Pierce Oil Corp. v. Mitchell

1923 OK 1128, 225 P. 937, 99 Okla. 148, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 887
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 1923
Docket14275
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1923 OK 1128 (Pierce Oil Corp. v. Mitchell) 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
Pierce Oil Corp. v. Mitchell, 1923 OK 1128, 225 P. 937, 99 Okla. 148, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 887 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES, C.

This was an action instituted in the district court of Canadian county by the defendant in error. Orville A. Mitchell, arising from an alleged malicious prosecution in which he recovered a judgment against the plaintiff in error, Pierce Oil Corporation, for the sum of $1,000.

The appellee, plaintiff below, alleged in his petition in the lower court that on or about January 14, 1921, the appellant, defendant below, caused the plaintiff to be arrested by filing a complaint against him charging him with grand larceny; that after his arrest, he was imprisoned in the county jails of Canadian and Kay counties, for a period of about two days; that upon a preliminary trial the county attorney, after hearing the evidence, moved that the prosecution be dismissed on account of insufficiency of the evidence, whereupon the examining magistrate dismissed the same. Plaintiff further alleges that said prosecution was unfounded and without probable cause and was malicious and that he was thereby damaged in the sum of of $2,990.

The appellant, defendant in the lower court, answered by a general denial, and for further defense, without admitting that it caused the prosecution, alleged that, should the court hold that it did-cause the same, the same was not without probable cause and was not malicious, and that the prosecution was commenced by one V. M. Zimmerman, who, prior to making the complaint, made a full, fair, and complete statement of all material facts with regard thereto within his knowledge to Howard B. Wilson, county attorney of Kay county, who, in good faith, advised Zimmerman to institute proceedings against the plaintiff, and that Zimmerman, in good faith, acted upon the advice of the county attorney in instituting same.

The complaint upon which the appellee was , prosecuted, charged him with the crime of larceny of $63.25, the property of the Pierce Oil Corporation, appellant herein.

This cause for damages was tried to a jury on the 18th day of December, 1922, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the ap-pellee in the sum of $1,000. The evidence on the trial developed that Mitchell was in the employ of Reed & Mittendorff of Ponca City, who were running the Oreamery Filling Station, and that Reed, one of the members of the above named firm, was agent of the Pierce Oil Corporation in Ponca City, and in December, 1920, it seems from the evidence that Reed, as agent of the Pierce Oil Corporation, was short in his account, and that he absconded, and left the filling station largely in charge of Mitchell and directed him to collect certain bills and apply same on payment of rents, and also directed him to go to Great Bend, Kan., and drive a truck from that point back to Ponda City, which Reed and his partner, Mittendorff, were the owners of, or at least interested in.

The evidence is not conclusive as to whether or not the bills collected by Mitchell and applied on the rents owing by Reed & Mittendorff and the expenses on his trip to Kansas, had been incurred by reason of the purchase of merchandise from Reed & Mittendorff, or whether they had been incurred by reason of the sale by Reed, as agent, of some of the merchandise belonging to the Pierce Oil Corporation. Appellant *149 contends that me bills had been incurred by reason oí the sale of merchandise of the Pierce Oil Corporation, and the Complaint and charge of grand larceny was based on the above transaction.

The appellant interposed a demurrer to the evidence of the appellee in the trial of the case, which was overruled by the court and is one of the errors now complained of, and likewise the overruling of a motion for an instructed verdict, and also complains of errors committed by the trial court in refusing to give certain instructions requested by appellant. The instructions requested are as follows:

“If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff herein, after obtaining knowledge of the fact that the moneys collected by him after Reed had absconded belonged to the Pierce Oil Corporation, applied the same to the payment of individual obligations of his employers, even though instructed so to do by them, without the consent of the Pierce Oil Corporation, you should find for the defendant.”

The refusal of the court to give this instruction was justifiable, for the reason that the evidence does not prove that the money in controversy belonged to the Pierce Oil Corporation, and if in fact it did, the evidence fails to disclose any knowledge of that fact on the part of Mitchell; and the other instruction requested is as follows:

“You are instructed that it was the duty of the plaintiff herein to disclose to Mr. Zimmerman, at the time he went to Ponca City, to investigate the facts at that place, all information which he had regarding the affairs of the said agency and of all moneys belonging to said corp.oration which he had collected at that time.”

There is nothing in the evidence indicating that the appellee, Mitchell, did not make a full disclosure of everything he knew concerning the whereabouts of Reed and the condition of the 'business and accounts of Reed & Mittendorff. Mitchell drove a truqk for this firm and there is no evidence in the record which justifies the belief that he necessarily knew anything' about the accounts and the business standing of the firm, other than that which he disclosed to the said Zimmerman; and there is no evidence of any character which would indicate that he knew of the whereabouts of Reed at that time, or at any other time after he had absconded. So, we think that the court was correct in refusing to give the instruction requested, because there was nothing in the proof or the pleadings which would justify such instructions.

The appellant makes a rather extended argument and recited much of the evidence in its brief in an effort to show some element of guilt on the part of Mitchell, some probable cause and justification for its áction, but we are unable to grasp the thread of reasoning of the appellant and unable to see any elements of criminality in the conduct of Mitchell in the collection of his employer’s bills and the application of the money received on rentals due by his employer, and for expenses incurred while in the service of his employers.

Appellant cites the rule as laid down in the case of Sawyer v. Shick, 30 Okla. 353, 120 Pac. 581, in which this court sets forth the various elements necessary to enter into a malicious prosecution, as follows:

“(1) The commencement or continuance of an original criminal or civil proceeding; (2) that defendant caused it to be instituted or continued against plaintiff; (3) its bona fide termination in favor of plaintiff; (4) the absence of probable cause for such proceeding; (5) the presence of malice; (6) damages to plaintiff”

—and contends, first, that there was no proof of the absence of probable cause in this prosecution, but we think this question in its final analysis is one of fact and as has been laid down by the authorities, slight proof may be sufficient to establish want of probable cause on account of difficulty of establishing it. 26 Cyc. 85; Note 21, 18 R. C. L. 23, art. 12. And numerous other authorities in support of that rule are cited, and the case of Vladar v. Lkopan, 89 N. J. Laws, 575, 99 Atl.

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Related

Empire Oil & Refining Co. v. Williams
1938 OK 654 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)
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1936 OK 14 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
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1935 OK 508 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 1128, 225 P. 937, 99 Okla. 148, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-oil-corp-v-mitchell-okla-1923.