Gaither v. Carpenter.
Gaither v. Carpenter.
Opinion of the Court
To the case on appeal tendered by appellant, the appellee offered exceptions. The Court adopted the “appellant’s case as amended by appellee’s exceptions,” and the matter comes up to this Court in that shape, leaving this Court to incorporate the amendments. This practice cannot be tolerated. It is “the duty of the appellant to have the case as thus modified redrafted and submitted to the Judge for signature. When he does not do this, but merely.sends up the appellant’s case with the appellee’s exceptions and Judge’s order, there is strictly no 'case settled,’ and the Court in its discretion (there being no errors upon the face of the record) may, ex mero motu, either affirm the judgment or remand the case.” Mitchell v. Tedder, 107 N. C., 358; Hinton v. Greenleaf, 115 N. C., 5; State v. King, 119 N. C., 910. When counsel do not agree upon a case, only the “case settled” by the'Judge should come up in the record. No part of the tentative cases of counsel, on either side, should come up, save as *242 they appear -in tbe redrafted case signed by tbe Court. State v. Dewey, 139 N. C., 557. Tbe “case on appeal” should contain sucb incidents of tbe trial as were duly excepted to. Wbat those incidents were is a matter which, if not agreed upon by counsel, must [be “settled” by the trial Judge, and cannot be determined by this Court.
A member of the jury in the criminal trial having testified as to the evidence of the defendant when prosecuting the criminal action, was allowed to state, over the plaintiff’s exception, that the jury in that case were “out a considerable time” and at first stood “seven for acquittal and five for conviction.” We do not approve of the admission of such evidence. As the jury, on full deliberation, acquitted, this is of more value than its first tentative vote. The evidence was irrelevant and should h_ave been excluded, but we cannot see that its admission was prejudicial or reversible error in this case.
His Honor charged the jury that to constitute malicious prosecution there must be want of probable cause and malice. This was correct. Kirkham v. Coe, 46 N. C., 423; Railroad v. Hardware Co., ante; ibid., 138 N. C., 174. Nor could the plaintiff complain of the definition of malice — “a disposition to do the person prosecuted a wrong without legal excuse.” In Railroad v. Hardware Co., 138 N. C., 180, it was defined to be a “wrongful act intentionally done without just cause or excuse.” Nor could the plaintiff complain that any of its contentions were not presented to the jury. If he wished fuller instructions upon any phase of the evidence it was his duty to have presented them by prayers for special instructions. Patterson v. Mills, 121 N. C., 258, and cases there cited.
As the jury were about to retire, one of the jurors asked the Judge to be allowed to carry the charge to the jury-ro'om with them. This the. Judge properly did, for though not *243 within the very language of Bevisal, 537, it could not be erroneous in view of that statute. Unintentionally, by some oversight, the special prayers asked by the plaintiff, and which had been given, were not also handed to the jury. It does not appear what they were nor that the failure to hand them to the jury worked any prejudice to the plaintiff. They are not set out so that we might see. It is not contended that they contradicted the charge in any way. If they were material, the jury would probably have sent back for them, for they had been read in the hearing of the jury. Besides, the plaintiff’s counsel were present in the court-room and did not then or at any time before verdict call the matter to the attention of the Court — who would doubtless gladly have corrected the oversight — nor make any exception. “Exceptions to. the evidence and to all matters occurring on the trial, except the charge of the Court, must be noted at the time Bev., 554 (2). “If not, they are waived.” Taylor v. Plummer, 105 N. C., 57 (often affirmed), citing State v. Ballard, 79 N. C., 627; Scott v. Green, 89 N. C., 278; Alley v. Howell, 141 N. C., 116.
“It is the policy of the law to encourage citizens of the country in their efforts to bring public offenders to the notice of the Court to the end that they may be regularly put on trial. Hence, one who institutes proceedings for that purpose is in some measure protected, and he does not expose himself to an action merely by acting without probable cause. It must appear also that he acted from malice.” Kirhham v. Coe, 46 N. C., 429. The jury have found that the defendant acted without malice and, from the evidence doubtless, that he had probable cause also-. Actions of this kind are not favored by the law unless oppression and malice is shown.
No Eirror.
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