White v. Brinkman

73 P.2d 254, 23 Cal. App. 2d 307, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 656
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 28, 1937
DocketCiv. 10548
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 73 P.2d 254 (White v. Brinkman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Brinkman, 73 P.2d 254, 23 Cal. App. 2d 307, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 656 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J., pro tem.

This is an action in which plaintiff seeks recovery of damages for alleged malicious prosecution; and plaintiff’s appeal is from a judgment against him entered upon an order made March 27, 1937, sustaining demurrers interposed separately by the five individually named defendants. In advance of such order, the plaintiff had on March 4th voluntarily dismissed the action as against the defendant, Maryland Casualty Company; and by stipulation paragraphs IV and XVIII of the complaint relating to that defendant had been stricken out. The fictitiously named defendants are to be treated as nonexistent for the purposes of this appeal. While the demurrers to the complaint were both general and special, the fundamental question is whether the complaint states a cause of action against the defendants *310 or any of them. According to the complaint, plaintiff was at all times mentioned a duly licensed building contractor engaged in business as such in Contra Costa and Alameda Counties. The defendant Brinkman was the chief building inspector, and the defendant Thompson the city manager of the city of Berkeley in Alameda County, the city manager being the person in authority over the chief building inspector.

The defendant Sherry was a deputy district attorney of Alameda County and ex officio prosecuting attorney for the city of Berkeley. The defendants Both and Kneiss are not made defendants in any official character.

The complaint charges that at divers times between December 7, 1936, and February 2, 1937, the three public officers and the defendants Both and Kneiss maliciously engaged in a conspiracy to injure plaintiff in his social and business relations; and to that end caused plaintiff to be arrested on a charge of having committed a misdemeanor in violating a certain provision of Ordinance No. 1473 N. S. of the city of Berkeley. In this respect it is averred that the arrest was made under a warrant issued by the judge of the Justice’s Court of the City of Berkeley, and founded on a complaint verified by the oath of the defendant Brinkman made before the defendant Sherry. In that complaint it was charged that on February 1, 1937, in the city of Berkeley, the plaintiff, White, violated section 2801 of said ordinance by causing “an excavation to be made on his own property without having protected said excavation so that the soil of the adjoining property would not cave-in and settle”. In respect of this charge, the plaintiff alleges that he did not make any excavation on February 1, 1937; that he did not own any property in the city of Berkeley, and that he had not violated any of the terms and provisions of the municipal ordinance “in the manner or as alleged in said complaint”.

Plaintiff’s complaint further states that under the authority of the warrant of arrest, he was taken into custody by the police on February 4th, and after being booked on the charge, was held in the station for about half an hour until he furnished bail for his release in the sum of $200. Thereafter on that day he was arraigned in the justice’s court; and upon pleading that he was not guilty, he demanded a jury trial, which was set for February 15th. Meanwhile, the action *311 against plaintiff was on February 11th dismissed by the court on motion of defendant Sherry, the official prosecuting attorney.

Plaintiff charges that the acts of the defendants in causing his arrest and imprisonment were malicious and without probable cause; and his prayer is for $345 as special damages together with $60,000 as exemplary and punitive damages.

The order sustaining the demurrers to plaintiff’s complaint allowed ten days for amendment; but the right of amendment having been renounced by plaintiff in order to facilitate his intended appeal, judgment was entered against him on April 2d.

So far as the defendants Roth and Kneiss are concerned, no specific charges are made against them in plaintiff’s complaint, except that those defendants are in effect said to have joined with the three public officers in a common plan, maliciously and without probable cause, to bring about the arrest of plaintiff for the misdemeanor charged in the complaint filed by Brinkman as chief building inspector. The defendants Brinkman, Thompson and Sherry have joined in a brief in support of the judgment in their favor, and a separate brief has been filed by the defendant Roth. In the absence of any brief on behalf of the defendant Emily Kneiss, it is presumed that she stands in the same position as her co-defendant Roth.

In cases of this character liability for damages cannot be made to rest on mere conspiracy. The gravamen of the action is the malicious prosecution of the criminal charge without probable cause. (Dowdell v. Carpy, 129 Cal. 168, 171 [61 Pac. 948]; Andrews v. Young, 21 Cal. App. (2d) 523 [69 Pac. (2d) 891].) In regard to the liability of the three officers, counsel for plaintiff recognizes that, for reasons of public policy, officers exercising judicial or quasi-judicial powers in the performance of their duties are immune from civil liability. But laying stress upon an allegation in the complaint that the charge of violation by plaintiff of the municipal ordinance was wholly false, malicious and unfounded, and was known to be so by each and all of the defendants, plaintiff insists that the officers were acting wholly without jurisdiction, and are no more entitled to exemption from civil liability than if they were acting in a strictly private and personal capacity.

*312 It must be remembered, however, that the complaint expressly alleges that Brinkman as chief building inspector, Thompson as city manager and Sherry as ex officio prosecuting attorney of Berkeley, acting in concert with the other defendants, caused the alleged malicious prosecution of the charges against plaintiff. It was thus in their. official capacities that in this action the officers were charged with wrongdoing and brought into court. The naked statement that an official, acting in the exercise of quasi-judicial powers, caused the institution of a criminal prosecution on a complaint which he knew to be false is but tantamount to a repetition of a previous statement that he acted maliciously and without probable cause. The element of probable cause is to be viewed subjectively as well as objectively. Its presence involves consideration not only of the actual facts of the case, but the facts and circumstances as comprehended by the mind of the actor according to his honest and reasonable belief. One knowingly pressing a baseless criminal charge acts without probable cause, and is guilty of malice per se. (Bowie v. Stackpole, 119 Me. 333, 335 [111 Atl. 409] : Linitsky v. Gorman, 146 N. Y. Supp. 313, 318; Parker v. Huntington, 2 Gray (68 Mass.), 124, 128.) As is said in Burt v. Smith, 181 N. Y. 1, 5 [73 N. E. 495, 2 Ann. Cas. 576] : “While malice is the root of the action, malice alone even when extreme is not enough, for want of probable cause must also be shown.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 254, 23 Cal. App. 2d 307, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-brinkman-calctapp-1937.