Lucas v. Kaylor

299 P. 297, 136 Or. 541, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 120
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 299 P. 297 (Lucas v. Kaylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucas v. Kaylor, 299 P. 297, 136 Or. 541, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 120 (Or. 1931).

Opinion

*542 BEAN, C. J.

This is an action for damages for malicious prosecution. A verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff. Prom a consequent judgment defendant appeals.

The circumstances pertaining to the matter, so far as it is deemed necessary to relate, are about as follows: On the 12th of December, 1928, the defendant Kaylor exchanged five hundred shares of Myers Yalve stock with plaintiff Lucas and Mrs. M. Bruce for certain household furniture located in an apartment house and in a small building in the backyard of the apartment house in Portland, Oregon, a list of which furniture was attached to the bill of sale executed to Kaylor; thereafter, under a contract with Kaylor, Lucas and Mrs. Bruce occupied the premises until the 13th of April, 1929. The furniture had been transferred to Lucas and Mrs. Bruce by a third party and an inventory made thereof, which was taken as a description at the time of the deal with defendant. Kaylor did not check the list.

The testimony tended to show that, during the time Lucas and Mrs. Bruce occupied the premises, they had furniture and goods of their own in the building and also some that had been left by tenants as security for rent, and some stored by other parties. Some time prior to the 12th of April, 1929, defendant had a prospective purchaser for his furniture, one Mrs. Disbrow, who called at the apartment house to examine the goods. The plaintiff states that he endeavored to get the defendant to inventory his goods in the apartment house in order to enable plaintiff to be ready to move therefrom, but was unable to do so. About April 11, the defendant Kaylor and Mrs. Disbrow, as he asserts, went to the rooming house for the purpose of check *543 ing its contents, when a dispute arose as to the list or inventory of the furniture belonging to the defendant, which he had at that time. The defendant then arranged for an attorney to go with Mrs. Disbrow the following morning to the rooming house, giving the attorney the inventory for the purpose of checking the contents. Upon their arrival they found a large moving van then being loaded with furniture and household effects taken from the premises, and they protested to the plaintiff that he was apparently removing the property belonging to defendant. After some argument the attorney for Mrs. Disbrow advised defendant of the fact that the furniture and household effects on the premises were being moved away by the plaintiff. Thereupon the defendant obtained from the district attorney a complaint, which he signed, charging the plaintiff with grand larceny, and a warrant was secured from Municipal Judge Stadter. Plaintiff was arrested and confined in jail until the following day, when he furnished bail. On April 15, 1929, the ease against plaintiff came on for hearing before Municipal Judge Stadter, as ex officio justice of the peace. The court, after hearing some of the testimony, advised Mr. Kaylor, the prosecuting witness, that the magistrate desired more specific information as to just what articles of furniture had been taken and removed by plaintiff. Kaylor informed the magistrate that he was certain about half of the goods was gone, and the magistrate advised him that he would hold the ease open indefinitely until he made a check of the goods or he could go before the grand jury. The magistrate made an entry in the record at the time “Cont. Indef.” Thereafter he ran a line through the words “Con. Indef.” and wrote the word “Discharged.” On the same date a formal order was made and signed by *544 the judge to the effect that the defendant Lucas had been duly examined and it appeared from the testimony that the crime of grand larceny “has not been committed and that there is not sufficient cause to believe defendant guilty thereof. Defendant discharged. ’ ’

Upon the trial of the present, case, after the introduction of all the testimony, the defendant Kaylor moved the court for a directed verdict in his favor, which was denied. It appears that the defendant Kaylor completed checking the goods, which he claimed, on April 18. The testimony strongly tends to show that the furniture which plaintiff moved from the apartment house belonged to him or that it had been stored there by others, and that he took none of the goods which he had sold to defendant Kaylor or which belonged to Kaylor. It seems that the furniture plaintiff took from the apartment house was moved to Vancouver, only a short distance, but it does not appear that defendant had the goods examined, and it is doubtful if the defendant would know any of his furniture, except by the inventory which he had obtained.

The defendant assigns error of the court in refusing to direct a verdict in his favor. There was some contradictory evidence, as usual,' but the testimony strongly tended to support the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint and to show that there was no probable cause for plaintiff’s arrest and prosecution.

As one of the grounds for a directed verdict in favor of defendant, he states

“That the defendant made a full and fair statement of all the facts to his attorney and to the district attorney of Multnomah county before signing the complaint for a warrant. ’ ’

It is difficult to understand how the defendant could have made a full and fair statement to the dis *545 trict attorney before signing the complaint. He evidently knew little or nothing about the matter himself, He had sent Mrs. Disbrow and Mr. Warrington, his attorney, to the rooming-house and they had reported to him that Lucas was moving the furniture away from the premises. They were not familiar with the furniture and did not know whose it was. Defendant did not investigate to ascertain whose goods plaintiff was moving. As to stating the facts to the officer, it was a controverted question which was for the determination of the jury: Marshall v. Brown, 108 Or. 658, 662 (218 P. 923). Mr. Hoesly, deputy district attorney, testified as follows:

“so I gave him the warrant and told him it was a’very serious proposition, having someone arrested, was very serious, and that ‘I am giving you this warrant’ because he was insisting upon it and wanted it, but he is not getting the warrant upon my advice; he is taking it against my better judgment and against my wishes, and if there was anything happened in the future about this, why, he would have to look to himself, but I had tried to advise him not to get a warrant of arrest.”

Mr. Warrington, defendant’s attorney at that time, testified that he did not instruct defendant to get a warrant for plaintiff’s arrest. Much of the argument upon the ruling on the motion for a directed verdict is devoted to disputed questions of fact, which of necessity were submitted to the jury. There was no error of the court in refusing to grant the motion for nonsuit.

Error is predicated upon the testimony of Mrs. Bruce, on behalf of the plaintiff, when she read a list of household goods, from a cash-book entry which she had made therein, that were in the apartment house belonging to people other than the defendant Kaylor. This was about the only way that the witness could *546 testify in regard to the several articles of household goods.

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Related

State v. McLean
468 P.2d 521 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 P. 297, 136 Or. 541, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-kaylor-or-1931.