Pickford v. Hudson
Pickford v. Hudson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
-We think this appeal can be disposed of without a consideration of each of the numerous errors assigned. Our attention has been especially called to one assignment, relating to the refusal of the court to give the following instruction to the jury, when requested on hehalf of defendant: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant was present in the police court on the 4th and 5th of April, 1901, when the case of the United States against one Ferdinand Hopp and the plaintiff, James Hudson, was being tried, and heard all of the testimony of the several witnesses then produced and examined, and then, acting at the request and under the instructions of the assistant United States attorney who had charge of the prosecution of said case, made the affidavit of complaint dated the 5th day of April, 1901, offered in evidence, believing the charge therein made to be true, then their verdict must be for the defendant.”
The evidence adduced at the trial of this cause clearly discloses that the defendant, early in the negotiations between 'himself and Hopp, sought the advice of the district attorney, and acted under the direction of that officer and the detectives detailed to work on the case. It also appears that the affidavit of complaint of April 5th, the one upon which this suit must stand or fall, because the only one referred to in the declaration, was-sworn to at the suggestion of the district attorney, after evidence had been taken in the case against the plaintiff and Hopp for
The presence of the defendant at the preliminary examination of plaintiff and Hopp, and the advice of the district attorney, are important considerations in ascertaining defendant’s liability. It must be remembered that the evidence taken at the hearing was, by stipulation of attorneys, made to apply to the complaint of April 5th. It was upon this evidence that the plaintiff and Hopp were bound over to await the action of the grand jury. It is well settled that “a judgment of a magistrate finding that there was probable cause for believing plaintiff guilty, and binding him over to await the action of the grand jury, constitutes prima facie evidence of probable cause.” Ambs v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co. 114 Fed. 317. Hence, where a person making a criminal complaint in good faith produces evidence sufficient to warrant the magistrate in holding the person charged to await the action of the grand jury, the complaining witness has discharged the obligation upon him of establishing probable cause.
We are here confronted with this situation: Defendant had before him, at the time of making the complaint of April 5th, the evidence of the several witnesses upon which probable cause was found to exist by the- committing magistrate. With his own knowledge of the facts, and the additional knowledge gained from hearing the testimony of the witnesses, together with the caution displayed in seeking the counsel and advice of the district attorney, defendant swore out the complaint. If he acted in good faith, and did not secure the finding of probable cause by the magistrate through deception and misrepresentation, he cannot be held liable for malicious prosecution. In other words, if he believed the statements made in the complaint of April 5th to be true, based upon his own knowledge of the facts and the evidence disclosed at the hearing, or upon the evidence alone, he cannot be held liable in the present case. He was not required,
Where a citizen acts in good faith in assisting the officers of the law to apprehend and bring to the bar of justice those guilty of crime, or against whom probable cause exists of the commission of crime, such action is to be commended, and not condemned. Hence, where a state of facts exists, such as is here disclosed, a defendant, before being mulcted in damages, is entitled to have all his rights protected and safeguarded before the jury by clear and definite instructions as to the law applicable to the case as made out by the evidence.
It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff that the instruction was properly refused because it did not caution the jury that they must believe that the defendant disclosed all the facts within his knowledge material to the case, before they could find that he acted in good faith and could justify his action on the advice of the district attorney. This was not necessary. Having heard the evidence upon which the. committing magistrate found probable cause, he was not required to make any statement to the district attorney, so long as he honestly believed the facts set forth in the complaint to be true. The establishment of probable cause was all that was necessary to justify his action, if the complaint was made in good faith. When the complaint was made, probable cause- had already been established by the evidence. The presumption is that defendant acted in good
We deem it important to consider briefly another assignment of error. It appears that counsel for plaintiff, in his closing argument to the jury, used the following language: “You noticed, did you not, gentlemen of the jury, that although Mr. Maddox asked Mr. Hudson, when a witness on the stand, where he got information with regard to the fire at Four Corners, and Hudson said, ‘Shaw told me.’ Did you also notice that he did not ask Hudson what it was that Shaw told him ? He did not dare to do it. Mr. Hudson is here in court, and we will consent that he be recalled for further cross-examination, if counsel for the defendant desire.” The record discloses that counsel for defendant objected to this statement on the ground that it was not proper argument, but the court overruled the objection, stating that it was proper retort to the argument of plaintiff’s counsel. There is manifestly a mistake in the transcript of the record or in the bill of exceptions as the court must have referred to the remark as proper retort to the argument of defendant’s counsel. This mistake, however, is not material.
At the time of the trial in the present case, the defendant had been discharged from the indictment charging him with the crime of arson in the State of Maryland. The remarks indulged in tended to impress the' fact of his former indictment upon the attention of the jury in a most damaging way, and in a manner not warranted by the evidence. It was within the rightful discretion of counsel for defendant to cross-examine plaintiff in any manner they thought judicious, as long as they kept within proper bounds. They were not required to pursue any line of interrogation further than they deemed wise, and it was wholly improper for counsel for plaintiff to speculate as to what would have been disclosed by further inquiry. This is a species of professional conduct generally condemned by courts of review. This court, speaking through Chief Justice Alvey in Washington & G. R. Co. v. Dashiell, 7 App. D. C. 507, made the following pertinent observation: “That great prejudice and wrong is frequently effected by the improper and unwarrantable comments of counsel, made without the support of the evidence, and beyond and outside of the legitimate scope of the subject of inquiry, is beyond question; and in recent times the courts of the country have frequently been called upon to counteract and relieve against such undue prejudice and its effects, by silencing counsel and setting aside verdicts. Counsel have no privilege.
In Hall v. United States, 150 U. S. 76, 37 L. ed. 1003, 14 Sup. Ct. Rep. 22, the court said: “The attempt of the prosecuting officer of the United States to induce the jury to assume, without any evidence thereof, the defendant’s guilt of a crime of which he had been judicially acquitted, as a ground for convicting him of a distinct and independent crime for which he was being tried, was a breach of professional and official duty,, which, upon the defendant’s protest, should have been rebuked by the court, and the jury directed to allow it no weight. The presiding judge, by declining to interpose, notwithstanding the defendant’s protest against this course of argument, gave the jury to understand that they might properly and lawfully be influenced by it, and thereby committed a grave error, manifestly tending to prejudice the defendant with the jury, and which, therefore, was the proper subject of exception, and, having been duly excepted to, entitles him to a new trial.” The case last cited is clearly in point. There is no distinction between comment touching a crime of which a defendant has been acquitted, and one for which a defendant has been indicted, but from which he has been released by the prosecuting officer entering a nolle prosequi. It is not for us to say what effect these remarks might have had on the jury. There is too grave a danger involved in. the probable results of such an impression to permit of any speculation on our part as to its effect upon the jury. The probability of injury and injustice is so great as to leave but one safe course for us to pursue, and that is to grant a new trial.
For the errors committed, the judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial. Reversed.
Reference
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- PICKFORD v. HUDSON
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- Syllabus
- Malicious Prosecution; Direction of Verdict; Misconduct of Counsel; Prejudicial Error. 1. Where in an action for malicious prosecution it appears that the plaintiff, charged on the complaint of the defendant with conspiracy to blackmail, was given a hearing in the police court; that at the suggestion of the district attorney, and because of the insufficiency of the original complaint, the defendant swore out a new complaint upon which the action was based; that, with the consent of the plaintiff, the evidence taken at the hearing was considered as applicable to the new complaint, and thereupon the court bound over the plaintiff for the action of the grand jury which found an indictment which was afterwards nolle prossed, — it is error for the trial court to refuse an instruction for the defendant that if the defendant, after hearing the evidence against the plaintiff at the hearing, and then, acting upon the instructions of the district attorney, made the new complaint, believing the charge to be true, then their verdict must be for the defendant. 2. While counsel are allowed in argument to the jury wide latitude in drawing deductions from the evidence, it is wholly improper for them to discuss collateral matters tending to discredit a witness, in such manner as to prejudice the rights of one of the parties in the eyes of the jury. 3. In an action for malicious prosecution, where the counsel for the plaintiff in his argument to the jury commented upon the defendant’s connection with a crime for which he had been indicted, but from the charge of committing which he had been released by the prosecuting officer entering a nolle prosequi, and the trial court overruled plaintiff’s objection to such comment, with the remark that it was proper retort to the argument of defendant’s counsel, it was held that the action of the trial court was error prejudicial to the defendant. (Citing Washington & G. R. Co. v. Dashiell, 7 App. D. C. 507, and Washington & G. R. Co. v. Patterson, 9 App. D. C. 423.)