Swaim v. . Stafford

26 N.C. 392
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.C. 392 (Swaim v. . Stafford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swaim v. . Stafford, 26 N.C. 392 (N.C. 1844).

Opinion

Case for a malicious prosecution, in causing the plaintiff to be arrested on a warrant charging her with feloniously stealing a parcel of belt ribbons. Plea, the general issue. In support of her action the plaintiff produced and proved the warrant stated in the declaration, issued on the oath and at the instance of the defendant. The magistrate before whom it was tried testified that a belt ribbon found in possession of the plaintiff, was produced before him, and that, after examining the witnesses for the prosecution, among whom was the prosecutor, John M. Stafford, the present defendant, he dismissed the warrant, it being proved on the part of the present plaintiff that she had purchased the belt produced, or one like it, at a store in Salem a short time before.

The defense relied upon was that the defendant had a probable cause for the prosecution, and to establish it he introduced several witnesses. One Hartman testified that the defendant was a merchant, and (393) that the witness, on a Friday, about the last of April, 1840, went to his store and saw the plaintiff, two of her sisters, two grown ladies, and several school girls in the room; that several parcels of goods were on the counter, near which the grown ladies were standing, the children being a little in the rear; that he saw the plaintiff, with one elbow on the counter, leaning over, as if she were examining a bunch of ribbons which she had in her hands; that when he first went into the *Page 291 storeroom the plaintiff looked towards him; that he did not turn his attention to her afterwards; that in about 15 minutes she and her sisters left the store, together with all the other females; that after the company were gone, the defendant commenced putting his goods on the shelf, when he seemed to miss something, and took the goods down to examine whether the articles alleged to have been lost were among them; that the witness then told him he had seen the plaintiff have the ribbons in her hands; that the defendant then took the goods down again, reexamined them and opened the folds of the goods; that the plaintiff lived with her father, about two miles or two miles and a half from the store; that on the following Sunday he saw her at a preaching, wearing a new belt ribbon; that he saw the defendant on the Tuesday or Wednesday afterwards, when the defendant said to him he had seen or found his ribbons on Sunday; that the witness replied to him that he had seen the plaintiff have on a new ribbon; that he might or might not have told the defendant that the ribbon resembled his; that he did not recollect, but thought he did not tell him so; that the ribbon produced before the magistrate and now on this trial resembled in color some of those he saw the plaintiff have in the store.

Miss Martha Harris testified that she had frequently been in the defendant's store up to within a few months of the time when the warrant was taken out, and had seen ribbons resembling in color the one produced by the plaintiff on the trial; that she had never seen the plaintiff wear any ribbon like it, and she has never since seen the ribbons in the store; that the defendant's ribbons were of different figures (394) and colors.

W. L. Swaim stated that he acted as clerk for the defendant during April Court, 1840, and that he saw in his store during that time ribbons like the one produced.

Jackson Stafford testified that he had owned the store, and sold it to the defendant about twelve months before that time; that among the goods were belt ribbons like the one shown on the trial; that he never saw any of the same kind in other stores.

A witness, Alspaugh, testified (the plaintiff objecting to his testimony) that he was present on the Tuesday or Wednesday mentioned by Hartman, and that Hartman did tell the defendant that the ribbon he saw the Sunday before resembled or was similar in color to his.

Ezekiel Thomas testified that he had told the defendant, before he sued out the warrant, that he heard Hartman say the ribbon resembled his in color.

The plaintiff then called a Mr. Lineback, who stated that he had been acting as a clerk in a store for about five or six years; that at the time when the warrant was taken out he was a clerk in a store in Salem, and *Page 292 that some three or four weeks before that time he had sold to the plaintiff, who came there in company with her mother, a belt ribbon of the same kind, quality, and color as that produced here on the trial; that such ribbons at that time were common and generally worn. It was also in proof that, besides two stores in Salem, there were two or three others within a few miles of the defendant's store.

Rachel Ebbert testified that she went with the plaintiff and her sisters to the defendant's store on the Friday mentioned; that it was the last day of a school in the immediate neighborhood; that several females were in company; that the females stood along the counter, and the defendant behind the counter; that the plaintiff stood immediately on her left; that the plaintiff had a bunch of ribbons in her hands, and after examining them handed them to the witness, who also examined them and then laid them down on the counter to the right; that the defendant was then some 5 or 6 feet from her, but whether he saw her lay the ribbons down, or was looking at her, she did not now recollect, (395) nor does she know whether she saw them afterwards on the counter; that some 15 minutes thereafter she and all the female company left the store, but she saw neither the plaintiff nor her sisters have any ribbons.

Jacob Shultz testified that he had known the plaintiff ever since she was quite young; that her character was good, and that she was about 16 years old when the warrant was sued out.

For the purpose of showing that no felony had been committed; that the defendant had not used diligence to inform himself on that subject, and to contradict Hartman as to the search he said the defendant had made among his goods, the plaintiff proposed to prove that in the month of June, after issuing the warrant (which was dated 22 May, 1840), the same bunch of ribbons the plaintiff had had in her hands was found in a fold of one of the pieces of goods which were spread on the counter during the time the plaintiff was in the store, but the introduction of this testimony was opposed by the defendant and rejected by the court.

The court charged the jury that probable cause is the existence of such facts and circumstances as are sufficiently strong to excite in a reasonable mind suspicion that the person charged with having been guilty was guilty; that it is a case of apparent guilt, contradistinguished from real guilt, and that if they believed the testimony of Hartman, Stafford, Martha Harris, and W. L. Swaim, there was probable cause, and that this testimony as to probable cause was not weakened by the testimony of Alspaugh and Thomas.

The plaintiff's counsel then prayed the court to instruct the jury that they might take the testimony of Rachel Ebbert, in connection with the defendant's testimony as to probable cause, as tending to show that the *Page 293 plaintiff was not the last person to handle the ribbons while in the store, and that the defendant knew it. To this the court replied that the witness not recollecting that the defendant saw her with the ribbons, there could be no inference from her testimony that the defendant knew it. The plaintiff's counsel also prayed the court to instruct the jury that, after the prima facie case made by the plaintiff, it was (396) incumbent on the defendant, in making out probable cause, to satisfy the jury that a felony had been committed, which instruction was refused by the court.

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Related

Stanford v. . Grocery Co.
55 S.E. 815 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1906)
Wilkinson v. . Wilkinson
74 S.E. 740 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1912)
Beale v. . Roberson
29 N.C. 280 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1847)
Swaim v. Stafford
25 N.C. 289 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1843)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.C. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swaim-v-stafford-nc-1844.