Stansbury v. Luttrell

137 A. 339, 152 Md. 553
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 137 A. 339 (Stansbury v. Luttrell) 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
Stansbury v. Luttrell, 137 A. 339, 152 Md. 553 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, Warren Lee Luttrell, brought an action at law for malicious prosecution against the appellant, John E. Stansbury, and his co-defendants, II. Melvin Bull and Lester L. Stevens, for having falsely and maliciously charged, before a justice of the peace, the appellee with larceny of *556 three trees, and having procured the issuance of a warrant and the arrest of the appellee until he was released on bail, and thereafter his indictment for such crime, with the result that the appellee was acquitted. The outcome of this action was a judgment against the appellant, after the jury had been instructed that his co-defendants were not liable. On this appeal the single exception is to the rulings of the trial court on the prayers; and it is our judgment the only question requiring consideration is the rejected prayer to the effect that the evidence was legally insufficient to establish that the appellant had acted in the prosecution without probable and reasonable cause.

If there be probable and reasonable cause for the criminal prosecution at the time it was begun or participated in by the prosecutor, then an action for malicious prosecution will not lie, although the prosecutor may have been actuated by malice (a.), the accused may have been actually innocent (&), or acquitted after trial (c). As probable cause is such reasonable ground of suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves, as to warrant a cautious man in believing the party accused to be guilty, it follows that if the facts and circumstances known to the appellant at the time he began or participated in the prosecution were so convincing as of themselves to afford a cautious man reasonable ground to believe that the appellee was guilty of the crime charged, then the prosecutor would not be liable for procuring or assisting in the prosecution of the accused for such crime (JF). Hence, the real motive of the prosecutor, the actual innocence of the party charged, or his acquittal, becomes immaterial, if the accused be not able to meet the burden (e) of establishing by competent evidence the absence of probable cause in his prosecution. The legal sufficiency of the facts and circumstances relied upon to constitute probable and reasonable cause is a question of law. If such facts and circumstances exist and are proven, without conflict or contradiction, by competent evidence, the question is one of law for the court, but if these facts and circumstances are *557 improbable or are the subject of denial or controversy, their existence and truth are questions for determination by the jury, and then probable cause is said to be a mixed question of law and of fact (f). These are familiar principles which find many exemplifications in the decisions, (a) Goldstein v. Rau, 147 Md. 6, 13; Dorsey v. Winters, 143 Md. 409; Jordan v. Piano Co., 140 Md. 207, 213; Bishop v. Frantz, 125 Md. 183, 198; Lasky v. Smith, 115 Md. 370, 374, 375, 376; Flickinger v. Wagner, 46 Md. 580, 603; Medcalfe v. Brooklyn Life Ins. Co., 45 Md. 198, 204. (b) Jordan v. Piano Co., 140 Md. 207, 209, 210; Chapman v. Nash, 121 Md. 608, 612; Moneyweight Co. v. McCormick, 109 Md. 170, 183. (c) Chapman v. Nash, 121 Md. 608, 617; Camp bell v. Balto. & O. R. Co., 97 Md. 341, 345, 346; Bowen v Tascoe, 84 Md. 497, 499. (d) Goldstein v. Rau, 147 Md. 6, 13; Dorsey v. Winters, 143 Md. 399, 409; Pessagno v. Keyes, 143 Md. 437, 441, 442; Jordan v. Piano Co. 140 Md. 207, 209, 212, 213; McNamara v. Pabst, 137 Md. 468, 474, 475; Bishop v. Frantz, 125 Md. 183, 190; Mertens v. Mueller, 122 Md. 313, 320; Moneyweight Co. v. McCormick, 109 Md. 170, 183, 184; Bowen v. Tascoe, 84 Md. 497, 500; Johns v. Marsh, 52 Md. 323, 335; Boyd v. Cross, 35 Md. 194, 197; Cooper v. Utterbach, 37 Md. 282, 317; Stansbury v. Fogle, 37 Md. 369, 384. (e) Goldstein v. Rau, 147 Md. 6, 13; Dorsey v. Winters, 143 Md. 399, 408; Jordan v. Piano Co., 140 Md. 207, 209; Sappington v. Fairfax, 135 Md. 186, 188; Bishop v. Frantz, 125 Md. 183, 190; Chapman v. Nash, 121 Md. 608, 611. (f) Boyd v. Cross, 35 Md. 196, 197; Garvey v. Wayson, 42 Md. 179, 187, 188; Thelin v. Dorsey, 59 Md. 539, 545, 555; Medcalfe v. Brooklyn Life Ins. Co., 45 Md. 198, 204, 205; Hooper v. Vernon 74 Md. 136, 139; Central Ry. Co. v. Brewer, 78 Md. 394; Dorsey v. Winters, 143 Md. 409; Goldstein v. Rau, 147 Md. 6, 13; Jordan v. Piano Co., 140 Md. 210; Chapman v. Nash, 121 Md. 608, 617; Lasky v. Smith, 115 Md. 370, 376; Campbell v. Balto. & O. R. Co., 97 Md. 341, 344, 346; Bowen v. *558 Tascoe, 84 Md. 497; Central Ry. Co. v. Brewer, 78 Md. 394, 408.

For the purpose of determining whether, on the whole evidence, there was no legally sufficient testimony of the absence of probable cause, the court will assume the truth of all the facts tending to support the plaintiff’s case and consider such facts in connection with “such other facts appearing in the record which have been proved and not contradicted or denied by the plaintiff.” Chapman v. Nash, 121 Md. 608, 610. The application of this rule to the case at bar presents these facts.

A large 'tract of land called “Pleasant Plains Farms” was owned in common by the Ellsworth Apartments, Inc., and the J. E. Stansbury Company, Inc., which had reserved practically all of the land fronting on the waters- of the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries for development and sale as building sites, and had rented the remainder for agricultural and dairying purposes to Harry W. Elliott, who had sublet the premises- to one George T. Shelton. The lessee was bound by the lease to surrender the premises at the end of the term in as good order as at its- beginning, and not to make any repairs other than those which, during the term, the lessors had first agreed could be made. These stipulations bound the sub-lessee, who, notwithstanding their inhibition and without the prior -consent of the lessors, requested the appellee, who operated a saw mill which was located on a public road at a point less than half a mile from where the highway entered the mentioned tract, to cut and haul oak, chestnut and poplar timber from the land, saying that he needed the chestnut boards for hotbeds, the poplar for building purposes, and the oak for stable bottoms. Despite the appellee’s knowledge that the sub-lessee Shelton was a tenant, the appellee went with two- of his men to- the farm and inquired where the timber was to- be felled, and the tenant Shelton directed him to cut the growing timber back of the- peach orchard.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 339, 152 Md. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stansbury-v-luttrell-md-1927.