White v. Fox

4 Ky. 369, 1 Bibb 369, 1809 Ky. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 25, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Ky. 369 (White v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Fox, 4 Ky. 369, 1 Bibb 369, 1809 Ky. LEXIS 69 (Ky. Ct. App. 1809).

Opinion

OPINION of the Court, by

Ch, J. Edwahds.

— The declaration in this case contains two counts, one for a malicious prosecution, the other for the publication of a libel. In April 1805, a writ of enquiry was awarded, in which situation the cause stood as to the pleadings, till June term 1807, when the defendant in the circuit court offered a special plea of probable cause, &c. and moved thereon to set aside the writ of enquiry, which motion was overruled by the court, upon the ground that the court had a discretion to refuse to admit such a plea in that stage of the cause ; and that discretion ought to be exercised to its rejection, because the matter thereof, if it contained a sufficient defence, could be given in evidence on the general issue.

By this decision injustice could not have been done the defendant in that court, and he ought not to have been indulged in taking advantage of his own laches, in not having before plead, by permitting him to embarrass the case, or delay the trial by pleading a special plea, the full advantage of which he could have had on the general issue ¿ and this opinion perfectly accords [370]*370with the decision in 1 Cranch 110, upon a case directly in point, and it is in conformity with the principles that are clearly inferable from the case in 1 Wash. 28.

The attorney monwe'ith”11" who fet down the name ofihe profecutor, n not the only ad miihbie witnefs to prove who not a right to demand the o-court"upon lan abfcact propo- . . ^witneff's is to be decided by the jury; wherethe^evi’ denes was con. tradictory, the ftruct the jury that there was probable caufe, If one party proffers a paper to be read to ¡s* accordinHy done, he can. not afterwards becaufe'k'was fo read. When a party evtdenc "3U!and when the ad. verfaiy (hall be «impelled to ,er,

It is therefore wholly unnecessary t® consider the P^ea °fferec*t0 second count, because, before the writ of enquiry should have been set aside, each count in the declaration should have been properly answered. This vjew Df the subject furnishes an answer to the three . J first assignments of error.

The 4th is, that the court erred in permitting one of Sranc^ jury5 who was of the inquest on the indictment in the declaration mentioned, to be sworn, and to g¡ve evidence as to what passed in the grand jury room and arnon8st the grand jurors, on making said inquest,

It appears that the circuit court admitted a grand juror, as a competent witness, to prove that White, the appellant, carried the indictment before mentioned to the grand jury, and also to prove what had passed between the said White and the grand jury. As the law, imPos‘n5 an oath of secrecy on grand jurors, has been long since repealed, we are unable to discern the slightest reason to justify the rejection of such testimony, or any on which it could be considered incompetent, The 5th assignment is the same in substance as the fourth.

assj~nment js that the court erred in their . . „ p . . ’ . , permission of the evidence in tne 5th bill of exceptions mentioned, to go to the jury, to prove the defendant be-i°V/"to have been the prosecutor, the same not being the best evidence the nature of the case admitted, and being incompetent.

appears that the bill of exceptions alluded to by this assignment, contains all the testimony introduced jjy Fox, to prove White to have been the prosecutor, ^c° which it seems very satisfactorily to do. To its competency, there seems to be no other objection, besides that which has already been noticed, except that jyjan¡n Hardin, Esq. the attorney for the common-ivealth, who prosecuted, as appeared by his signature to the aforesaid indictment, was not produced to prove that the name of White was set down at the foot of the indictmentby his direction or consent; and because there was no person or writing produced, to prove the same was done by the consent or direction of said White. [371]*371This objection does not appear to be well founded : Martin Hardin, Esq. considered as an individual, was no better than any other witness ; considered as an officer, doing business in court and acting under its authority and inspection, his proceedings becorné matter of record, and as such, have as much credit attached to them as those acts done immediately by the clerk or the court itself.

The circuit court was therefore correct in permitting the testimony to go to the jury.

The 7th assignment is, that the court erred in refusing the instructions to the jury asked for, as mentioned in the 6th bill of exceptions.

The bill of exceptions alluded to by this assignment, states, that after the evidence on both sides was gone through, White moved the court to instruct the jury, that upon the evidence offered, he had made out probable cause for the prosecution mentioned in the first count in the declaration ; but the court refused to decide on the fact, whether the evidence proved probable cause or not, being of opinion that it was not proper for them, but the jury, to decide upon it ; at the same time, the court declared its readiness to instruct the jury, that if they should be of opinion, from the evidence produced on the part of the defendant, that without collusion, he had reason to believe the plaintiff was guilty of the crime contained in the indictment, that the law was with the defendant, and that it mattered not whether the plaintiff was guilty or innocent, provided the defendant had reasonable probable cause to believe he was guilty.

Repeated decisions of this court have established the principle, that no party has a right to call upon the court lor a decision upon a mere abstract proposition, and that he who complains of an error, shall exhibit such a case as will shew its practical operation to his injury. White then, to avail himself of this error, (if it be one) should have set forth in his bill of exceptions, the testimony on which he prayed the instruction from the court, that this court might judge, from the case itsaif, whether such instructions should have been given. Suppose the case had been stated, this court might hav& been of opinion that the matter alleged as probable cause, and supported by the testimony, would not in itself [372]*372amount to a justification ; that the circumstances thus set up, were not such from which the law would infer guilt ; that they consisted in mere hearsays, &c. . Now, though the principle for which the assignment contends be admitted as correct, that the court should decide probable cause or not; yet in the case stated, it would appear that the court had given no opinion, or refused none to the injury of the complaining party ; because if the court had given an opinion at all, it ought to have been against him, and not for him. In such a case, this court would not reverse the judgment on his application : and this shews the necessity of stating the case in such a manner as to shew whether the error he alleges, has had any practical operation to his injury..

But independent of these objections to this assignment, it appears to us that the circuit court decided correctly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ky. 369, 1 Bibb 369, 1809 Ky. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-fox-kyctapp-1809.