White v. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co.

123 P.2d 193, 168 Or. 371, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 24
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 123 P.2d 193 (White v. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co., 123 P.2d 193, 168 Or. 371, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 24 (Or. 1942).

Opinion

RAND, J.

On January 9, 1937, two unknown men, masked and armed with revolvers, entered the office of the local cashier of the Pacific Telephone and Tele *373 graph Company in Portland and robbed him of $5,084.50 in money, belonging to that company. Thereupon a deputy district attorney for Multnomah county drew up a criminal information, setting forth that the crime of assault and robbery, being armed with a dangerous weapon, had been committed and charging John Doe and Richard Roe, whose true names were unknown, with its commission. The same was then signed and verified by R. V. Jenkins, an officer of said company, and filed in the office of a committing magistrate of said county and a warrant was issued and delivered to a police officer for service.

After an investigation had been made by the police department and upon information thereby obtained, the police officer to whom the warrant had been delivered was instructed by one of his superior officers to insert the name of Coe C. White in the warrant and to arrest him as one of the persons charged with the commission of said crime. Thereupon White was arrested and taken before a committing magistrate and bound over to appear before the grand jury. Being unable to furnish the required bond, he was placed in the county jail where he remained until March 18, 1937, when he was discharged from custody upon the return into court by the grand jury of a not true bill. White then brought an action for malicious prosecution against said company and Jenkins jointly to recover damages for the injuries resulting from his arrest, prosecution and imprisonment, and, after trial upon the merits, obtained a judgment against said defendants in the circuit court for Multnomah county. The defendants appealed from said judgment, and it was held by this court in White v. Pacific Telephone and, Telegraph Company, 162 Or. 270, 90 P. (2d) 193, *374 that defendants’ motion for directed verdict should have been sustained and that the trial court erred in not instructing the jury to return a verdict for the defendants. Upon that ground, the judgment was reversed and the cause was remanded to the court below with directions to dismiss the action, which direction was complied with by the trial court, in entering a final judgment for the defendants for their costs and disbursements.

Under those proceedings, all matters at issue between the parties in that action were finally settled and determined and a judgment was entered which constitutes a bar to any further litigation as to any and all of said matters. Notwithstanding that the plaintiff was concluded by said judgment from further litigating any of said matters, he brought another action against the same defendants, setting forth two causes of action — one for malicious prosecution and the other for false imprisonment, and based his right to recover upon the same alleged wrongful acts that were alleged in his former complaint. In other words, by his present action, the plaintiff is attempting to re-litigate as against the same parties the same matters which were litigated and determined adversely to him in the former action after a trial upon the merits. Moreover, when his complaint in the present action was filed more than two years had elapsed since the prosecution was terminated in his favor by his discharge and release from custody on March 18, 1937.

It is well settled that a cause of action for malicious prosecution is complete when the prosecution is terminated in favor of the plaintiff, and the statute of limitations begins to run at that time. See Restatement, Torts, section 898.

*375 The plaintiff, however, contends that, since the former action was commenced within two years after the prosecution of the criminal action was terminated in his favor and the present action was brought within one year after the former action was terminated and a judgment entered for the defendants, the time for bringing the present action was extended for one year thereafter by the provisions of section 1-219, O. C. L. A., which provides:

“If an action shall be commenced within the time prescribed therefor and such action be dismissed upon the trial thereof, or upon appeal, after the time limited for bringing a new action, plaintiff * * * may commence a new action upon such cause of action within one year after such dismissal or reversal on appeal, etc.”

That section applies only when an action has been commenced within the time prescribed by the statute and has been dismissed without a trial upon the merits, such as in a case when judgment of nonsuit is given, or when an action is dismissed for want of prosecution or for want of jurisdiction, and the like, and it has no application to a judgment entered after a trial upon the merits. In all these latter cases, the judgment of dismissal does not conclude the plaintiff’s right of action and leaves the right of action open the same as if no proceedings thereon had ever been had. But where, as here, there has been a trial upon the merits and a judgment entered, to place a different construction upon the statute would result in the entire destruction of the rule of res adjudicata and permit the plaintiff to litigate the same cause of action as against the same parties without end, provided only that the original action was commenced within the time prescribed by the statute and new actions were there *376 after brought within one year after the termination by a judgment on the merits of the last preceding action.

It is obvious that no such intention can W ^und in the words of the statute. We, therefore, hold that, under this statute, where the plaintiff fails otherwise than upon the merits and the time limited for the commencement of such action has expired, the plaintiff may commence a new action within one year as provided by the statute and that it has no application to a judgment entered after trial upon the merits and that the word “dismissed”, as used in section 1, 219, O. C. L. A., signifies a final ending of an action, not a final judgment on the controversy, but an ending of that particular proceeding. This conforms to the definition found in Black’s Law Dictionary of the word “dismissal”, where he says:

“The dismissal of an action, suit, motion, etc., is an order or judgment finally disposing of it by sending it out of court, though without a trial of the issues involved.”

It is in that sense that the word “dismissed” is used in the statute. Moreover, section 1-219, in referring to a new action, applies only to the same cause of action and between the same parties, for if the cause of action is a different cause of action than that sued on in the former action, or if between different parties, unless brought within the time prescribed by law, the bringing of such action would be expressly barred by statute.

Upon the filing of the complaint in the present action, the defendants demurred upon the ground that neither the complaint nor either of the alleged causes of action therein set forth states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and that neither of the *377 alleged causes of action was commenced within the time limited by the code.

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Bluebook (online)
123 P.2d 193, 168 Or. 371, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-pacific-telephone-telegraph-co-or-1942.