Shipman v. Fletcher
Shipman v. Fletcher
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an action for malicious prosecution. The first count of the declaration alleges in substance that the defendants, William Fletcher, Jonathan Magarity and James W. Magarity, by conspiracy between them, falsely and maliciously, etc., procured the defendant, James W., at Fairfax Court House in Virginia, to appear before one Taylor, a justice of the peace for Fairfax County, to charge that the plaintiff, being a witness in a certain cause on trial before the Circuit Court for Fauquier County, Virginia, committed perjury therein, (setting out the matter) and procured the said James W. falsely, etc., to cause the said justice to grant his warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff. The declaration alleges the consequent arrest of plaintiff, his appearance, examination and discharge by the examining magistrate.
The second count contains similar averments of the procuring of James W. Magarity to appear before one Clarke, a justice of the peace of Fairfax County, Virginia, to charge the plaintiff with having committed perjury in testifying on the trial of a cause in Hamilton County, in the State of Ohio. It
It appears, then, that the arrest was a substantive part of the matters complained of in this count.
At the trial the plaintiff gave evidence to prove the facts relating to the arrest on a charge of perjury committed in Fauquier County, Virginia, and then.offered to prove, for the purpose of showing malice, that he had been arrested, at the instigation of Jonathan Magarity and William Fletcher, in Washington City, about a year before the pending trial, and about four years after this suit was brought, and also in January, 1890. Upon objection this evidence was excluded, and exception was taken. This point was not insisted upon, at the argument and it is sufficient to say that we think that acts done so long after the alleged original cause of action are not to be supposed to be in any sense a part of the original matter. Proof of these later arrests was properly excluded.
The plaintiff then offered in - evidence the warrant for arrest, and the affidavit of James' Magarity, relating to the perjury alleged to have been committed by the plaintiff in Ohio; and offered to prove his arrest under those proceedings. To this the defendant objected on the gronnd that the justice issuing the said warrant had no jurisdiction, and thereupon the court allowed it to be read in evidence for the purpose only of showing malice in the arrest charging perjury on the trial at Warrington, in Virginia, and refused to allow the plaintiff to show what was the result of the hearing upon the warrant charging perjury committed in Ohio, or to show that such prosecution was without probable cause. To this ruling the plaintiff excepted.
It is clear enough that a tort is committed and a cause of action arises, whether a person falsely and maliciously causes a court to exercise its legitimate authority, or by the same means causes a court, or rather, the person holding the court, to act without any authority to touch the matter in question; but the torts committed in the two cases are distinguishable. In the instance first stated, the court cannot be regarded as merely the implement of the prosecutor, whereby its acts are his acts; its acts are the acts of the law, and the act of the prosecutor consists of tortiousfy causing the law to act. It is true, all the harm done thereby is in law traceable to him, but the force used in doing it is not his act. He is answerable for the harm done because it is the consequence of his act, but his act consists strictly and only of falsely and maliciously prosecuting. As he cannot be charged with having used force, the action must be on the case, and not for a trespass.. Itwill be observed that the distinguishing fact in the case where the court had jurisdiction is that an act of the law cannot be regarded as a personal act of force, but when the court is without authority to act at all in furtherance of the complaint presented to it any proceeding thereon is held to be coram non judice. The person purporting to act as a judge acts only in the capacity of a person, and in that capacity he is capable of being a mere implement of the so-called prosecutor in the use of force; his acts can be the prosecutor’s acts. If, as a matter of fact, he makes an arrest at the request of the person who lodges the complaint the force used is held to have been used by the latter. It is immaterial that the magistrate is in such a case guilty of trespass; the person whom he assists is also guilty of trespass, and any action to recover for the injury thereby caused must be for trespass. It is not for tortiously instituting a prosecution that he is liable, but for tortiously using violence under the pretext of an apparent prosecution.
To apply these considerations, it must be observed that the action set forth in the second count is not for malicious prosecution simply. The subsequent arrest is stated as a substantive ground of action, and there is no room for the theory of consequential injury. The declaration discloses the want of jurisdiction in the justice who ordered the arrest, and alleges that it was in fact caused by the defendants to be made ; in other words, it alleges that the defendants were guilty of direct trespass. We are of opinion, therefore, that an action on the case cannot be maintained in such a case. This count was open to demurrer, but, in the absence of a demurrer it can be met in the way adopted by the defendants. They had a right to object to, proof of trespass in an action on the case.
We have based our conclusions upon what we conceive to be well established principles, because the decisions in this country appear to present a conflict of authority. It is proper, however, that we should refer to them.
In Morris vs. Scott, 21 Wend., 281, Cowen, J. said: “A party who pursues a man by arrest in a court destitute of jurisdiction, may be sued in trespass for the false imprisonment; and the objection is, that whatever might have been his malice, and however plain the want of probable cause, the injured man cannot bring an action on the case, especially if he mention and claim damages in his declaration for the arrest and imprisonment. In such case he has committed an assault and false imprisonment; an act which, in its own nature, is a trespass vi et armis. But taking the authorities together, they give a decided countenance to an action on the case, though there may be a total want of jurisdiction, providing the malice and falsehood be put forward as the gravamen, and the arrest or other act of trespass be claimed as the consequence. This case, therefore, as it stood, at the common law, seems properly set down by Mr. Chitty as presenting a right to elect between case and trespass. 1 Chitty, 127. But be that as it may; a clear right of election arises under the statute. 2 R. S., 456. By that section, case may now be brought for almost any trespass affecting the person or personal property.”
It will be observed that this case was avowedly decided on the statute of New York, and that the court only undertook to say that it would be decided in the same way at common law. For this last proposition it cited Chitty on Pleading, and the case of Goslin vs Wilcock, 2 Wilson, 302.
In Hays vs. Younglove, 7 B. Mon., 545, the court said: “The only question is, whether he should not have sued in trepass. It is manifest the justice had no jurisdiction to issue the warrant, and that trespass could be sustained. But it has been held that when the proceeding is malicious and unfounded, though instituted in a court having no jurisdiction, either
Stone vs. Stevens, 12 Conn., 218 (225) is the next case cited for the plaintiff. That was an action for “ malicious arrest.” It appeared that a search warrant had been issued by a justice
The cases cited do not at all, we think, support the position of the court. They were cases in which the prosecution failed because the indictment was defective. It could not be said that, in case of such defect, the proceeding was coram non judice, and was therefore a mere trespass committed by the prosecutor with the help of another trespasser. The court acted judicially, and could not be regarded as the prosecutor’s personal implement. His act consisted, as we have indicated, in having tortiously caused a court to act.
On the other hand, the following cases were cited on the part of the defendant: In Turpin vs. Henry, 3 Blackf., (Ind.) 210, the court said: “An action of malicious prosecution can only be supported in cases where the prosecution was-under the regular process and proceedings of some judicial
We think the weight of authority is with these decisions. Whether any damages can be recovered in an action for malicious prosecution, where the court had no jurisdiction, it has not been necessary for us to decide; though we have not seen fit, on the other hand to deny that damages might be recovered for the injury caused by the mere act of prosecuting. It is enough that damages for the arrest cannot, in such a case, be recovered in this form of action.
The next, and only remaining exception is, that the court allowed the jury to determine what was probable cause. The language of the charge was as follows: “Now gentlemen of the jury, it is for you to pass'on the question of probable cause. Of course, I hardly need say to you that if you are satisfied from the imperfect explanation of the court as to what is necessary from the evidence in this case, that these defendants did have probable cause, reasonable cause, to do what they did, that would end the case, ‘and your verdict would be for the defendants.”
• It is only by severing the first of these two sentences from the other, and assuming that, after telling the jury it was for them to pass on the question of probable cause, the court there dropped the subject, that the judge can be understood to allow them to determine a matter of law. But these two sentences cannot be severed. The court proceeded to advise the jury that they were to pass on the question of probable cause in the light of what had already been said of the evidence necessary to make out probable cause.
We find no error in the rulings of the court, and the judgment is therefore—
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHN J. SHIPMAN v. WILLIAM FLETCHER
- Status
- Published