Talbott v. Great Western Plaster Co.

86 Mo. App. 558, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 217
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 Mo. App. 558 (Talbott v. Great Western Plaster Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talbott v. Great Western Plaster Co., 86 Mo. App. 558, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 217 (Mo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

BEOADDHS, J.

This cause was tried in division number two of the Jackson county circuit court on the twenty-ninth day of May, 1899, before W. B. Teasdale, special judge, and [562]*562verdict had for the plaintiff for $272.50, from which and the judgment thereon defendants, the Great Western Plaster Company and George A. Ely have appealed; William Weston and Weston Lime & Cement Association having been dismissed before the case was finally submitted to the jury.

. The suit is for a wrongful and malicious prosecution of an attachment, without probable cause. It is alleged that on the nineteenth day of July, 1898, the defendants instituted attachment proceedings against plaintiff before Theodore S. Case, justice of the peace; that afterwards a change of venue was taken to J. II. Hawthorne, another justice; that thereafter on the first day of September, 1898, said proceedings were dismissed by the defendants herein; that the plaintiffs in said proceedings for grounds of -attachment alleged that the plaintiff herein had fraudulently conveyed and assigned his property and effects, etc., so as to hinder and delay his creditors.

The answer is a general denial and sets up a judgment in favor of the defendant,'the Great Western Plaster Company, as a counterclaim against any judgment plaintiff may obtain. There was a trial before a jury and finding for plaintiff for actual damages in the sum stated after allowing defendant’s counterclaim. There was a great amount of evidence introduced on the trial, the greater part of which could have little or nothing to do with the issue before the jury. It is sufficient, in order to understand the case properly, to state certain main facts connected with the transaction.

In 1897, the plaintiff and William Weston formed a co-partnership in the lime and cement business in Kansas City, Missouri. The firm did some business until in January, 1898, when a corporation was formed under the name of the Weston Lime and Cement Association. This association was organized in pursuance of a written agreement between plaintiff and his partner, William Weston. Some of the property and assets of the former concern went into the new organization. [563]*563At the time, however, it is shown that there was about $1,700 due the old concern from its patrons. The plaintiff collected the greater part of this amount, paid some of the debts of the firm; turned some over to one Hill, a creditor, and applied $300 in part payment of his individual note to the Eirst National Bank of Kansas City, and also transferred certain shares he held in the new concern as collateral security for said $1,000 note. It appears that ultimately the partnership was unable to pay its debts. The fact that $300 of the partnership money had been pgid out by plaintiff on his note to the bank came to the knowledge of the defendants before the attachment proceedings were begun, but it was not known to them that plaintiff had pledged his shares of stock in the new concern until afterwards. There was some evidence that by reason of the attachment the plaintiff had lost, he thought, somewhat in his credit, and that he paid out $15 to an attorney to defend the attachment suit. In view of the fact that instruction number 2 given in behalf of plaintiff is predicated upon actual malice as contradistinguished from legal malice, I have searched the record to learn what the evidence was in that respect. The search has been fruitless — I could find none upon the part of the defendants now before the court.

The plaintiff, if entitled to recover, must stand upon his proof that the attachment was instituted maliciously and without probable cause. He must show both. He can not recover upon proof only of want of probate cause. See Grant v. Reinhart, 33 Mo. App. 74; Witascheck v. Glass, 46 Mo. App. 209; Sharpe v. Johnson, 59 Mo. 557. An examination of said instruction number 2 given at instance of plaintiff over defendants’ objection has omitted to combine the two elements necessary to constitute the charge of malice and probable cause. It reads: “There are two kinds of malice. Malice in fact and malice in law. The f ormer means ill will 'against a person; the latter a wrongful act done intentionally. If, therefore, the [564]*564jury believe from tbe evidence that tbe defendants instituted or procured, or caused to be instituted, against the plaintiff the attachment suit as charged in plaintiff’s petition, and that defendants were moved thereto by ill will against the plaintiff, or that said attachment suit was instituted, or procured or caused to be instituted, wrongfully, and was without probable cause, the jury must find for the plaintiff.”

By this instruction the jury were told that they must find for the plaintiff if the defendants were moved thereto by ill will, or if they found that they instituted the attachment wrongfully and without probable cause. Even if it be conceded that the word “wrongfully” has the same significance as “maliciously,” the defect of the preceding part of the instruction would not be cured because the element of probable cause is entirely omitted therein. But it is unnecessary to invoke the aid of the loxicographer and judicial construction to show that the words “wrongfully” and “maliciously” are not synonymous; and the instruction is wrong for another reason: the question of actual malice is submitted to the jury as a basis of recovery, when the record, as has been stated, is barren of any evidence in that respect. The instruction is in the disjunctive form, and would authorize the jury on proof of probable cause alone, or upon proof alone of wrongful institution of the attachment, to find for the plaintiff.

Instruction number 3 reads: “If the jury believe from the evidence that said attachment suit was instituted without probable cause, they may infer therefrom that it was malicious.” The proof of want of probable cause does not necessarily establish the existence of malice. If so, the plaintiff has only to prove in a given case want of probable cause and the malice would follow as a legitimate inference. The effect, then, in reality, would be to dispense with all proof outside of proof of want of probable cause to sustain the allegation of malice. But .the books do not so hold. See Grant v. Rein[565]*565hart, 33 Mo. App. 83. Judge Rombauer in that case uses the following language:

“Malice is not an inference of law from want of probable cause. Malice, however, need not be proved by direct and positive testimony, but may be inferred from the facts which go to establish the want of probable cause, and this is all that is meant when it is said that malice may be inferred from want of probable cause. But the jury are not required to make this inference, and they should not be so instructed that such an inference may be made, unless the facts attending the conduct and determination of the prosecution and those adduced to establish the want of probable cause, are of a character to warrant such an inference.”

I have quoted the language of the learned judge for the reason that I do not think the rule could be more clearly and correctly stated. Applying this wholesome rule to the case under consideration I do not think the instruction should have been given.

The practically undisputed facts shown in the case are, that the defendants’ concern was justly indebted to the defendant here, the Great Western Plaster Company; that an attempt had been made to collect the debt; that the concern was hard run and slow in paying its debts; and that defendant’s agent, George A.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Mo. App. 558, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbott-v-great-western-plaster-co-moctapp-1901.