Williams v. Frey

1938 OK 280, 78 P.2d 1052, 182 Okla. 556, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 633
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 19, 1938
DocketNo. 28056.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1938 OK 280 (Williams v. Frey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Frey, 1938 OK 280, 78 P.2d 1052, 182 Okla. 556, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 633 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

This was an action involving civil liability for having caused a search of the plaintiff’s property pursuant to a search warrant, and seizure of allegedly stolen articles consisting of an iron kettle and some iron pipe. The plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment, and the defendants appeal.

The plaintiff is one of eight children whose father had executed a mortgage on the home place. The father died, with the mortgage unpaid. A default in an interest payment occurred, and defendant Williams, owner of the mortgage, caused a foreclosure action to be filed. The other and principal defendant, Southworth, was appointed receiver to take charge of the assets and preserve them. Plaintiff was not living on the mortgaged property.

The defendant receiver, Southworth, had had a little difficulty before with the plaintiff, about the plaintiff’s removing articles from the place. A large iron kettle had been imbedded in some concrete or brick in a building on the premises for many years, in such a manner as no doubt constituted a permanent fixture. It was not included in the inventory of personal property of the deceased owner of the realty. Regardless, however, of whether it was a permanent fixture, it was in custodia legis. The defendant receiver discovered that this large iron kettle had been pried loose and *557 removed from the premises, along with some iron pipe. In view of the fact that plaintiff had told him, several weeks before, that he was going to take the kettle (regardless of the defendant receiver’s consent), the defendant assumed, and correctly so, for it is admitted, that plaintiff had taken it. Defendant was also told by a brother of plaintiff, who had personal knowledge of the fact, that plaintiff had taken it.

The defendant then made a full disclosure of those facts to an attorney and asked his advice. The attorney advised against a replevin action and directed defendant to consult with the county attorney. The defendant then made full disclosure of said facts to the county attorney, who likewise advised against a replevin action, and advised him to have a' search warrant issued. The county attorney prepared the affidavit necessary for a search warrant, defendant signed it. and the county attorney was present when it was issued. The search warrant was placed in the hands of the sheriff, who searched the premises where plaintiff was living, and found the kettle and some iron pipe which had been taken from the premises by plaintiff. Plaintiff was using the kettle at the time, and subsequently brought it and the pipe in himself.

Plaintiff had a married sister who during this time was being permitted to live on the premises from which the articles were taken. She and the plaintiff testified in the present hearing that she had loaned the kettle to plaintiff. But the evidence is undisputed that when defendant went to the place to verify that it had been taken, she did not tell the defendant of that fact. As to the iron pipe, neither she nor the plaintiff testified, nor is there yet any contention, that she consented to his taking it.

Subsequently, pursuant to an application made by the plaintiff to the county attorney, and a conversation between them, the details of which are not made clear by the record, the articles were returned to plaintiff, It is contended by defendants in their brief that plaintiff procured dismissal of the proceedings by promising not to press the present action, and other promises, but we do not find sufficient evidence thereof in the record to confirm such contention as a matter of law. However that may be, the plaintiff was never arrested and was never tried, and the articles were returned to him, and an order of the justice of the peace was agreed to and signed putting an end to the matter.

It is not disputed that in an action for damages on account of a wrongful search and seizure both malice and lack of probable cause for the suing out of the warrant must be shown. Before the search warrant may be issued, probable cause must exist (McHenry v. State, 61 Okla. Cr. 450, 69 P.2d 90), and the failure to prove the absence thereof, in an action of this kind, is fatal to plaintiff’s case. That proof of both is essential to recovery seems to be accepted by the parties, and the case was tried on that theory. That is the rule in actions for malicious prosecution. Sawyer v. Shick, 30 Okla. 353, 120 P. 581; Flamm v. Wineland, 41 Okla. 688, 139 P. 961; Robberson v. Gibson, 62 Okla. 306, 162 P. 1120. In this respect the actions for malicious prosecution and for wrongful search and seizure are identical. See cases cited at 56 C. J. 1255, footnotes 90, 91.

It is well settled that the term “probable cause” does not mean actual or positive cause, for the determination of the question whether the person causing the warrant to issue had probable cause to believe the party guilty is, on its face, a different question from the question whether the party was actually guilty. Otherwise crime would often go unpunished, for it would follow as a matter of law that the affiant must suffer in damages if an acquittal for any reason should occur. Ordinarily, if the facts and circumstances known to the person causing the warrant to issue are such as to justify a man of prudence and caution in believing that the offense has been committed, it is sufficient. Carroll v. United States, 267 U. S. 132, 45 S. Ct. 280, 69 L. Ed. 543, 39 A. L. R. 790; 56 C. J. 1214, and cases cited.

There was no material dispute as to the facts in this case bearing on the issue of probable cause. Of course, the receiver was under a legal duty to protect the property. He knew that for 20 years the kettle had been a part of the fixtures of the place or that at any rate, due to the fact that it had not been listed as personal property in the inventory of the estate, it was a part of that for which he was accountable. The plaintiff had told him that he was going to take it, and this was against his consent. The plaintiff’s own brother then came and told him, the defendant receiver, that plaintiff had taken it. He immediately went to the premises, found that it had been pried loose and that it and the pipe were missing. There he talked with plaintiff’s sister, who was living on the place. She did not tell him either that plaintiff had taken it or *558 that she had given him permission to take it. She testified in the subsequent trial that she had given her permission, but she did not tell this to defendant. Furthermore, suppose she did give her permission? It is not shown by the evidence that she was clothed with authority to dispose of the assets of the estate, either by loaning or giving them away. However, it is not necessary to dwell at length on this p>hase of the. case, for we do not base our ruling thereon ; whatever effect the granting of her permission may have had if the plaintiff had been tried for larceny is beside the point in the present inquiry, which is concerned only with the question of probable cause for having the search warrant issued.

What, then, did the defendant receiver •do? Did he go immediately and have the search warrant issued? No; and this is the point upon which the case turns. 1-Ie conferred with the attorney for the receiver, or attorney for the plaintiff in the mortgage proceedings. That attorney advised him against instituting a replevin action and specifically directed him to the county attorney.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 280, 78 P.2d 1052, 182 Okla. 556, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-frey-okla-1938.