Court Opinion

ID: 7108606
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:23:44.001202+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:13.270951
License: Public Domain

Waterman, J.-
1 Tbe defense interposed by tbe answer is a general denial. Tbe county attorney was called as a witness in defendant’s bebalf, and it was sought to be shown that defendant disclosed to him all tbe facts of tbe transaction before instituting tbe prosecution. Defendant was also asked as to tbe same matter, and further it was attempted to show by him what advice be received from tbe county attorney. This testimony was ruled out, on plaintiff’s objection, and appellant’s first complaint is of this action of tbe trial court. Tbe ground for this bolding seems to bave been that the defense of advice of counsel must be specially pleaded; that it cannot be shown under a general denial. The gist of plaintiff’s action was malice and want of probable cause. Advice of counsel tended to directly rebut or disprove these essential elements. Mesher v. Iddings, 12 Iowa, 553. This being true, evidence to establish it was admissible under tbe pleadings. Tbe rule is that any evidence is admissible under such an issue which tends to disprove tbe facts that plaintiff is required to establish. Johnson v. Pennell, 67 Iowa, 669. In Bowman v. Manufacturing Co., 96 Iowa, 188, tbe action was aided by attachment, and there was *44a counterclaim for damages for. tbe wrongful and malicious suing out of the writ. The reply was a general denial, and under it plaintiff was permitted to show that he acted under advice of counsel in instituting the attachment proceeding. On appeal by defendant, the admission of this testimony was complained of, and upon this subject it is said in the opinion: “It is insisted by appellants that the fact that plaintiff acted upon the advice of counsel was a mitigating circumstance, which should have been pleaded. But it was not shown as a mitigating circumstance, within the meaning of the section quoted. Section 2961 of the Code of 1813, in regard to attachments, provides that if, in an action on the bond, it be shown that the attachment was sued out maliciously, the plaintiff therein may recover exemplary damages. The defendants aver in their counterclaim that the allegations of the petition on which the attachment was issued were made with malice, for the purpose of procuring the writ, and to injure the defendants, and that they were injured by them. The defendants therefore allege grounds for the recovery- of exemplary damages. The reply contains a general denial, and that is a denial of the allegations of malice. To sustain the issues thus formed, evidence was offered for the defendants, and it was competent for the plaintiff to offer any competent proof of the absence of malice on his part in suing out the writ * * * The evidence in question was offered, not in mitigation of a wrong admitted, but to defeat an alleged ground of recovery which was fully denied.” In the following cases-it is directly held that evidence to show probable cause and the nonexistence of malice is admissible under a general denial: Folger v. Washburn, 131 Mass. 60; Griffen v. Chubb, 7 Tex. 603; Harlan v. Jones, 16 Ind. App. 398 (45 N. E. Rep. 481); Kellog v. Scheuerman, 18 Wash. 293 (51 Pac. Rep. 344). Appellee cites some cases from this court in which advice of counsel was specially set up as a defense in actions like that at bar, and argues from this that the rule has been generally considered to require that such a defense be affirmatively *45pleaded. We find, however, in Johnson v. Miller (a case that was several times in the court), that in 63 Iowa, 529, the answer was a general denial, and in 69 Iowa, 562, and 82 Iowa, 693 (presumably on tbe same pleadings, for there is nothing to indicate a change of issues), evidence of advice of counsel was admitted. This seems to have been the case, also, in Logan v. Maytag, 57 Iowa, 107. Our conclusion on this branch of the case is thai the court erred in not receiving this testimony.
2 II. Over defendant’s objection, the court'admitted in evidence the following judgment entered in the criminal proceeding : “It appearing to the court that this prosecution was found at the instance of a private prosecutor, to wit, Thomas J. Johnson, as shown by his own uncontra-dicted testimony, and the court being satisfied that the prosecution was instigated by malice, and without probable cause, the costs herein are taxed to said Thomas J. Johnson, and judgment rendered herein against him therefor, to which said Thomas J. Johnson excepts.” We have serious doubts of the admissibility of this evidence, in any view of the case. We ■ need, however, consider only one ground of defendant’s objection. Johnson’s name was not indorsed on the indictment, as it is provided in section 4292 of the Code of 1873 shall be done by the grand jury when the indictment is found at the instance of a private prosecutor. The basis of the court’s right to tax the costs of a criminal prosecution to an individual is the action of the grand jury in returning the fact that the indictment is found at the instance of such person. Only the grand jury can know the incentive to its action. However baseless the complaint, the prosecuting witness cannot be charged with costs unless he was the inspiring cause of the prosecution. There is nothing in the record of the criminal case, outside of the recitals of this judgment, to show that Johnson had anything more to do with the return of the indictment than to give his testimony, and this may have been done in response to a subpoena. In the absence of statutory authority, the district court has no power to tax the costs in a erimi-*46ml proceeding to an individual. It gets the only right in this respect from section 4292. .When the grand jury fails to make the finding and indorsement there provided for, the court lacks jurisdiction to render such a judgment as the one here introduced. In State v. Briggs, 68 Iowa, 416, 420, we said in relation to this section: “The indorsement is required to be made to enable the court to tax the costs against a private prosecutor, if it should be satisfied that the prosecution was malicious, or without probable cause.” To hold otherwise would be to practically annul section 4292. See State v. McAllister, 107 Iowa, 641. The court being without jurisdiction to render it, this judgment was void, and therefore open to collateral attack. Jordan v. Brown, 71 Iowa, 421. It was error to admit it in evidence over defendant’s objection.
8 III. Plaintiff testified that defendant, on the night of the shooting, said: “I am on the ground that I was. when I shot at you two years ago.” Defendant, when examined as a witness, denied having said this; and his counsel sought to have him tell the facts as to the former difficulty between him and plaintiff. This was excluded, and properly, as we think. 1 Greenleaf Evidence, section 52. Evidence of collateral facts is not admissible merely to strengthen probabilities. Farrell v. Webster County, 49 Iowa, 245; Orr v. Railway Co., 94 Iowa, 423; State v. Gross, 68 Iowa, 180.
IV. The offense for which plaintiff was prosecuted was the shooting of defendant, and it is claimed that this was done in self-defense. We find no- error in the instruction on this branch of the case, or in the rulings of the court in the admission of testimony offered to impeach defendant.
4 V. McAllister testified that Johnson was coming upon his premises through the gateway or over the fence at that point when he shot him. Defendant offered evidence to show wh ire that portion of the charge of shot which missed Johnson struck the fence behind him. This was ruled out. It is claimed this evidence would have shown that Johnson was sixty to sixty-five yards distant from the *47gate, down the road. Johnson denied that he was advancing ■upon plaintiff' at the time of the trouble. We think he had a right to show his location.
We need not notice other matters discussed. Some of them are not likely to arise again, and some, in view of another trial, we cannot properly express an opinion upon.— REVERSED.