Court Opinion

ID: 4894201
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:54:45.68327+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:25.452973
License: Public Domain

Stayton, Associate Justice.
This action was brought by the appellee by next friend to recover damages for malicious prosecution. It appears that the appellant had instituted and prosecuted to hearing before a justice of the peace a complaint in effect charging the appellee and others with the theft of cotton. Upon that hearing the appellee and the others with whom he stood charged were discharged.
Upon the trial of this cause the jury were instructed: “If the plaintiff was discharged from the prosecution by the' examining magistrate who examined the case, then the presumption of law is that there was no probable cause; but if the evidence further shows that the defendant had reasonable cause to believe, and did believe, that the facts stated in the complaint were in fact true, then he would have such probable cause as the law contemplates.” This is assigned as error.
This question was decided in the case of Griffin v. Chubb, 7 Tex., 614, and it was there, in accordance with authority, held that a verdict of “ not guilty ” and discharge of the defendant in a criminal prosecution instituted by the defendant in the suit, who had testified in the criminal prosecution, did not raise a presumption of the want of probable cause.
The correctness of this ruling is not questioned by the appellee, but it is contended that the subsequent part of the charge corrected the error, and that the want of probable cause was fully shown by the evidence.
Whether there ivas want of probable cause was for the jury to determine under the facts in evidence; 'and they might consider, in making up their verdict, the fact that the appellee had been discharged by the examining court; but the charge of the court was *209incorrect as matter of law, and gave to that fact a prominence to which it was not entitled.
Any charge as to a presumption arising from a given state of facts, unless in those cases in which the law raises a conclusive presumption, in the nature of things, is a charge upon the weight of evidence, and, although other parts of the charge given may have been correct, such an error will require a reversal of the judgment; and the. fact that this court might be of the opinion that the evidence in the case justified the verdict found would not change the rule. The defendant was entitled to have the case submitted to the jury without any intimation from the court as to the putative force of a given fact. That was not done.
The other assignments of error have been considered and are not deemed to be well taken.
For the error indicated, the judgment of the court below is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
[Opinion delivered October 23, 1883.]