Hunter v. Randall

69 Me. 183, 1879 Me. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 18, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 Me. 183 (Hunter v. Randall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunter v. Randall, 69 Me. 183, 1879 Me. LEXIS 35 (Me. 1879).

Opinion

Libbey, J.

This is case against the defendant for malicious prosecution of the plaintiff for perjury.

The only exception to the charge, relied upon by the defendant’s counsel, is to giving the instruction requested by the plaintiff. It is not maintained that that part of the charge is not good [186]*186law; but it is claimed that it is not applicable to the ease ; that there is no evidence in the case which would authorize the jury to find a conspiracy between the defendant and Oliver to obtain the plaintiff’s money on the security of Oliver, and therefore the instruction should not have been given. Upon a careful consideration of the evidence, we cannot say that there is not enough in the case to authorize the instruction.

Certain requests for instructions were presented to the court by the defendant, which were given with some qualification, or not given at all except as appears in the charge, which is made a part of the case, and exceptions are taken thereto.

¥e shall consider the several requests in the order in which they are stated in the exceptions.

I. “ That the testimony of Hunter that he let Randall have $3,110 in 1868, if meant and understood as testimony delivered in support of his declaration for money had and received, is justifiable only in case Hunter had let him have money as a loan, accomodation, or otherwise, upon the credit of Randall.” This was given excepting the word only,” which was omitted.

This request is based upon the hypothesis that the plaintiff had no justification for giving the testimony recited, for which he was pi’osecuted, unless he had let the defendant have the money on his credit. The proposition shuts out all other theories.

The precise testimony given by the plaintiff, for which he was prosecuted by the defendant, does not appear in the report of the evidence. A full report of it was identified and verified by Mr. Pulsifer, the reporter, and was put in evidence, but it does not appear in the case. The evidence tends to prove that it was, in substance, that he let the defendant have $3,110 in 1868, and that it had not been paid to him; and that he was proceeding to state the facts and circumstances in the transactions between the parties, when objection thereto was made by the defendant’s counsel, and he was not permitted to testify to them.

The real issue upon which the jury was to pass, was not merely whether the defendant had probable cause to believe the plaintiff’s testimony false, but whether he had probable cause to believe the testimony wilfully and corruptly false. If the jury was satisfied [187]*187by the evidence that tbe plaintiff desired and was proceeding to state all tbe facts, in explanation of what he meant by his general declaration that he let the defendant have the money, and was prevented from so doing by the defendant’s objection, they might deem it very important upon the question whether the testimony was wilfully and corruptly false ; and whether the defendant had probable cause to believe it was so given. The request, if given, would shut out this view of the case from the consideration of the jury-

Again, the request excludes the plaintiff’s theory that the defendant and Oliver conspired together to fraudulently obtain the plaintiff’s money on the worthless securities of Oliver, and thereby induced him to deliver his money to the defendant, to be shared between them. If this theory was well founded, the plaintiff could recover under his count for money had and received, though he parted with his money on the credit of Oliver. And if the plaintiff testified as claimed, in support of the count, intending and attempting to follow his general statement with a detailed statement of the facts and circumstances tending to support that theory, and was prevented from doing so by the defendant’s objection, it would seem to negative the theory that his testimony was wilfully and corruptly false.

The request presented a partial view only of the case, and was properly refused without the modification made.

II. “ If it were true that Hunter let Handall have money for Oliver, as a loan to Oliver, that fact would not justify the testimony of Hunter that he let Handall have money as a loan, accommodation, or otherwise, to the credit of Handall.” This request was given with the word “ alone ” inserted after “ fact.”

This was sufficiently favorable to the defendant. The presiding judge ought not to have given the request without qualification, for the reasons we have stated above; and for the further reason that it assumes, as fact, that the plaintiff testified that he let the defendant have the money as a loan, accommodation, or otherwise, to his credit.

III. “If Hunter parted with his money, and took Oliver’s security for it, it was a loan to Oliver and not to Handall: and [188]*188upon the trial of the case for money had and received, it is immaterial whether the money went through Randall’s hands or not.” This request was qualified by inserting “ alone ” after security, and “ without relying upon Randall” after “for it.”

The request, as a legal proposition, is not correct. The plaintiff might have parted with his money on the credit of Randall, and still have taken Oliver’s security. He might have relied upon the credit of both. As given, it was correct and sufficiently favorable to the defendant.

IV. “That the transaction between Hunter and Randall, in which Hunter sold and endorsed notes to Randall for cash, and that in which Randall cashed the note or notes of Hunter, have no effect to charge Randall as indebted to Hunter ; nor do such transactions have any effect to justify Hunter’s testimony that he did let Randall have $3,110 in 1868.”

This request selects certain portions of the evidence tending to show the whole of the transactions between the parties, and asks the court to instruct the jury, as matter of law, that they have no effect upon the issues involved in the case. The evidence was introduced without objection. We caunot say that it was entirely irrelevant. It tended to show the interest the defendant took in procuring the money. It was proper for the consideration of the jury in connection with the other evidence in the case. The request was properly refused.

V. “ That, if Hunter’s loan was made to Oliver, and upon security given by Oliver, the testimony of Hunter to the effect that he let Randall have the money, is false; and Randall had probable cause.”

The request was properly refused. The court could not declare, as matter of law, that, if plaintiff’s testimony was false, the defendant had probable cause. The testimony may have been false, and still the defendant may have had good reason to believe that it was not wilfully and corruptly false.

VI. “ It is immaterial whether the security given by Oliver was or was not good and sufficient.”

This request was properly refused. If the security given was worthless we think it a material fact in the case.

[189]*189VII. “ In the consideration of the question whether the letter of June 23 was or was not written by Randall, the jury are to read and consider the contents of the writing, and see whether it is or is not consistent with known circumstances.”

What the known circumstances ” were, with which the jury were to compare the contents of the letter, does not appear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Me. 183, 1879 Me. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-randall-me-1879.