Putnam v. Stalker

91 P. 363, 50 Or. 210, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 196
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 91 P. 363 (Putnam v. Stalker) 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
Putnam v. Stalker, 91 P. 363, 50 Or. 210, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 196 (Or. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Commissioner Slater.

1. By his motion for nonsuit, defendant invoked the ruling of the court on the legal effect of the evidence of plaintiff to support his cause of action. Upon such motion every intend'ment and every fair and legitimate inference which can ’arise from the evidence must be made in favor of plaintiff, and the court must assume those facts as' true which the jury can properly find under the evidence: Wallace v. Suburban Railway Co. 26 Or. 174 (37 Pac. 477: 25 L. R. A. 663). And if the evidence tends to show facts which will sustain the action, though [213]*213remote, the motion for nonsuit should not be sustained: Herbert r. Hufur, 23 Or. 464 (32 Pac. 302).

2. If the testimony offered by plaintiff tends to show that the defendant had good reason to believe that the law had been violated, and he acted in good faith, it is the duty of the court to declare the legal effect of the evidence by allowing the motion fpr nonsuit. “The welfare of society,” says Mr. Justice Bean, in Hess v. Oregon Baking Co. 31 Or. 503, 513 (49 Pac. 803), “imperatively demands that those who violate the law shall be promptly and speedily punished, and to accomplish that purpose the rule has been firmly established that any citizen who has good reason to believe that the law has been violated may cause the arrest of the supposed offender, and, if in doing so he acts in good faith, the law will protect him against an action for damages, although the accusation may in fact be unfounded. This rule is founded on grounds of public policy to encourage the exposure of crime, .and the punishment of criminals, and when, therefore, the act of a citizen in thus enforcing the law is challenged, the court must determine the question, when the facts are admitted or established, whether he had probable cause for so doing, and not leave it to the arbitrament of a jury.”

3. At the outset of his ease, plaintiff offered, and there was received, the transcript of the proceedings in the justice court, which contains the information sworn to by defendant before the magistrate on March 27, 1906, and the warrant issued thereon, and upon which plaintiff was arrested on the 27th day of March, 1906, and on the next day was committed by the magistrate to the custody of the sheriff of the county. But it further shows that on April 25, 1906, a preliminary hearing was had before the magistrate upon the charge, and after an examination duly held according to law, at which the state appeared by the deputy prosecuting attorney for that county, and the plaintiff appeared in person and by his attorney, and after three witnesses had been examined on behalf of the state, and two on behalf of plaintiff, including himself, he was held to answer at [214]*214the next term of the circuit court for that county, and was admitted to bail in the sum of $250. This evidence, instead of showing the want of probable cause, the burden of showing which was upon plaintiff, makes, it would seem, a prima facie case of probable cause. “It is quite generally held,” says Mr. Justice Wolverton, in Stamper v. Raymond, 38 Or. 16 (62 Pac. 20), “that, where proof was offered upon the examination which is deemed sufficient by the committing magistrate upon which to commit, his commitment accordingly will afford prima facie evidence of probable cause.” The effect of the commitment as evidence of probable cause, however, may be overthrown by other evidence showing that it was obtained by false pretenses or other improper means: Sharpe v. Johnston, 76 Mo. 660; Giusti v. Del Papa, 19 R. L. 338 (33 Atl. 525); Womack v. Circle, 29 Grat. 192. But, unless it is overthrown by testimony of that character, it becomes conclusive, and must 'prevent the plaintiff from prevailing.

■ 4. We are unable, however, to discover in the record any evidence oh the part of plaintiff tending to show, and in fact it does not seem to have been claimed by him, that there was any fraud or other improper conduct on the part of this defendant at the preliminary examination which prevented the plaintiff from obtaining a full and fair hearing, or that the conclusion announced by the magistrate was the result of any improper conduct of defendant; nor are we able to find any evidénce on part of defendant in this case, after his motion for nonsuit was overruled, by which the pñma facie case of a probable cause, made out by the commitment, was overthrown. The court, therefore erred in denying the motion.

■ At the close of the testimony, defendant by his counsel requested the court to instruct the jury as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that the fact is before you and is not disputed that, before the defendant began tlie criminal action described in the complaint in this case, he was advised by J.- E. Marks, Deputy District Attorney for the-Ninth Judicial District of Oregon for Grant County, to institute the said [215]*215criminal action, and that before receiving such advice there liad been laid before the said deputy district attorney all the facts and circumstances in the knowledge of the defendant relating to the charge against the plaintiff, and that the said deputy district attorney also made an investigation of his own motion of the charge against the plaintiff, and that after making such investigation, and after receiving all such facts and circumstances, advised the defendant to institute said criminal action, and that defendant acted on such advice in good faith; and I instruct you as a matter of law that such fact-constitutes probable cause for said criminal action, and I .instruct you to return a verdict for defendant.”

This requested instruction was denied by the court, and, an exception to the ruling having been taken by the defendant, error is assigned thereon. It appears from the testimony that defendant, soon after having given plaintiff the order for the books, and after having paid plaintiff the sum of money-charged to have been obtained under false pretenses, became suspicious of plaintiff’s good faith and his right to receive the money as an agent for the proprietors of the work, and on that account defendant consulted with his attorney, A. M. F. Kircheiner, in regard to the matter, giving him a full, fair and correct statement of all that had transpired between the parties. It transpired that this attorney and E. E. McHaley, residents of that neighborhood, also 'had recently had transactions with plaintiff similar to those which had taken place 'between him, and defendant, and on which the criminal information was based, and under the same circumstances. These three persons, after talking the whole matter over among themselves, becoming convinced that they had been swindled, and that they would never be supplied with the books, made an investigation to ascertain the correctness of the statements and representations made "to each of them by plaintiff when taking their orders and receiving their money.

To that end communications were addressed to the Bureau of National Literature^ and Art in Washington, D. C., plaintiff’s reputed principal, and to Mr. C. T. Brown, general manager of the Washington Post at Kansas City, Mo., which was, since [216]*216June, 1905, the successor in interest to all of the proprietary rights in the sale and distribution of the books in question, formerly possessed by said bureau. On March 19, 1906, the Bureau of National Literature and Art, through E. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 P. 363, 50 Or. 210, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-stalker-or-1907.