Scott v. Shelor

28 Gratt. 891
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 28 Gratt. 891 (Scott v. Shelor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Shelor, 28 Gratt. 891 (Va. 1877).

Opinion

Burks, J.

This is a writ of error awarded the plaintiffs in error to a judgment of the circuit court of Floyd county, rendered against them on behalf of the defendant in error in an action for malicious prosecution.

There was a general demurrer to the declaration, which was overruled, and the parties went to trial before a jury, on issue joined on the plea of “not guilty,” which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff (defendant in error here) of $1,000,. as award for damages; ujjon which verdict, and in accordance therewith, the judgment aforesaid was rendered.

In the course of the trial the defendants tendered *four bills of exceptions [279]*279to the rulings of the court, which were signed, sealed, and made a part of the record.

The first three are to the exclusion by the court of certain evidence offered by the defendants, and the fourth and last is to the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant them a new trial, on a motion based upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence.

There are six counts in the declaration. The last five substantially allege that the defendants maliciously and without probable cause procured the plaintiff to be charged with and prosecuted for felony, in that he did feloniously pass, utter, &c., a false, .forged and counterfeited United States treasury note of the denomination of fifty dollars, well knowing the said note to be false, forged and counterfeited, with intent to defraud, &c., setting out the complaint, warrant, arrest thereunder, examination, indictment, trial, imprisonment during the prosecution, verdict of acquittal by the jury, and final discharge by the Federal court, in which the trial was had; and further alleging that heavy and enormous costs had been incurred by the plaintiff in defence of the prosecution, &c.

The first count differed from the other five only in alleging that the grievances complained of were directly committed by defendants, instead of being instigated and procured by them as in the other counts alleged.

The declaration seems to have been carefully and skillfully drawn, and I think the demurrer, which was not argued before this court at all, was properly overruled.

On the trial before the jury, the plaintiff introduced *as a witness one John Walsh, a United States commissioner for the western district of Virginia, who testified that he issued the warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff on the sworn complaint of one George E. Smith; that the plaintiff was arrested on that warrant, examined and recognized by him to answer an indictment in the United States court; and that he had retained the complaint and sent the warrant, with a statement of the evidence of the witnesses who testified on the examination, to the clerk of the United States court at Abingdon.

“On cross-examination (of Walsh), the defendants asked him who were the witnesses before him. He replied, J. M. Boyd and Mr. Scott (the defendants). *, * * Witness said he took Boyd’s testimony in writing, which he filed in the papers in the case. Defendants then showed witness a paper taken from the files in the case, and asked him if that was the paper referred to. He said it was. Thereupon the defendants’ counsel asked the witness. ‘What was the conduct of J. M. Boyd (who was one of the defendants) before him, and whether he manifested any anxiety on the subject of the prosecution?”’ The plaintiff, by his counsel, objected to the answering of this question by this witness. The court sustained the objection, and gave as a reason for doing so, “that it was not a proper question to be asked by the defendants and have answered on cross-examination.” To this ruling the defendant’s first bill of exceptions was tendered and made a part of the record.

Evidently the court did not exclude the answer to the question propounded for the reason that it was incompetent and irrelevant evidence, but because the question was, in the opinion of the court, asked at an improper stage of the examination. The paper, which *had been shown to the witness for the purpose of identifying it, had not been offered in evidence. It contained what purported to be the testimony of the defendants as taken down by the witness on the examination of the plaintiff before him. The defendants, after asking whether the defendants testified at the examination, then propounded the question objected to. It seems to me they should have waited until the testimony contained in the paper had been offered by the plaintiff. The demeanor of the defendant Boyd, if a proper subject of inquiry at all, would have been more appropriately inquired into after it had been shown what his testimony was. At all events, as I construe the bill of exceptions, the answer was only excluded because the question was out of time. It appears, from the evidence set out in the fourth bill of exceptions, that the testimony of the defendant, Boyd, before the commissioner, as contained in the paper referred to, was, at some time during the trial, read in evidence to the jury. No doubt if, after the paper had been so offered and read, the defendants had renewed their question, the answer would have been admitted.

The general course of examination of witnesses in judicial proceedings is, and must of necessity be, for the most part, subject to the discretion of the presiding judge; and the exercise of such discretion will never be controlled or interfered with by an appellate court, unless it plainly appears that some injustice has been done. Brook v. Wilcox, 11 Gratt. 411.

I do not think that any injustice has been done to the defendants in this matter, and no error has been committed in the ruling complained of.

The defendants’ second bill of exceptions states that, on the trial, the plaintiff introduced a witness, *H. Alderman, who testified that he was a deputy marshal, and as such arrested the plaintiff. On cross-examination, the defendants’ counsel asked the witness the following question: “When you were on the way to arrest Shelor (the plaintiff), in July 1873, did you see Scott and Boyd (the defendants); and if so, did they or not manifest any anxiety for the prosecution to be carried on?” íhis question was objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel, and the court said that the witness might state the acts and conduct of Scotl- and Boyd, but not their declarations; and to this refusal of the court to permit the question to be answered, except as qualified by the court, the defendants excepted. It does not appear that the question, as limited by the court, was asked, or any answer given.

The declarations of a party are not, in general, admissible as evidence in his own favor; they are so admissible, however, [280]*280when thej? are a part of what is called the res gestee. In a late English treatise of great excellence, condensing and illustrating the rules of evidence in admirable style, the author tersely states- the rule thus: When any act done by any person is a fact in issue, or is relevant to the issue, the following facts (among others) are relevant — that is to say, all statements made by or to that person accompanying and explaining such act. Stephens’ Digest of the.Raw of Evidence, ch. 2, art. 7, and note 5. art. 3. To come within the terms and operation of the rule, the declarations must accompany and explain an act done, which is a fact in issue or is relevant to the issue.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Gratt. 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-shelor-va-1877.