McNamara v. Pabst

112 A. 812, 137 Md. 468, 1921 Md. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 112 A. 812 (McNamara v. Pabst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNamara v. Pabst, 112 A. 812, 137 Md. 468, 1921 Md. LEXIS 14 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court-.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in a suit for malicious prosecution, and the only exception in the record is to the ruling of the court below on the prayers.

The plaintiff, who states that he was a “firshclass automobile mechanic,” in May, 1918, owned a “Powerplus Indian” motorcycle of the 1907 model, for which, according to his testimony, hei had paid $350.00, and which he had used for thirteen months. The plaintiff further testified that on Sat *470 urday evening, May 14th, 1918, about 7 o’clock, he sold the motorcycle at bis home to Edward Hildebrand, a young man about twenty years of age, and one of tbe appellants in this case, for $175; that be told Hildebrand that tbe motorcycle was “in absolute first-class condition” and agreed to give bim instructions at 11 o’clock Sunday morning; tbat after Hildebrand agreed to take it be took Hildebrand and bis friend a ride on it tbat night, and then took Hildebrand to his home, where be left tbe machine and where Hildebrand paid bim $160 on account of tbe purchase price and agreed to pay tbe balance of $15 in tbe next two weeks; that tbe following Tuesday Hildebrand and bis mother, Mrs. McNamara, came to bis bouse to' see bim; tbat Mrs. McNamara told bim tbat tbe machine was not in good condition, tbat some parts of it were broken, etc., and asked bim to give her son back tbe money as be was dissatisfied with it; tbat when be told Mrs. McNamara tbat be would not “give tbe money back,” she started to cry, and said she thought it was a dirty trick, and “that she was either going to get her money back or have” bim “sent to jail,” and tbat be told her she could “help1 herself” ; tbat be saw Mrs. McNamara again tbe following day at bis home, and tbat she again made tbe same statement to him; tbat be was arrested tbe following Friday and taken to the N ortheastern Police Station, and tbat after a bearing, at which Mrs. McNamara, Hildebrand and Joseph Suzan testified, be was sent to the court bouse and from there to the Baltimore City Jail, where be remained* until be was released on bail about 1 o’clock on tbe same day; tbat be did not testify before tbe police justice, who told bim “tbat be would have to bold tbe case for court.” Tbe plaintiff also proved that be was “charged on the oath of Annie McNamara with obtaining $160 * * * from Edward Hildebrand by means of false pretense on the 4th of May, 1918”; tbat Annie McNamara and Officer1 John Patterson were tbe names of tbe witnesses for tbe state on the commitment; tbat Hildebrand and Joseph Suzan were by order of the State’s *471 Attorney subsequently summoned as State’s witnesses before-the Grand. Jury, and that the ease was dismissed by the Grand Jury.

According to the testimony of the defendants, Joseph Suzan told Hildebrand on the first Saturday in May, 1918, that the plaintiff wanted to sell his motorcycle-, and Hildebrand wrent to the plaintiff’s house that night with Suzan to buy it. The motorcycle was in the plaintiff’s yard, and it was too dark for Hildebrand to examine it carefully that night. The plaintiff told Hildebrand that it was in a' first-class condition, and that if it was not in that condition he would give Hildebrand “the money back.” On Sunday morning Hildebrand discovered that the machine was not in good condition and that it could not he ridden, and on the same day he told' the- plaintiff that it was not in good condition and asked him to give him back the money and the plaintiff said he had spent it — bought a suit of clothes with it— and that he would not give it hack. Mrs. McNamara did not see the motorcycle until Sunday morning, and after she saw it she and her son went to see the plaintiff at his home, and she asked the plaintiff to live up to Ms- bargain, but he refused to return any of the money. After going to see the plaintiff and the plaintiff’s mother, and after the plaintiff refused to return any of the money, Mrs. McNamara, according to her testimony, concluded not to bother aho-ut it any more, but ber “insurance man, Mr. Wagner,” happened to come in the next day and she told him about it and he advised her to go and see the squire at the station house and have a talk with him. She further testified that she accordingly went to the station house to see Justice- Dawkins on Wednesday and explained the matter to him, and that he said he would issue a warrant; that she never made the threat, testified to by the plaintiff; that she appeared before the justice of the peace on the day of the- hearing, and that she was summoned to appear, hut was not called, before the grand jury. On cross-examination she said that she told the *472 plaintiff’s mother that if the plaintiff would return $100 he could have tire motorcycle and keep the other $60, and that when she first saw the motorcycle that Sunday morning she told her son that it loqked “like it was all broke.” It further appeal’s from the evidence that Hildebrand did not go to the station house with his mother on the day she swore out the warrant; that he was there on the day of the hearing because he “was summoned up there because” he bought the motor, and that he was not in the grand jury room. The testimony of Hildebrand as to the terms of the contract of purchase was fully corroborated by Joseph 'Suzan, who testified that he told Plildebrand that the motorcycle was for sale, and went with him to the plaintiff’s house Saturday night to purchase it. He said further that the plaintiff represented the machine to be in good condition, and told Hildebrand if he was not satisfied with it he would give him back the money. Officer Patterson, who arrested the plaintiff, testified that the plaintiff asked him if he could do anything for him, and that when he replied that it would depend upon “how he made the deal,” the plaintiff said that the price was a “little stiff,” and that he would have given some of the money back if they had not had him arrested.

The suit was brought against both Mrs. McNamara and Hildebrand, and at the conclusion of the testimony the plaintiff offered three prayers, which were granted, and the defendants offered three, only one of which, the third, was granted.

Plaintiff’s first prayer was approved by this Court in Torsch v. Dell, 88 Md. 459; Mertens v. Mueller, 119 Md. 525, and Mertens v. Mueller, 122 Md. 313, and there are no special circumstances in this case to render the instruction improper.

The plaintiff’s second prayer was not questioned in this Court, and his third prayer instructed Hie jury that “if the jury find their verdict for the plaintiff — they may take into consideration all of the circumstances of the case and award *473 such, damages as will not only compensate the plaintiff for the wrongs and indignities he has sustained in consequence of defendants’ wrongful acts, but may also award exemplary or punitive damages as a punishment to the defendants for such wrongful acts.” It is earnestly contended by the appellants that this prayer of the plaintiff, “disconnected as it is with the other prayers, does not require of the jury, that, as a condition precedent to the award of punitive damages, malice must be found on the part of the defendants”; that while a similar prayer was approved in Mertens v.

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 812, 137 Md. 468, 1921 Md. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnamara-v-pabst-md-1921.