Kansas & Texas Coal Co. v. Galloway

74 S.W. 521, 71 Ark. 351, 1903 Ark. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 9, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 521 (Kansas & Texas Coal Co. v. Galloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas & Texas Coal Co. v. Galloway, 74 S.W. 521, 71 Ark. 351, 1903 Ark. LEXIS 55 (Ark. 1903).

Opinion

Bunn, C. J.

This is a suit for malicious prosecution, originating in the G-reenwood district circuit court of Sebastian county, and tried on a change of venue in the Scott county circuit court by a jury. Yerdict' and judgment in the sum of $500 in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendants duly and in due time1 appealed to this court.

The malicious prosecution complained of in the present suit arose from the following circumstances, according to the abstracts in the case: There was a strike, commencing February 1, 1899, throughout this (Sebastian) county, which embraced the miners in the employment of the Kansas & Texas Coal Company at Huntington in said county. The said coal company employed a great many negroes, presumably to fill the places of the strikers, some of whom it had shipped by carloads from other counties. We gather, from the evidence and statements made in the progress of the trial in the court below, that this strike was the occasion of much excitement and anxiety in the eommunitjr, and on the 22d day of April, 1899, the Kansas & Texas Coal Company, being ex- , tensively engaged in operating its mines in the vicinity of the said town of Huntington, sued out in the United States circuit court, of the Western district of Arkansas, at Fort Smith, an order of ijunction, whereby said court enjoined and restrained said strikg miners from interfering in any manner whatsoever with the úness of said coal company; from intimidating its employees, rg force or violence or unlawful persuasion to induce them to leave the employment of said coal company; from deterring others from entering the services of the said company, and from doing any act to prevent said company and its managers and employees from exercising free control over its said business and its property there or elsewhere; and the plaintiff herein, with one George Bunch and others, was made defendant in said injunction proceeding, served with process, and was put under said order of injunction and restraint, and such injunction was in full force and effect, when an encounter of considerable violence occurred in the said town of Huntington between the said Gus Galloway, George Bunch and McGowan, the town marshal, all alleged to be of the strikers or in strong sympathy and close connection with them, on the one part, and one Albert Evans, an employee of the-company, and one Battles, on the other part, as set forth in an affidavit of Joseph M. Hill, one of the attorneys of the company, made on the 5th of July, 1899, as part of a petition of the company for a warrant of arrest to have the plaintiff brought before said court for violating said order of injunction on the occasion named, which was on the 3d day of July, 1899, and, leaving out mere formal parts, -is as follows, to-wit: “That Gus Galloway and George Bunch, two of the defendants named in said complaint (for the. injunction), and upon whom process had been duly served, did on the 3d day of July, 1899, intimidate, threaten, maltreat and attempt to coerce said Albert Evans, one of the employees of the plaintiff, by beating, cursing and abusing him, the said Albert Evans; that the object and purpose of such intimidation, coercion and threats was to prevent the said Albert Evans [from] laboring for the plaintiff, and to injure him on account of the fact that he was employed by the plaintiff. Wherefore writ of attachment was prayed against the said Bunch and Galloway, that they be brought before the court, and there dealt with according to law.”

On the 7th of July, 1899, another affidavit by the same party, as attorney for the coal company, was filed in said court charging' the plaintiff herein and others with the violation of said order of injunction on the 5th day of July, 1899, which said affidavit, after setting forth the petition- or order of injunction made thereon, contained the recital and prayer, to-wit:

“That, while said injunction was still in force and effect and after service upon said defendants, to-wit, on the 5th day of July, 1899, the said defendants, in furtherance of a conspiracy and combination to hinder the plaintiff and its officers and employees in the free and unhindered control of its business, did violate said injunction in the following manner, to-wit, the said George Bunch and Gus Galloway did direct and assist in the formation of a large number-of persons in the town of Huntington who avowed their intentions of going to the mine of the plaintiff (coal company) known as' “Mine No. 53,” and then and there forcibly and violently eject the employees of the plaintiff therefrom, and cause said employees to cease working for plaintiff; that, in furtherance of said combination and conspiracy, in which the said George Bunch and Gus Galloway participated, sentinels were established along the various roads leading between the town of Huntington and said mine. No one was permitted to go to said mine except by the consent of said sentinels, and emissaries were sent to the employees of the company to unlawfully persuade them to leave the employment of the company. And by carrying out said threatening combination and conspiracy the said George Bunch and Gus Galloway, in company with various and divers others, did intimidate and cause many of the employees of the company to leave its employ on account of fear of personal violence to them, tbe said employees, by reason of such threats made by said combination of persons. That said George Bunch and Gus Galloway participated, aided, assisted and abetted in all the acts and deeds of such combination and conspiracy existing in the town of Huntington on the 5th day of July, 1899.” Prayer for attachment and arrest of said Gus Galloway and George Bunch, and that they be dealt with according to law for contempt in violating the injunction of said court.

Galloway was accordingly arrested on the warrant issued on the two affidavits on the 7th of July, 1899, by the Hnited States marshal of the district, and carried to Fort Smith, and there by the order of said court was committed to the Hnited States jail, where he was imprisoned six or seven days to await the investigation of the charges of contempt made against him in the affidavits aforesaid, filed by the attorney of the said company as aforesaid, and on the 14th day of July, 1899, on the hearing of the evidence in the cause, he was fully discharged by said court.

This arrest and imprisonment and subsequent discharge of the plaintiff, Gus Galloway, constitute the ground of this his suit for malicious prosecution against the said Kansas & Texas Coal Company and its manager, Bennett Brown, who answered the complaint, the first paragraph of which is a demurrer to the complaint, and in the other paragraphs they specifically deny each and every material allegation of the complaint, to which complaint are attached the warrant of arrest, the injunction of the court in full, and the judgment of discharge of the court in the contempt proceedings, and they.are made exhibits thereto.

Trial before a jury. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $500 against the defendants, and they'in due time and in due form appeal to this court.

In this kind of proceeding it ¿[evolves upon the plaintiff to show affirmatively that there was both malice and a want of probable cause on the part of the defendants in the prosecution of the contempt proceedings against the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 521, 71 Ark. 351, 1903 Ark. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-texas-coal-co-v-galloway-ark-1903.