a magistrate. In no other jurisdiction, so far as we are advised, does this distinction obtain, although it may be that sometimes little weight is due to the conclusion of minor officials for the reasons assigned by the New York tribunal. And in other states no greater credit or weight is accorded to reversed, judgments of conviction in courts of record than convictions before justices.

The appellate courts of most jurisdictions, however, have adopted and adhered to the principle that a judgment of conviction, although reversed, continues to be conclusive proof of probable cause for the criminal accusation. That conclusiveness seems to be based on the general deduction that, when the facts on which the accusation is predicated were such as to generate in the mind of a reasonable man, moved by proper motives, a belief in the guilt of the accused, and the inquisitorial and trial juries, upon an ex parte investigation in the first instance and a full hearing under the super[714]*714vision and direction of the 'trial judge in the second, have concurred in such belief, the inquiry as to the existence of probable cause thereby should be foreclosed and a further investigation precluded, except for fraud or perjury. Or, as said by the supreme court of the United States in Live Stock Co. v. Slaughter House Co., 120 U. S. 141, “the judgment of the court in favor of the plaintiff is conclusive proof of probable cause for the prosecution of the suit alleged to be malicious, notwithstanding its subsequent reversal by an appellate court, unless it be shown to have been obtained by means of fraud”. It has been held by many appellate courts, with the same reservation as to fraud, that “the allegation of facts which are prima facie

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.E. 1038, 77 W. Va. 710, 1916 W. Va. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haddad-v-chesapeake-ohio-railway-co-wva-1916.