Wilmerton v. Sample

39 Ill. App. 60, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 419
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 11, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 Ill. App. 60 (Wilmerton v. Sample) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmerton v. Sample, 39 Ill. App. 60, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 419 (Ill. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

C. B. Smith, P. J.

This was an action on the case. The declaration contains seven counts. The first charges appellant with assaulting and beating appellee. The second with assaulting appellee, and taking him before a justice and imprisoning him without probable cause. The third with committing a trespass upon appellee’s house and destroying doors and windows. The fourth with trespassing on the land of appellee and destroying grass, corn, etc.; and the fifth with destroying appellee’s trees. We do not understand that any serious effort is made to sustain this judgment under any of the first five counts, and even if there were any sucli claim it is clear there is no sufficient evidence in the record to justify such claim. The sixth charges that appellant went before a justice and falsely and maliciously procured the arrest and imprisonment of appellee without probable cause, and the seventh that appellant falsely and maliciously and without probable cause went before the grand jury and procured an indictment against appellee for malicious mischief.

The general issue was filed and upon a trial the plaintiff obtained a verdict for $181, and after overruling a motion for a new trial the court gave judgment upon the verdict. The record is now brought here by appellant, who insists that the verdict is against the evidence and that the court erred in giving and refusing instructions and in receiving and rejecting evidence to the prejudice of appellant.

The record in this case shows that this controversy is the final result and culmination of a long effort on the part of appellee to get the title to certain land of which appellant claimed to be the owner, through judicial proceedings. Appellant was claiming the title, and the right to possession at least, of one forty-acre tract upon which a house stood. This house had been occupied by a tenant of appellee. Appellant had given this tenant notice to quit and surrender possession to him. The tenant left and before appellant took actual possession of the land appellee went and practically destroyed tlie house and so mutilated it that it was not and could not be occupied. He chopped down some of the doors and windows. Mutilated the plastering, tore off the casings to the doors and windows, tore off the weather boarding and carried the doors of the house home with him and concealed them in a dark cellar. He also chopped down a number of fruit trees, grape vines, etc., about the house. For the injury to the house and orchard appellant had him arrested for malicious mischief, and for carrying away the doors and concealing them, appellant had him arrested for larceny. On a trial for malicious mischief appellee was acquitted and the prosecutors nollied the indictment charging appellee with larceny.

On the trial of this cause the evidence was somewhat conflicting upon the material questions involved, but as to the weight or value of it we express no opinion, inasmuch as the case must be remanded for another trial. The real and substantial question arose on the 6th and 7th counts, charging appellant with malicious prosecution and false imprisonment without probable cause. To justify a recovery under these counts the proof must show both malice and want of probable cause. Whether either of these necessary elements existed in this case was hotly contested on Loth sides, and it was earnestly denied by appellant. It was therefore important that the law should have been accurately declared to the jury. This we think was not done in several of the instructions. Twenty-two long and elaborate instructions were given for the plaintiff, and so far as we can see or are advised by the record, exactly as submitted by counsel for appellee. Without stopping to criticise all this mass of miscalled instructions, we think that it must have impressed the jury more like an argument from the court in behalf of the plaintiff, than a simple, short and direct statement of the law as'applicable to the facts in evidence. Many of these contain correct statements of the law, to which, standing single or in company with a reasonable number, no objection could be taken; but when correct propositions of law are repeated so often and in so many different ways by the court as to bear and assume the character of an argument from the court, then they are open to serious criticism and are obnoxious to any correct practice in instructing a jury. But aside from this objection going to the number, repetition and argumentative character of the instructions given for plaintiff as a whole, several of them were erroneous.

The 13tli was as follows:

“If the jury believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant knew, or had good reason to know, that the plaintiff was in possession of the real estate and personal property which it was charged he maliciously injured, claiming to own the same at the time the criminal charge was alleged to have been committed, then there was no probable cause for the prosecution.”

This instruction is open to two objections.' The jury are told that if the plaintiff was in possession of the property, claiming it, then there was no probable cause for the prosecution without reference to the fact whether appellee was claiming in good or bad faith. The mere possession and claim of ownership in property is not of itself conclusive of his right to it as against a better or rightful owner, nor as against such better title, authorizes him to destroy it. Such possession and claim of ownership must be made in good faith and in an honest and reasonable belief that it is his own property and that he has a right to injure or destroy it. After announcing this erroneous principle of law the court then declares, as a matter of fact, that if such claim was made then there was no probable cause for such arrest. Whether the facts all considered or any of them furnished ground for believing there was probable cause for the arrest, was for the jury and not the court. This instruction was highly prejudicial to the defendant, and well nigh took the case from the jury. There was no denial that the jffaintiff in that case was in possession and claiming some kind of right at the time of the injury to the house and taking away the doors, but whether he had any reasonable ground for making such claim, and whether, in the light of the undisputed facts, such claim was an honest one, ought to have been referred to the jury. The proof is clear, that he dismantled the house and chopped down the orchard and vines. Whether such conduct by appellee toward this property, which he now claims was his own, and that he had a right to destroy it, was consistent with an honest claim of ownership in himself, ought to have been submitted to the jury, and it was error for the court to take it away from them and decide the question for them.

The 14th instruction is as follows:

“ While the law is that a person is not guilty of the charge of false imprisonment,'where the arrest and imprisonment are made under the color of legal process, yet, although the process may have been issued regularly, by a competent officer, the jury are instructed that the person who procures such process, f.or the purposes of having another arrested and imprisoned, and makes a false affidavit for that purpose, knowing it to be false, in order to obtain an advantage, or to force the person arrested, to surrender his possession, is guilty of the abuse of process, and can not justify under such process.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Griswold v. Horne
165 P. 318 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1917)
Nelson v. Chicago City Railway Co.
163 Ill. App. 98 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)
Wilmerton v. Sample
42 Ill. App. 254 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Ill. App. 60, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmerton-v-sample-illappct-1890.