Kinghan v. Capps

1924 OK 726, 229 P. 224, 100 Okla. 269, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1000
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1924
Docket13179
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1924 OK 726 (Kinghan v. Capps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinghan v. Capps, 1924 OK 726, 229 P. 224, 100 Okla. 269, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1000 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

Tbe plaintiff in error, defendant below, will be referred to herein as defendant, and the defendant in error, plaintiff below, as plaintiff.

The facts out of which this case arose arc that defendant was operating an automobile repair and machine shop at Enid, Okla., and the plaintiff placed his automobile in defendant’s shop for repair. After the repair work had been completed the repair bill was fixed at $20 and plaintiff, after some protest tbat it was an excessive charge, wrote a check in payment of the bill and took his automobile out nf the shop. Afterwards he concluded from some information furnished him that he had been overcharged for the work, and talked with the defendant about the matter and defendant got mad and refused to make any adjustment of the bill, and the plaintiff stopped payment on the check. Defendant placed the $20 check in the hands of his attorney, who wrote some letters in an effort to collect it, and thereafter told defendant to take the matter up with the county attorney. Defendant took the check to the county attorney and asked for a warrant for the drawer of the check, plaintiff here. The matter of filing criminal complaint and issuance of warrant was held up by the county attorney; but because of the insistence of the payee, the defendant here, the county attorney prepared a complaint charging the plaintiff here with obtaining the sum of $20 under false pretense. The plaintiff was arrested and preliminary hearing was had on the criminal complaint, and at the close of the state’s testimony the justice of the peace sustained a demurrer thereto and discharged the defendant, the plaintiff here. The defendant here was the state’s principal witness in the criminal prosecution. After the plaintiff here was discharged in the criminal proceeding, he filed suit against this defendant for malicious prosecution. The petition was filed on December 18, 1920, in which the plaintiff charged that he was arrested without probable cause and had been discharged upon the hearing of the criminal charge, and that he had sustained damages by reason of tbe arrest and prosecution in the sum of $10,200. The answer denied the allegations of the petition, and for affirmative defense it was alleged that defendant acted upon advice of his attorney to whom he made a full and complete statement of the facts. The cause was tried to a jury on October 25, 1921, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in tbe sum of $500. The defendant prosecutes appeal.

The errors assigned are argued under three propositions;

(1) The court erred in admitting the evidence of J. V. Ratcliffe as to the judgment in the criminal action.

(2) The court erred in overruling the demurrer to the evidence offered by plaintiff in tbe trial court, and in overruling tbe motion for a directed verdict.

(3) The court erred in giving instruction No. 11.

In the trial it seems that the justice of the peace, before whom the preliminary trial on the criminal complaint was heard, was called as a witness and was permitted to testify that he sustained a demurrer to the state’s evidence and discharged the defendant. This was objected to for the rea *271 son that it was not the best evidence, and the objection was overruled and exception reserved to the ruling. It was further shown that the justice had not completed his docket entries by entering the demurrer and judgment sustaining the demurrer and discharging the defendant. The justice of the peace identified the jacket in which he kept the papers in the criminal case on which was indorsed the words “dismissed on demurrer.” The question was asked of the justice of the peace as to the outcome of the criminal prosecution, and was answered before an objection was made to the question, and after the answer was given an objection was interposed to the question. No motion was made to strike the answer. An objection made to a question after it is answered comes too late to save the point without a motion to strike the answer and a ruling on the motion. Further along in the testimony the justice of the peace was permitted to testify without objection that the plaintiff (defendant in .the criminal proceeding) was discharged. Afterwards, on cross-examination of the justice of the peace by counsel for defendant, the docket entries of the justice in the criminal proceeding were read into the record by defendant’s eounsél. It shows a notation that a criminal complaint was sworn to by defendant, but does not show what disposition was made of the case, and in answer to questions propounded by the court the justice testified that he discharged the defendant upon the states testimony and made an entry upon the jacket holding the papers. All that was attempted to be proven by the justice of the peace was that the plaintiff had been arrested upon a complaint made by the defendant, and that a hearing was had and the defendant (plaintiff here) discharged. It is difficult to understand how the defendant in this case could have been prejudiced by the statement of the justice of the peace, that upon a hearing of the criminal charge he released the defendant (plaintiff here). If the objection had been technically correct and the statements of the justice of the peace only secondary evidence, no harmful consequences could follow to the defendant. It was not in dispute that plaintiff was discharged in the criminal proceeding. The plaintiff himself was permitted, without objection, to testify that he was released from the criminal charge upon a hearing before the justice of the peace. If the justice of the peace had completed his docket, all that could have been established thereby was that a hearing was had on the criminal charge and the party released. The defendant was not defending in the damage suit on the theory that plaintiff had not been released upon the hearing of the criminal charge. His defense was that he had disclosed all the facts to his attorney and to the county attorney, and that the prosecution was in good faith based upon an honest belief that a crime had been, committed.

Under the circumstances presented here, we refuse to find reversible error because the justice of the peace was permitted to testify that he discharged the plaintiff in the hearing on the criminal complaint.

The defendant complains of error of the trial court in overruling the defendant's' demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence, and in overruling the motion for a directed verdict. We have carefully examined the evidence adduced by the plaintiff, and it tends strongly to show that there was no probable cause for believing that a crime had been committed. The plaintiff made objection to the charge of $20 for the work done, and under protest gave a check. Afterwards ho thoroughly convinced himself that he had been charged too much, and stopped payment on the check after advising with his banker. The plaintiff stopped the payment, evidently, so that he mieht ere* a proper adjustment of the bill. He had, at the time, about $1,600 in the bank. No effort was made to collect the amount from plaintiff although he had ample funds out of which the check could have been collected. According to the information gotten by the plaintiff he had been overcharged by the defendant something like $15 for the work done.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 726, 229 P. 224, 100 Okla. 269, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinghan-v-capps-okla-1924.